Kerala Tour Packages From Bhubaneswar

Bhubaneswar wears its identity in stone. The Temple City of India is home to over 700 ancient temples — the soaring Lingaraja Shikara, the exquisitely carved Mukteshwar, the sun-drenched Rajarani — each one a testament to an artistic and spiritual tradition so deep and so refined that it has drawn scholars, pilgrims, and art lovers to Odisha for over a thousand years. It is a city that understands the sacred in architecture, in dance, in the patient hand of a Pattachitra painter, and in the devotion of millions who walk the road to Jagannath Puri just sixty kilometres to the south. When a city this culturally rooted in ancient India decides to travel, it deserves a destination worthy of that depth.


Viacation's Kerala Tour Packages from Bhubaneswar are designed for exactly that encounter. Our Kerala Tour Packages from Bhubaneswar connect Odisha's greatest sacred city to South India's most naturally magnificent state — a journey between two ancient, culturally layered worlds separated by a short flight but divided by an entire universe of landscape, language, and sensory experience. From Bhubaneswar's dry temple plains to Kerala's lush backwater canals, from the carved stone of Lingaraja to the copper-roofed grandeur of Padmanabhaswamy, from Odissi's sinuous grace to Kathakali's fierce painted drama — this is one of India's most culturally rich travel journeys, and Viacation makes every step of it effortless book now Kerela Tour Packages.


About the Destination

If Bhubaneswar speaks the language of carved stone and sacred architecture, Kerala speaks the language of living water and tropical abundance. Every element of Kerala's geography — its 44 rivers, its 900-kilometre backwater network, its 580-kilometre Arabian Sea coastline, its mist-wrapped Western Ghats — is defined by movement, by flow, by the constant presence of water in one form or another. And yet, like Bhubaneswar, Kerala is a profoundly ancient place — a state whose temple traditions stretch back over 2,000 years, whose Ayurvedic healing system was developed in these very forests, and whose classical performing arts — Kathakali, Mohiniyattam, Kalaripayattu, Theyyam — represent some of the most sophisticated and ancient performing traditions in all of Asia. For Bhubaneswar travellers who understand that culture and landscape are inseparable — that the Lingaraja Temple and the Mahanadi delta are both expressions of the same Odia soul — Kerala offers a South Indian version of that same truth in a completely different and deeply rewarding register.


"As an Odia family we were a little uncertain about South India. We knew Puri, we knew Konark, but Kerala was something we had only seen in magazines. Viacation changed that completely. The seven days they arranged — Kochi, Munnar, Alleppey, Kovalam — was the most perfectly planned holiday we have ever experienced. The houseboat night was like nothing we could have imagined. The Kathakali performance in Kochi genuinely moved us — as people who love Odissi, we could feel the connection across the art forms. Viacation is exceptional. We are already booking again." — Subhasis & Mamata Panda, Bhubaneswar


Why Choose Viacation Over Other Travel Websites

  1. Odisha & East India Travel Specialists: Viacation understands the travel culture and values of Bhubaneswar's Odia community — the reverence for genuine cultural experiences, the expectation of quality and reliability, and the importance of a travel partner who actually knows the destination they are selling. Every Kerala package from Bhubaneswar is built on this foundation of trust and expertise.
  2. Temple & Pilgrimage Circuit Integration: For Bhubaneswar's large devout community, Viacation seamlessly integrates Kerala's sacred sites — Padmanabhaswamy Temple, Guruvayur, Sabarimala approach, Vadakkunnathan Temple — into every itinerary that combines pilgrimage with leisure, honouring the spiritual purpose of the journey alongside its natural beauty.
  3. Direct Flight Coordination from Biju Patnaik Airport: Biju Patnaik International Airport (BBI) connects to Kochi (COK) and Trivandrum (TRV) via connecting flights through Hyderabad or Bangalore. Viacation monitors all fare combinations across IndiGo, Air India, and SpiceJet to secure the most competitive prices for every Bhubaneswar travel date.
  4. Classical Arts & Culture Curated Experiences: Understanding that Bhubaneswar's Odissi-loving, temple-going, art-appreciating community will want more than standard tourist sightseeing, Viacation includes curated cultural experiences — Kathakali performances, Kalaripayattu demonstrations, Theyyam ritual visits, and heritage museum tours — in every Kerala package from Bhubaneswar.
  5. Multi-Generational Family Package Experts: Bhubaneswar's extended Odia joint families travel together across generations. Viacation builds Kerala itineraries that work genuinely well for grandparents, parents, and children — with appropriate accommodation, comfortable pacing, and activities that engage every age group.
  6. Zero Hidden Charges, Always: Every Viacation quote is fully itemised with complete transparency — accommodation, flights, transfers, guides, meals, and activities — all accounted for before you confirm. No surprises, no additions, no fine print.


