A fortress older than the tigers: Ranthambore’s 1,000-year story
Ranthambore Fort was built in 944 CE by the Chahamana dynasty and was considered so impregnable that it changed hands only through treachery, never siege. Prithviraj III held it against Muhammad of Ghor; Alauddin Khalji took it in 1301 through a prolonged blockade that ended in jauhar — the mass self-immolation of Rajput women. The Mughals prized it as a hunting ground: Akbar shot tigers here, and the crumbling chhatris (cenotaphs) of Rajput nobles still stand between the lake and the fort walls. When Project Tiger declared Ranthambore a tiger reserve in 1973, the fort became the only medieval citadel in the world where big cats sleep on the ramparts.
Machli: the queen of Ranthambore
Tigress T-16 Machli (1997–2016) was the most photographed wild tiger in history. She once killed a 14-foot crocodile in a fight witnessed by a busload of tourists. She raised 11 cubs — four litters — and her descendants now account for roughly half the tiger population of Ranthambore. National Geographic, BBC and Discovery all filmed her. When she died at 19 (ancient for a wild tiger), the forest department gave her a state funeral with Vedic rites. Her legacy is the reason Ranthambore’s tiger-sighting odds — roughly 40–60% per safari — are the highest in India.
How a safari works
- The park is divided into 10 zones. Zones 1–5 are the "premium" zones with the best tiger density; zones 6–10 are buffer zones with more birdlife and leopard sightings.
- Safaris run twice daily: morning (6:00–10:00 AM, Oct–Mar) and afternoon (2:30–6:00 PM). Book on the official rajasthanwildlife.in portal 90 days in advance — premium zones sell out fast.
- Choose a Canter (20-seat open bus, ₹800) for budget or a Gypsy (6-seat jeep, ₹2,500) for a quieter, closer experience.
- Besides tigers, look for leopards, sloth bears, sambar deer, marsh crocodiles and over 270 bird species including Indian Grey Hornbill and Bonelli’s Eagle.
India’s tiger trail
Ranthambore is one leg of India’s great tiger circuit. Jim Corbett in Uttarakhand is the oldest national park. Kaziranga in Assam combines tigers with one-horned rhinos. Gir in Gujarat is the last home of the Asiatic lion. Thread Ranthambore with the palaces of Jaipur (3 hours) and the textile villages of Kutch for a Rajasthan-Gujarat wildlife-and-culture arc. See all Wildlife destinations.
“In Ranthambore, the fort belongs to the tigers. We are the guests.”
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
- What are the chances of seeing a tiger in Ranthambore?
- Roughly 40–60% per individual safari in the premium zones (1–5). Over a 2-day trip (4 safaris), most visitors see at least one tiger. Winter mornings (November–February) offer the best odds as tigers come to the lakes to drink.
- When is Ranthambore open?
- October 1 to June 30. The park closes during the monsoon (July–September). Best months: November to February (cool, tigers active near water). March–May is hot but has the highest sighting rates as vegetation thins.
- How do I get to Ranthambore?
- The nearest station is Sawai Madhopur, connected by direct trains from Delhi (5 hours), Jaipur (2.5 hours) and Mumbai (12 hours). Most hotels arrange pickups from the station. The park gate is 10 km from town.






















