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Amar Singh Gate, Agra Fort — the red sandstone southern entrance gate to the Mughal fortress.
Photo: ASaber91 / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 4.0
UNESCO World Heritage Site

Agra Fort

Également Connu Sous: Lal Qila Agra · आगरा का लाल किला

Agra, Uttar Pradesh · fort

Akbar's 16th-century red sandstone fortress-city — the seat of Mughal power for three generations and the site of Shah Jahan's gilded imprisonment.

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Agra Fort is the mightiest Mughal fortification in northern India and one of Agra's three UNESCO World Heritage Sites alongside the Taj Mahal and Fatehpur Sikri. Construction began under Emperor Akbar in 1565 on the site of an older Lodi fort; successive emperors Jahangir and Shah Jahan added palaces of increasing opulence, creating a compound that chronicles the full arc of Mughal imperial taste — from Akbar's robust red sandstone work to Shah Jahan's delicate white marble inlaid with lapis lazuli and cornelian.

The 94-acre enclosure contains some of the finest Mughal architecture outside the Taj Mahal. Diwan-i-Am (Hall of Public Audience) is where the emperor received petitions from an elaborately carved white marble throne. Diwan-i-Khas (Hall of Private Audience) features columns of exceptional carved refinement. Khas Mahal are Shah Jahan's private apartments. Jahangiri Mahal is a palace built in the Hindu style for Akbar's Rajput queens. Most poignant of all is Musamman Burj — the octagonal marble tower from whose balcony the imprisoned Shah Jahan, deposed by his son Aurangzeb in 1658, gazed toward the Taj Mahal and the tomb of Mumtaz Mahal until his death in 1666.

For vegetarian travellers the fort area is well served. Kinari Bazaar, a five-minute walk from the Amar Singh Gate, is lined with petha shops and traditional namkeen stalls — Panchi Petha and Bhikharam Chandmal both have counters nearby. Agra Fort Railway Station sits directly adjacent to the complex, making it ideal as a first stop on an Agra day-trip: arrive from Delhi's Hazrat Nizamuddin on the Gatimaan Express, spend three hours at the fort, then continue to the Taj for sunset. Official ASI-licensed guides at the entrance (₹500–700 for two hours) add enormous historical depth to the visit.

Planifiez Votre Voyage

Heures de Visite

  • 6:00 AM to 6:00 PM (gates close at sunset)
  • Last entry 5:00 PM
Jours d'Ouverture:Saturday to Thursday (closed Fridays)Jour de Fermeture:FridayMeilleure Saison:October to March (cool, dry weather; the open ramparts are punishing in summer)Meilleur Moment:Opening at 6:00 AM for cool air and zero crowds; second-best is 4:00 PM for warm light on the sandstoneTemps Nécessaire:2 to 3 hours (longer with a guide for the palaces and Musamman Burj)Affluence:Light at opening; heavy 9:00 AM – 1:00 PM when Taj Mahal day-tour buses arrive. Weekends and Indian school holidays are very busy.

Droit d'entrée: Foreigners ₹650, Indian nationals ₹50. Children under 15 free. Composite ticket with Taj Mahal saves ₹50 if visited the same day. Tickets online at asi.payumoney.com.

Guide d'Itinéraire

🚇 Métro le Plus Proche: Agra Fort Metro Station (Agra Metro Yellow Line, opened 2024) — 600 m walk to the Amar Singh Gate

🚶 À Pied du Métro: From Agra Fort Metro Station, walk south 600 m along the marked pedestrian route to the Amar Singh Gate. Path is flat and signposted.

Stationnement

on-site · ₹50–₹100

Designated parking lot opposite the Amar Singh Gate; gets full by 10 AM on weekends. Battery rickshaws (₹20/person) shuttle from the parking lot to the gate.

🚕 Conseil Taxi: Uber and Ola drop directly at the Amar Singh Gate parking. Auto-rickshaw from Agra Cantt Station is ₹80–120 (15 min); from Taj Mahal South Gate ₹60–80 (10 min).

Comment s'y rendre: Agra Fort Railway Station is directly adjacent — the easiest approach. From Agra Cantonment Station, take auto-rickshaw (₹80–120, 15 minutes). From Taj Mahal South Gate, it is a 2 km ride (₹60–80 by auto). Prepaid taxi from Agra Cantonment costs ₹150–200.

Famille et Accessibilité
Adapté aux Enfants:4/5Accès Poussette:PartielAccès Fauteuil Roulant:PartielTable à Langer:NonAnimaux:Non

Atouts Famille

  • Vast open courtyards safe for children to walk
  • Wheelchairs available at the gate (deposit ID); steep ramps in the upper palaces are challenging
  • Audio guide in English and Hindi (₹118) — kids enjoy the Shah Jahan imprisonment story
  • Indian-style washrooms at the entrance; cleaner facilities at nearby hotels
Protocole Culturel

À Faire

  • Arrive at 6:00 AM opening — golden hour light on red sandstone is spectacular and the fort is empty
  • Hire an ASI-licensed guide (₹500–700 for 2 hours) — the palaces make little sense without context
  • Carry a refillable water bottle — there are no reliable refill stations inside
  • Wear closed-toe walking shoes — the cobbled ramps are uneven and slippery in the rain
  • Combine with the Taj Mahal as a same-day visit — the composite ticket saves ₹50

À Éviter

  • Do not bring food, large bags, drones, or tripods — they will be confiscated at security
  • Do not climb on the parapet walls or carve graffiti — fines are enforced and there are CCTV cameras
  • Do not engage with unauthorised guides outside the gate — only ASI photo-ID guides are legitimate
  • Do not skip Musamman Burj — it is the most historically significant spot in the entire fort
  • Do not visit on Friday — the fort is closed and the wasted trip is a common mistake

👕 Code Vestimentaire: No formal dress code, but modest dress is recommended. Comfortable walking clothes and closed shoes are practical for the long ramps and courtyards.

