Summary of this article
By integrating sacred sites into themed tourism circuits and investing in infrastructure, livelihoods, and crowd management, Uttar Pradesh is transforming spiritual travel into a powerful engine of inclusive economic growth.
Uttar Pradesh is transforming its remarkable spiritual and cultural heritage into a coordinated tourism strategy. Instead of treating temples, ghats and shrines as isolated attractions, the state has mapped them into integrated circuits – Ramayana, Krishna-Braj, Buddhist, Jain, Shakti Peeth, Sufi-Kabir, Freedom Struggle, Craft, Wildlife Eco-Tourism and Spiritual circuits – designed to extend visitor stays, distribute footfall and generate economic opportunities across districts. The official tourism map now marks a deliberate shift from site-by-site promotion to experience-led travel planning.
Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath has presented this as more than heritage promotion: it is economic development rooted in culture. “Our heritage is a bridge to economic opportunity and global recognition,” he has said, linking pilgrim flows to jobs for artisans, hoteliers and transport operators.
Numbers that Matter
The circuits strategy is being implemented at scale. Uttar Pradesh recorded the highest domestic tourist footfall among Indian states in 2025, with reports citing more than 137 crore domestic visits that year – a figure that highlights both the depth of domestic demand and the state’s success in packaging experiences with broad appeal. This surge is complemented by focused efforts to attract international spiritual tourists.
To translate footfall into longer stays and higher incomes, the government has combined major projects with community participation. Current plans include development grants for pilgrimage towns, expanded homestay networks, and targeted infrastructure funds to manage crowds and enhance visitor services.
Making Pilgrimage Convenient
Each circuit follows a clear rationale. The Ramayana Circuit connects Ayodhya with related historical sites, enhancing pilgrimage routes that trace the epic’s geography. The Krishna-Braj Circuit links Mathura, Vrindavan and surrounding cultural centres to create a seamless Krishna pilgrimage experience. The Buddhist and Jain circuits highlight Kushinagar, Shravasti and other sites of pan-Asian spiritual significance, establishing connections with global Buddhist pilgrimage routes. These curated circuits are supported by central schemes such as Swadesh Darshan, which has completed multiple projects in the state to upgrade visitor facilities and interpretive infrastructure.
Practical improvements – wayfinding, multilingual signage, visitor information centres, improved sanitation and managed parking – are being integrated into the circuits so that the spiritual experience is also an accessible travel product for families, seniors and international tourists.

Infrastructure and Crowd Management
Large capital investments support the circuit vision. Recent budget allocations and targeted schemes direct funds to shrine precincts, ghats, parking, and last-mile connectivity. The 2026–27 budget allocated significant funds for pilgrimage infrastructure, including dedicated amounts for Ayodhya, Varanasi, and other priority nodes, as well as a ₹500-crore tourism development fund to upgrade key sites and promote homestays. These investments aim to convert single-day visits into multi-day itineraries that benefit local economies.
Importantly, event-scale crowd management – demonstrated during large gatherings such as the Magh Mela and Kumbh festivals – now serves as a model for routine tourism planning. Civil administration systems that manage lakhs of visitors during a mela are being adapted to ensure safety, sanitation, and quality of visitor experience across circuits.
Artisans, Homestays and Heritage Crafts
The circuits strategy emphasises local value capture. Craft circuits and artisan trails connect heritage workshops with tourist routes so that visitors experience living traditions – such as weaving, pottery, brassware, and temple arts – rather than only museum displays. The state’s plans to expand homestays and community-run accommodations aim to distribute tourism income beyond hotels and provide authentic experiences for travellers. Policymakers expect thousands of new homestays to increase accommodation supply while creating direct livelihoods in small towns and villages.
Skill and enterprise initiatives – from hospitality training to micro-credit for artisans – are being aligned with circuit priorities to ensure supply-side readiness meets rising demand.
Global Reach
The Buddhist and Jain circuits have significant international appeal. Investments to develop sites such as Kushinagar and Shravasti are being made in coordination with central schemes that aim to promote India’s iconic spiritual centres on a global scale. This aligns with outreach to source markets in Southeast and East Asia, where Buddhist pilgrimage flows can drive foreign exchange earnings and cultural diplomacy.
Sustainable Pilgrimage
Uttar Pradesh’s circuits approach redefines spiritual tourism as a driver of regional development: it leverages existing cultural capital, modernises infrastructure, creates jobs, and expands the distribution of tourism benefits. With targeted investments, improved administration, and community integration, the state is developing tourism products that respect religious sentiment and serve as effective economic levers. As the Chief Minister has stated, the goal is clear: to transform heritage into respectful opportunity, ensuring every visitor has a meaningful experience while communities gain sustainable livelihoods.
“Our heritage is a bridge to economic opportunity and global recognition.”Yogi Adityanath, Chief Minister, Uttar Pradesh
Vision To Action:
Integrated Tourism Circuits: Ramayana, Krishna-Braj, Buddhist, Jain, Shakti Peeth, Sufi-Kabir, Freedom Struggle, Craft, Wildlife Eco-Tourism, and Spiritual circuits.
From Sites to Experiences: Shift from isolated destinations to curated, multi-day pilgrimage journeys.
Record Footfall: Over 137 crore domestic tourist visits in 2025, the highest among Indian states.
Infrastructure Push: Major investments in shrine precincts, ghats, parking, sanitation, and last-mile connectivity.
₹500-crore Tourism Envelope: Dedicated funding to upgrade pilgrimage towns and promote homestays.
Crowd Management: Kumbh and Magh Mela planning models applied to year-round tourism safety and services.
Local Livelihoods: Artisan trails, craft circuits, and thousands of new homestays supporting village economies.
Global Outreach: Buddhist and Jain circuits strengthening cultural diplomacy and international spiritual tourism.
Sustainable Model: Community participation ensures tourism growth leads to lasting regional development.