What is the Best Time to Visit Kerala?

Bhubaneswar's climate shares some characteristics with Kerala's eastern edge — both are influenced by the Bay of Bengal and experience a significant monsoon season. But Kerala's western coastal climate is distinctly different and shapes the travel experience in important ways.

  1. October to February — The Golden Peak Season: Post-monsoon Kerala at its most magnificent — clear Arabian Sea skies, coastal temperatures between 22°C and 30°C, and every experience from backwater houseboat cruises to wildlife safaris to temple visits firing at peak quality. For Bhubaneswar families making their first Kerala trip, this is the definitive season — the one where Kerala delivers exactly what its reputation promises. December and January in particular are exceptional for beach holidays and cultural sightseeing. Book early, especially for houseboat and premium resort availability.
  2. March to May — Summer Escape to Kerala's Cool Highlands: As Bhubaneswar heats through its March–May summer, Kerala's Western Ghats hill stations — Munnar, Wayanad, Thekkady — remain cool, green, and refreshing. For Bhubaneswar families travelling during school summer holidays in April and May, a hill-station-focused Kerala package offers genuine relief at hotel rates that are significantly lower than peak season. The highland scenery in spring — before the monsoon — is lush, clear, and extraordinarily photogenic.
  3. June to September — Monsoon & Sacred Season: Bhubaneswar knows the monsoon well — but Kerala's monsoon is a world apart in its scale and transformative power. The Western Ghats receive some of Asia's heaviest rainfall, turning the landscape into a vivid, thundering green spectacle. Athirappilly and Soochipara waterfalls surge to their most dramatic, and Kerala's Ayurvedic healing centres enter their most therapeutically potent season. For Bhubaneswar's wellness and nature community, a monsoon Kerala retreat is one of India's most profoundly restorative travel experiences.
  4. Quick Verdict: First-time Kerala visitors from Bhubaneswar should book in winter, summer families head to the cool Ghats, and monsoon lovers discover Kerala's most dramatic and least-crowded season.


How to Reach Kerala from Bhubaneswar

By Air (Fastest & Most Recommended)

Biju Patnaik International Airport (BBI) connects to Cochin International Airport (COK) and Trivandrum International Airport (TRV) via one-stop connections through Hyderabad (HYD) or Bangalore (BLR), operated by IndiGo, Air India, and SpiceJet. Total travel time from Bhubaneswar to Kochi including the connection is approximately 4 to 5 hours. For most Bhubaneswar travellers, flying is the most practical and time-efficient option, with multiple daily flight combinations available for flexible scheduling around family and work commitments.

By Train (Direct, Scenic & Budget-Friendly)

Bhubaneswar Railway Station (BBS) has an excellent direct train connection to Thiruvananthapuram Central — the Hirakhand Express (Train No. 22504) operates 6 days a week from Bhubaneswar to Thiruvananthapuram, covering the journey in approximately 34 hours. The ERS Howrah Suvidha Express and Guwahati Express also connect Bhubaneswar to Ernakulam Junction (Kochi), offering multiple weekly options. Train travel is ideal for large Odia families and groups who value the comfort of reserved AC compartments, the convenience of direct connectivity, and the scenic journey through Andhra Pradesh and into Kerala's lush coastal terrain.

