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Greetings, gestures & everyday norms
Culture, Etiquette & Customs
Most of India’s cultural etiquette is intuitive once you know it — small gestures of respect that go a long way. Here’s what actually comes up in day-to-day travel.
General guidance — norms vary significantly by region, religion, and setting. See our full disclaimer on the hub page.
Greetings
Namaste
Palms pressed together at chest height, slight bow of the head. Always appropriate, always appreciated — the safest default greeting anywhere in India, for anyone.
Handshakes
Common in business and urban settings. Between genders, it’s polite to let the other person initiate — if a woman doesn’t extend her hand, a Namaste is the graceful alternative.
The gestures that trip people up
The head wobble
A side-to-side head tilt (different from a Western head shake) generally means “yes,” “good,” or “I understand” — genuinely confusing for first-timers, but you’ll get used to reading it quickly.
Right hand vs. left
The left hand is considered unclean — use your right hand (or both hands, which is even more respectful) to eat, give or receive money/objects, and touch people. This is one of the most consistent rules across all of India.
Feet
Considered unclean — don’t point your feet at people, altars, or religious objects; apologize immediately if your foot touches someone; remove footwear before temples and most homes.
Pointing
Pointing with a single finger is considered rude — use your whole hand, your chin, or your thumb instead.
Dress & public behavior
Dress
Western clothing is fine in cities, but modest dress (covering shoulders and knees) is genuinely important at religious sites, and generally reduces unwanted attention elsewhere. Carry a lightweight scarf — it doubles as head covering where required.
Public affection
Not illegal, but generally frowned upon, especially outside major cities and in rural or conservative areas. Holding hands is normal and fine; kissing or overt affection draws attention you likely don’t want.
Photography
Always ask before photographing people, and respect a “no.” Many temple interiors also restrict photography — look for signage or ask.
Smoking & alcohol
Smoking in front of elders is considered impolite; ask permission first. Public alcohol consumption is restricted in several states — check local rules before assuming.
Elders, hierarchy & conversation
Respect for elders
Deeply ingrained — greet the eldest person in a group first, offer your seat, and use respectful language. Adding “-ji” after a name, or “Uncle”/”Auntie” for older non-relatives, is a common and appreciated courtesy.
Personal questions
Questions about your income, marital status, or age are normal small talk in India, not rudeness — a friendly, approximate answer (or a light deflection) is all that’s expected.
Indirect refusals
Indians often avoid a flat “no” to an invitation — phrases like “I’ll try” or “maybe” often function as a soft decline. Take the cue rather than pressing for a firm answer.
Topics to let locals raise first
Religion, caste, and politics are best not opened by you — genuinely interesting conversations happen on these topics, but let your local host or new acquaintance steer there first.
Visiting someone’s home
Bring a small gift (a box of sweets is a safe, appreciated choice) and remove your shoes at the door — follow your host’s lead. Accept offered tea, water, or food graciously; declining repeatedly can seem impolite, though you’re never expected to finish everything on your plate. Give and receive gifts with your right hand or both hands — gifts typically aren’t opened in front of the giver.
Two things worth flagging plainly
Don’t give money to begging children — however well-intentioned, it can encourage further exploitation; if you want to help, a registered local charity is a better channel. And be aware some “holy men” near temples or rivers may tie a thread around your wrist or apply a forehead mark, then ask for payment afterward — a polite but firm decline is fine if you didn’t want it in the first place.