Everyone comes to Agra for the Taj Mahal. They leave having learned about grief. But 2.5 kilometres upstream, across a bend in the Yamuna, stands the building where the grief was authored — Agra Fort, the red-sandstone citadel from which four Mughal emperors ruled most of India. If the Taj is the Mughal dream, the fort is the Mughal wiring diagram.
From Lodhi mud-walls to Akbar's masterpiece
The site had been a fort since the 11th century, but what you see today began in 1565, when the 23-year-old emperor Akbar ordered his engineers to demolish the old mud citadel and rebuild in the local Dholpur red sandstone that Rajput kings had used for centuries. Four thousand masons worked for eight years. Akbar laid 1.5 million tons of stone into walls 70 feet high and 2.5 km in circumference, defended by a 10-metre-deep moat that once held tigers and crocodiles.
His grandson Shah Jahan — the same emperor who built the Taj — tore down many of Akbar's severe sandstone halls and replaced them with delicate white marble pavilions: Diwan-i-Khas, Khas Mahal, and the extraordinary Sheesh Mahal (mirror hall) where 40,000 tiny mirrors reflect a single flame into a galaxy. The fort is thus two buildings in one — Akbar's imperial muscle beneath, Shah Jahan's poet-king aesthetic on top.
The Musamman Burj: a view that broke a man
In 1658, Shah Jahan's third son, Aurangzeb, imprisoned his own father inside the fort and seized the throne. For the last eight years of his life, the emperor who had built the Taj Mahal could only look at it — from the octagonal marble tower called the Musamman Burj. The tower is still there. Stand in it at sunrise and the Taj rises out of the river mist exactly as it did for Shah Jahan in 1658. Few views in India carry this much weight of story.
What to see inside — a two-hour route
- Amar Singh Gate — the only public entrance, designed to confuse invaders with a right-angle turn.
- Jahangiri Mahal — Akbar's palace for his Rajput queen Jodha Bai, with Hindu motifs carved alongside Islamic arches.
- Diwan-i-Aam (Hall of Public Audience) — where Shah Jahan's fabled Peacock Throne once stood (now in Iran as war loot).
- Sheesh Mahal — bring a phone torch; the mirror effect is magical.
- Musamman Burj and Shah Jahan's prison chamber — for the Taj view and the tragic finale.
Pair it with the rest of Uttar Pradesh's heritage
Agra is the Mughal chapter, but Uttar Pradesh also holds the Hindu and Buddhist ones. Three hours east by the Expressway is Varanasi — the oldest living city on earth — and its neighbour Sanchi, where the Buddha's relics sleep inside Ashoka's stupa. If you liked the Mughal vocabulary, continue south-west to Rajput Jaipur and west to Udaipur's lake palaces, where the same stonework traditions were reinterpreted by Rajput kings. See the full story at state of Uttar Pradesh or under the Heritage category.
“Agra Fort is the book in which the Mughals drafted the Taj Mahal.”
About the author
YatraJunction Editorial
Our editors are travellers, historians and food lovers who have collectively visited every state of India. Every guide is fact-checked, field-tested and updated with love.
Learn about usFrequently asked questions
- How far is Agra Fort from the Taj Mahal?
- Only 2.5 km — about a 10-minute rickshaw ride. Most visitors do both in a single day: Taj at sunrise (6–9 am), fort after breakfast (10 am–12 pm), Itmad-ud-Daulah (baby Taj) in the afternoon.
- Is Agra Fort included in the Taj Mahal ticket?
- No, they are separate tickets. The fort costs ₹50 for Indians and ₹650 for foreign nationals. Buy a combined Agra Heritage Pass at the Taj Mahal east gate to save ₹150.
- Can you see the Taj Mahal from Agra Fort?
- Yes, and it is one of the most moving views in India. The best vantage is the Musamman Burj or the Khas Mahal courtyard. Sunrise and sunset light the Taj in different colours.
