By Road (For the Long-Distance Explorer)

The road distance from Bhubaneswar to Kochi is approximately 1,939 km via NH16 and NH44 through Visakhapatnam, Vijayawada, and Bangalore — a journey of approximately 26 to 28 hours by car. Best approached as a two-day drive with an overnight halt in Hyderabad or Bangalore. The Bangalore to Mysore to Wayanad road section is particularly beautiful — a scenic Ghat mountain drive through coffee estates and mist-filled forest passes. Private Volvo overnight buses from Bhubaneswar to Vijayawada or Hyderabad provide comfortable first-leg options for budget group travellers connecting onward into Kerala.


Places to Visit in Kerala

1. Kochi (Fort Kochi): Kochi is for Bhubaneswar's culturally sophisticated travellers — citizens of a city that reads its built environment as living history — Fort Kochi is Kerala's most immediately resonant destination. Its Portuguese churches, Dutch palaces, Jewish quarter, Chinese fishing nets, and contemporary art galleries tell 500 years of multicultural maritime history in a compact, walkable heritage district that rewards slow, attentive exploration. For travellers who love Bhubaneswar's temple architecture and Puri's coastal heritage, Fort Kochi offers a South Indian counterpart of equal historical depth in a completely different architectural and cultural tradition.

Key Attractions:

  1. Chinese Fishing Nets (Cheena Vala) at Dawn
  2. Mattancherry Palace (Dutch Palace) & Kerala Mural Paintings
  3. Paradesi Synagogue & Jew Town Antique Quarter
  4. Basilica of Santa Cruz & St. Francis Church
  5. Kerala Folklore Museum & Kochi-Muziris Heritage Trail

2. Munnar: Rising at over 1,600 metres in the Western Ghats, Munnar delivers the landscape transformation that Bhubaneswar travellers most consistently describe as their favourite Kerala memory. After Odisha's coastal plains, the cool mountain air, sweeping tea-estate panoramas, and morning mist that fills entire valleys below your window feel like stepping into a different country entirely. Munnar's rare wildlife, its plantation walks, and its dramatic highland viewpoints make it an essential stop on every Kerala itinerary from Bhubaneswar.

Key Attractions:

  1. Eravikulam National Park (Nilgiri Tahr & Rare Flora)
  2. Top Station — Highest Motorable Viewpoint in the Region
  3. Echo Point
  4. Tea Museum & Guided Estate Walk
  5. Anamudi Peak — South India's Highest Summit (2,695 m)

3. Alleppey (Alappuzha): Bhubaneswar is an inland city and Puri's beach is Odisha's great relationship with water — but neither prepares you for Alleppey's backwater world. The experience of drifting through Vembanad Lake's canal network on a traditional houseboat — with paddy fields on both banks, coconut palms overhead, a chef preparing prawn curry and appam in the kitchen, and fireflies flickering across the water at nightfall — is unlike anything available in eastern India and the single experience that most defines Kerala for every Bhubaneswar traveller who makes the journey.

Key Attractions:

  1. Vembanad Lake Overnight Houseboat Cruise
  2. Punnamada Lake — Nehru Trophy Snake Boat Race Venue
  3. Kuttanad Backwater Village Canoe Tour
  4. Alleppey Lighthouse Beach & Promenade
  5. Marari Beach — Secluded Fishing Village Shore (15 km)

4. Thekkady (Periyar): Thekkady position at the edge of Periyar Tiger Reserve — where Kerala's wildest jungle meets its most aromatic spice country — makes it one of South India's most richly layered single destinations. The lake boat safari through the Periyar reserve, with wild elephants frequently sighted on the misty forest shore, offers a wildlife encounter that Odisha's own forest tradition — its elephant corridors and Simlipal wilderness — will give Bhubaneswar travellers an instinctive appreciation for. The spice estate walks add a fragrant cultural dimension that connects Kerala's landscape directly to its legendary culinary identity.

