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Practical prep, not scare tactics
Health, Safety & Vaccinations
Most trips to India are perfectly healthy trips. A short list of sensible preparations — some vaccines, some food/water habits — handles the vast majority of risk.
General information only, not medical advice. See a doctor or travel clinic 4-6 weeks before departure for guidance specific to you. See our full disclaimer on the hub page.
Vaccines worth discussing with a travel clinic
Exact needs depend on your itinerary, duration, and existing immunity — this is a starting list, not a prescription.
Food & water: the single biggest health factor
Do
- Drink bottled, filtered, or boiled water only
- Choose freshly cooked, hot food from busy, reputable places
- Wash hands or sanitize before eating
- Peel fruit yourself where possible
Avoid
- Tap water, including for brushing teeth in some areas
- Ice unless you’re confident of the source
- Raw, unpeeled produce from unclear sources
- Street food that’s been sitting rather than freshly prepared
Traveler’s diarrhea is genuinely common (up to 40-50% of visitors, by some estimates) — it’s rarely serious, but it’s worth discussing standby antibiotics with your doctor before you go, so you’re not searching for a pharmacy while unwell.
Mosquito-borne illness
Risk isn’t uniform
Malaria and dengue risk vary significantly by region and season — higher during and after monsoon (June-September), and higher in rural areas than in classic urban circuits like Delhi-Agra-Jaipur. Ask your travel clinic whether prophylaxis makes sense for your specific itinerary.
Bite prevention (works regardless)
DEET-based repellent (20%+), long sleeves/pants at dawn and dusk, sleeping in air-conditioned or screened/netted rooms — genuinely effective and worth doing everywhere, not just high-risk zones.
Other practical health notes
Altitude (Himalayas, Ladakh)
Ascend slowly, hydrate well, and know the early symptoms of altitude sickness (headache, nausea) — descend if they appear rather than pushing through.
Sun & heat
India’s UV is strong year-round. SPF 30+, a hat, and real hydration matter even in cooler months.
Animals
Don’t touch or feed street animals — rabies risk is genuinely elevated in India. Any bite or scratch warrants prompt medical attention, not a wait-and-see approach.
Travel insurance
Get it. Confirm it covers medical evacuation — trauma care outside major cities can be limited, and evacuation costs are the scenario insurance actually protects you from.
General safety habits
- Keep valuables secure and out of sight on public transport
- Sit in the back seat of taxis; wear a helmet on any motorbike (bring your own if particular about fit)
- Avoid driving yourself at night — street lighting can be poor outside city centers
- Traffic flows on the left — look accordingly when crossing streets
- Keep photocopies (digital and paper) of your passport, visa, and prescriptions separate from the originals