Varanasi in May
Uttar Pradesh, India
Skip — 42–45°C with humidity; ghat walks unbearable past 9am, evening Ganga aarti still magical but the hours in between are punishing. Better window: October–March.
May is Varanasi at its most extreme. Temperatures hit 43-45°C, the loo wind turns the city into a convection oven, and the Ganges shrinks to its lowest level exposing wide muddy flats below the ghats. Power cuts are common. The city's ancient lack of urban planning — narrow lanes, dense construction — traps heat like a stone oven. This is survival territory, not travel territory.
The May story
The only travelers in May Varanasi are pilgrims who come regardless of weather and the rare international visitor who got their dates wrong. The city doesn't stop — the burning ghats operate through 47°C heat without pause, which is either deeply moving or deeply unsettling depending on your perspective. The pre-dawn window (4-6AM) remains usable: the boat ride at first light, before the sun clears the eastern bank, is still beautiful and now completely private. Buddha Purnima (May full moon) at Sarnath draws Buddhist pilgrims from across Asia — the celebration at the Dhamek Stupa is sincere and moving. Within the city, survival strategy is everything: morning activity, afternoon retreat to AC, evening ghat visit after 6PM. The thandai and lassi shops become genuinely essential rather than recreational. Anyone selling you May Varanasi as "a great time to visit" is lying. Come for Buddha Purnima specifically, or don't come.
Why May scores 2.0/10
Weather
Brutal 38-45°C. Stone ghats radiate heat. Walking impossible midday. Even boat rides scorching. Skip unless pilgrim.
Who should go
- ✓First-time travelers
- ✓Senior citizens
- ✓Buddhist pilgrims timing Buddha Purnima at Sarnath
- ✓Extreme heat travelers who have specifically chosen this challenge
- ✓Documentary makers wanting to capture Varanasi in its harshest light
Who should think twice
- ✗Everyone who has the option to visit October-February instead
- ✗Families, elderly travelers, anyone with health conditions
- ✗Photographers — heat haze, dust, and low water destroy composition
- ✗Travelers who need reliable power — outages are frequent
- ✗First-time India visitors — this could permanently discourage you
All 12 Months
| Month | Score | Note |
|---|---|---|
| January | 8.0/10 | Cool, pleasant 8-22C. Makar Sankranti kite festival. |
| February | 8.0/10 | Pleasant 10-24°C. Maha Shivratri celebrations at Kashi Vishwanath — city's biggest event. Ganga Aarti magical. Book ahead. |
| March | 8.0/10 | Warm but manageable. Holi celebrations (wild here). |
| April | 6.0/10 | Getting hot 28-40°C. Ghat walks only at dawn and dusk. Morning boat ride on Ganga still feasible. Midday brutal. |
| Mayviewing | 2.0/10 | Brutal 38-45°C. Stone ghats radiate heat. Walking impossible midday. Even boat rides scorching. Skip unless pilgrim. |
| June | 2.0/10 | Worst month 40-47°C plus pre-monsoon humidity. Ghats too hot to walk on barefoot. Dangerous heat. Avoid completely. |
| July | 4.0/10 | Monsoon. Ganga floods lower ghats. Steps slippery. Boats restricted in high water. Humid 30-38°C. Interior temples ok. |
| August | 4.0/10 | Ganga at peak flood level. Lower ghats submerged. Boat rides restricted or suspended. Humid. Silk shopping still on. |
| September | 6.0/10 | Easing 26-34°C. Post-monsoon clarity returning. Ganga receding. Ghats re-emerging. Evening aarti resuming full scale. |
| October | 10.0/10 | Best month 22-32°C. Post-monsoon clean skies. All ghats accessible. Dev Deepawali (Nov) prep. Ganga Aarti at peak. |
| November | 10.0/10 | Excellent. Dev Deepawali (Diwali on the ghats). 15-28C. |
| December | 10.0/10 | Peak winter comfort. 8-22C. Fog possible but atmospheric. |
Ready to book your stay?
We sit before the booking layer, not beside it — compare prices on the platforms below.
Tours and experiences
Treks, safaris and day tours — compare on the platforms below.
We don't take payment to feature any destination, stay or operator. Book through a link here and we may earn a small commission, at no extra cost to you. It never affects our scores or recommendations. Editorial policy
Don't miss the next Varanasi window
One Sunday briefing on where to actually go in India, plus a 3-week heads-up before each destination you save hits its peak month. No spam.
Free. No sponsored picks. Unsubscribe in one click.