Key Attractions:

  1. Periyar Lake Boat Safari (elephants, bison, otters, kingfishers)
  2. Cardamom, Vanilla & Pepper Spice Plantation Walk
  3. Bamboo Rafting on the Periyar River
  4. Kalaripayattu Martial Arts & Kathakali Cultural Show
  5. Mangaladevi Temple Trek (border forest, seasonal permit)

5. Thiruvananthapuram & Kovalam: Kerala's ancient capital city paired with its most celebrated beach destination completes the journey for Bhubaneswar travellers arriving via Trivandrum. The sacred Padmanabhaswamy Temple — one of India's most architecturally magnificent and spiritually significant temples — resonates deeply with Bhubaneswar's own temple-going community, while Kovalam's crescent beach, with its famous lighthouse and warm Arabian Sea waters, delivers the coastal holiday finale that every Kerala itinerary from landlocked Central and Eastern India deserves.

Key Attractions:

  1. Padmanabhaswamy Temple (India's Wealthiest & Most Sacred Vishnu Temple)
  2. Kovalam Lighthouse Beach & Cliff Promenade
  3. Napier Museum & Natural History Museum, Thiruvananthapuram
  4. Kuthiramalika Palace Museum (Travancore Royal Palace)
  5. Vizhinjam Rock-cut Cave Temple (8th Century Pandya Sculpture)


Kerala's Tribal Culture & Indigenous Heritage

Bhubaneswar is the gateway to Odisha's celebrated tribal belt — a region where over 60 indigenous communities including the Kondh, Santali, Dongria, and Gond have maintained living cultural traditions of extraordinary richness across centuries of change. This deep familiarity with tribal culture and indigenous heritage gives Bhubaneswar travellers a unique lens through which to discover Kerala's own extraordinary tribal world — one that is less widely known than Odisha's but equally fascinating and equally deserving of respectful, curious engagement.

  1. Wayanad's Tribal Communities: Wayanad district in northern Kerala is home to over 16 indigenous tribal communities including the Kurichiya, Kuruma, Paniya, Adivasi, and Kattunayakan peoples — among the oldest continuous inhabitants of the Western Ghats forest ecosystem. Community-based tourism initiatives in Wayanad offer guided cultural walks, traditional cooking experiences, and visits to tribal settlements where ancient forest knowledge, traditional medicine, and handcrafted bamboo and cane art are still actively practised. For Bhubaneswar travellers with an understanding and appreciation of tribal culture, these experiences are among Kerala's most meaningful and least-touristified encounters.
  2. The Theyyam Connection — Ritual as Living Tradition: Theyyam — the ritual performing art of northern Kerala's Kannur and Kasaragod districts — has deep roots in the worship traditions of Kerala's ancient tribal and lower-caste communities, who created these deity-embodiment ceremonies as a form of sacred expression outside the formal Brahminic temple system. The elaborate costumes, body paint, and trance states of Theyyam performers represent a living bridge between Kerala's tribal spiritual traditions and its classical performing arts — a connection that Bhubaneswar travellers familiar with Odisha's own tribal ritual traditions will recognise and appreciate with particular depth.
  3. Edakkal Caves — Prehistoric Life in Stone: The Edakkal Caves in Wayanad's Ambukuthi Hills contain Neolithic and Mesolithic petroglyphs — hand-carved figures, symbols, and pictograms dating back over 6,000 years — that represent some of the earliest evidence of human settlement and culture in the Indian subcontinent. For Bhubaneswar travellers who have stood before the Stone Age rock art of Ushakothi or the ancient carvings of Odisha's prehistoric sites, the Edakkal petroglyphs offer a comparable, equally moving encounter with India's deepest human past in a completely different geographical and cultural context.
  4. Araku Valley Parallel — A Familiar Yet Different World: Bhubaneswar travellers who know and love Araku Valley — the tribal highland plateau of Andhra Pradesh near the Odisha border — will find Wayanad's highland tribal landscape immediately familiar in its basic outlines but entirely different in its tropical Western Ghats character. The coffee and pepper cultivation, the forest-dwelling communities, the mist-covered highlands, and the cultural richness of the tribal populations create a parallel that makes Wayanad feel both accessible and endlessly surprising for Odia travellers making the South India journey.


