Home › Travel Guides › Weekend Trips from Rajkot: 7 Saurashtra Getaways
Wild lions, a seaside Jyotirlinga, a sacred mountain and princely palaces, all across the Saurashtra plain.
Photo: Asiatic lion, Gir · Wikimedia Commons
Best time
October to March
Ideal duration
1 to 2 days
Good for
Wildlife, pilgrimage, heritage
Base city
Rajkot
Rajkot sits at the centre of Saurashtra, the broad peninsula that holds some of Gujarat's most famous destinations. From here you are within a weekend's reach of the only wild lions in Asia at Gir, the seaside temple of Somnath, the sacred mountain of Girnar above Junagadh, and a string of former princely towns full of palaces and vintage cars. Few cities in the state give you this much variety in so many directions.
This guide brings together seven getaways that make the most of that position, from a serious wildlife safari to a coastal pilgrimage and a set of easy heritage day trips. Some, like Gir and Somnath, are best given a night; others, like Gondal and Wankaner, are comfortable returns in a day. Pair them by direction and you can build a rich two-day Saurashtra loop, or simply pick one and be back in Rajkot by nightfall.
Saurashtra packs an unusual amount into a short radius, and Rajkot sits right in the middle of it. Drive a few hours south and you are in Gir, the last home of the Asiatic lion; carry on to the coast for Somnath and its crashing sea; turn toward Junagadh for the thousands of steps up sacred Girnar. Closer to home, the princely towns of Gondal and Wankaner offer palace stays and one of the finest vintage-car collections in India. Wildlife, pilgrimage and royal heritage, all reachable on a weekend from a single, well-connected city.

Somnath, the first of the twelve Jyotirlingas, stands on the Saurashtra coast within a weekend of Rajkot.
A car is the most practical way to explore Saurashtra, and hiring one with a driver frees you to link sights that public transport reaches slowly. Gir and Somnath lie to the south and southwest and pair well over two days; Junagadh and Girnar are on the way; Gondal and Wankaner are short hops from Rajkot on the main highways; and Jamnagar is an easy run to the northwest. Rajkot has its own airport and good rail links, and state buses connect all the major towns, but for the national park, the coast and the palaces, having your own vehicle turns a series of trips into one smooth loop.
Rajkot works well as a base for the closer day trips, with a solid range of business hotels and budget lodges. For Gir, stay a night in or near Sasan Gir so you can make the early morning safari, choosing from simple guesthouses to comfortable jungle lodges. Somnath has plenty of hotels near the temple if you want to catch both the evening and dawn aartis. The real treat, though, is a heritage stay in the princely towns: both Gondal and Wankaner let you sleep in a former royal palace, which turns a simple day trip into a memorable overnight and is well worth planning a weekend around.
The cool season from October to March is ideal across Saurashtra, with comfortable days for the Girnar climb, the coast and the open safari jeeps of Gir. Note that Gir closes for the monsoon, roughly mid-June to mid-October, so plan a lion trip well inside the winter window and book permits early. The coastal temples at Somnath and Dwarka are pleasant through the cool months and can be humid otherwise. Summer, from April to June, is harsh for the Girnar steps and the open jeep safaris, though wildlife sightings at shrinking waterholes can actually improve as the forest dries out.
What is the best weekend trip from Rajkot for wildlife?
Gir National Park, about 160 km south, is the highlight — the only place in the world to see wild Asiatic lions, best over an overnight with a booked morning safari.
How far is Somnath from Rajkot?
Somnath is roughly 200 km from Rajkot, about a four-hour drive, and pairs naturally with Gir and Junagadh on a two-day southern loop.
Can I stay in a palace near Rajkot?
Yes. Both Gondal and Wankaner, former princely towns within an hour of Rajkot, offer heritage stays in royal palaces along with vintage-car collections.
Is one day enough for Junagadh and Girnar?
Junagadh town can be seen in a day, but the full Girnar climb of nearly ten thousand steps needs an early start and a good half-day on its own.
Rajkot may be best known as a busy commercial city, but its real value to a traveller is where it sits. In one weekend you can watch a wild lion cross a forest track, stand before a temple with the Arabian Sea at its back, climb a sacred mountain at dawn and sleep in a maharaja's palace. Pick a direction out of the city, give the big trips a night, and let Saurashtra reveal just how much it has been quietly holding all along.
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