Kerala Souvenirs & Shopping Guide

Bhubaneswar's gifted shopping culture — where Pattachitra silk paintings, appliqué work, silver filigree, and Sambalpuri fabric are taken seriously as art forms rather than tourist trinkets — gives Bhubaneswar travellers both the taste and the discernment to recognise and appreciate Kerala's own extraordinary craft and artisan traditions. Kerala offers some of India's finest handmade goods across multiple categories, and knowing where to find the best quality makes all the difference.

  1. Kerala Kasavu Sarees — The Signature Textile: The Kerala Kasavu saree — a cream or off-white cotton or silk fabric woven with a distinctive golden zari border — is Kerala's most iconic textile and one of India's most elegant regional dress traditions. The finest Kasavu sarees are produced by traditional handloom weavers in the Chendamangalam and Balaramapuram weaving clusters near Kochi and Thiruvananthapuram respectively. Bhubaneswar's saree-conscious Odia women — accustomed to the excellence of Sambalpuri and Odisha silk — will find Kasavu's understated elegance deeply appealing and the quality genuinely comparable. Government-run Hantex and Handloom House outlets offer certified, fairly-priced Kasavu sarees without tourist-market markup.
  2. Kathakali Masks & Wooden Crafts: Kerala's traditional woodcarving tradition produces extraordinary Kathakali dancer masks — carved from soft Alibangara wood and painted with the elaborate Chutti make-up patterns of the actual classical performance — that range from small souvenir pieces to large collector-quality artistic works. The finest carved masks and wooden deity figures are found at the government craft emporia in Kochi (Kerala State Handicrafts Emporium, Kairali) and at the artisan workshops of Thrissur district. For Bhubaneswar's Pattachitra art-loving community, Kerala's painted wooden art tradition offers a South Indian craft encounter of comparable intricacy and aesthetic richness.
  3. Kerala Spices — Direct from the Source: For Bhubaneswar's home cooks — Odia cooking is one of India's most spice-nuanced regional cuisines — Kerala offers the rare opportunity to buy quality spices directly from the landscape where they are grown. Thekkady's market street, Kozhikode's ancient spice bazaar, and the Ernakulam wholesale market in Kochi are the best locations for purchasing fresh cardamom, black pepper, cloves, nutmeg, dried ginger, and star anise at prices far below retail rates in Bhubaneswar. Sealed and certified spice packets from government-approved shops travel well and make Kerala's most practical and most appreciated souvenirs.
  4. Coir & Handloom Products: Kerala is India's leading producer of coir — coconut fibre woven into mats, rugs, baskets, and a wide range of home furnishing products of exceptional natural quality. The government-run Coirfed outlets in Alappuzha and Kochi offer the best quality coir products at fair, fixed prices. Kerala's handloom cotton fabrics — particularly the textured, naturally dyed cottons of the Wayanad and Thrissur weaving traditions — are also excellent value and widely available at cooperative handloom outlets across the state.
  5. Antiques & Heritage Curios in Fort Kochi: Mattancherry's Jew Town antique quarter in Fort Kochi is one of India's finest antique shopping destinations — a network of narrow lanes where shops overflow with old Kashmiri woodwork, Portuguese-era furniture, Kerala bronze oil lamps, ancient coins, colonial ceramics, Tanjore paintings, and an extraordinary range of South Indian decorative arts accumulated over five centuries of multicultural trading history. For Bhubaneswar's culturally educated and aesthetically refined travellers, an afternoon browsing Mattancherry's antique dealers is one of the most rewarding and potentially transformative shopping experiences available anywhere in South India.

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