📷 Règles Photo: Personal phones and DSLRs are free to use throughout. Tripods, gimbals, and professional shoots require a ₹2,500/day ASI permit. Drones are strictly prohibited.

Alerte aux Arnaques

The Fake "Government Guide"

A man in a vaguely official-looking shirt approaches at the gate, claims to be a "government guide," quotes ₹500, then demands ₹2,000+ at the end with hard-sell tactics.

Conseil Officiel: Real ASI guides wear a photo ID badge and are listed at the ticket counter. Always agree on price in writing and pay only at the end.

The "Closed Today" Auto Diversion

Auto-rickshaw drivers near Agra Cantt Station claim Agra Fort is "closed today" and offer to take you to a marble emporium instead, where they earn commission.

Conseil Officiel: Agra Fort is closed only on Fridays. Verify on asi.nic.in and insist on the Amar Singh Gate. Use Uber/Ola if the auto driver refuses.

Parcours Gourmand

Panchi Petha (Kinari Bazaar)

0.5 km
sweet shop

Original kesar petha and dalmoth — Agra's most trusted 150-year-old sweet shop

Bhikharam Chandmal

0.5 km
sweet shop

Sohan halwa and traditional namkeen — Kinari Bazaar institution

Ram Babu Paratha Bhandar

1.5 km
casual

Ghee paratha with dal makhani and aloo sabzi — old-city legend

Mama Chicken Mama Franky House (veg counter)

1.2 km
street food

Veg franky and paneer rolls (the veg counter is separate from the meat side)

Sites Touristiques à Proximité

Taj Mahal

2.5 km

Shah Jahan's marble masterpiece — visible from Musamman Burj inside the fort.

Jama Masjid (Agra)

0.4 km

17th-century red-sandstone Mughal mosque built by Jahanara Begum, opposite the fort's Delhi Gate.

Itmad-ud-Daulah ("Baby Taj")

4.5 km

1628 marble jewel-box tomb — the architectural rehearsal for the Taj Mahal.

Mehtab Bagh

4 km

The "Moonlight Garden" across the Yamuna — canonical sunset view of the Taj.

Toilettes et Hygiène
Toilettes et Hygiène:CorrectAccès Fauteuil Roulant:OuiTable à Langer:Non

Astuce Pro: Cleanest washrooms are at the entrance complex near the ticket counter — 🟡 average. There are no facilities inside the fort itself, so use them before entering.

Paiement et Connectivité
UPI:OuiCartes:PartielEspèces:OuiSignal Mobile:Élevé

🏧 Distributeur le Plus Proche: SBI ATM at Agra Fort Railway Station (300 m); HDFC and ICICI ATMs in Kinari Bazaar (500 m).

📡 Wi-Fi Public: No public Wi-Fi inside the fort. Jio and Airtel both work well.

🔌 Points de Charge: No public charging points. Bring a power bank (under 10000 mAh — larger banks are confiscated at security).

Photographie et Drone
Politique Drone:Interdit

💰 Frais d'Équipement: Free for personal phones and handheld cameras. Tripods, gimbals, and professional shoots require a ₹2,500/day ASI permit.

📍 Meilleur Spot Photo: The view of the Taj Mahal from Musamman Burj at sunrise — Shah Jahan's last view, framed by the marble jali screens.

🌅 Meilleure Lumière: 6:00 AM – 7:30 AM for golden light on the red sandstone; 4:30 PM – 5:30 PM for warm afternoon tones

Shopping et Souvenirs

Quoi Acheter

  • Sealed boxes of Panchi Petha and Bhikharam Chandmal sweets from Kinari Bazaar
  • Marble inlay coasters from government-certified workshops (verify the GI tag)
  • Leather goods from Sadar Bazaar (Agra is the leather capital of North India)

Quoi Éviter

  • Marble miniatures from gate-side touts — almost always plaster, not marble
  • "Antique" Mughal coins — none are genuine
  • Pashmina shawls hawked outside the gate

Marchandage: Oui

Urgence et Santé

Numéros d'Urgence

👮 Police Touristique: Tourist Police booth at Amar Singh Gate — multilingual staff, 24×7

🎒 Objets Trouvés: Report at the Tourist Police booth at Amar Singh Gate. Lost passports also need a report at Agra City Police Station, MG Road (3 km).

💊 Pharmacie la Plus Proche: Apollo Pharmacy on MG Road (2 km, open till 11:00 PM); 24×7 chemist at SR Hospital (3 km).

Qualité de l'Air: Agra's AQI is "Poor to Very Poor" from late October to early February. Carry an N95 mask if asthmatic.

Sécurité de l'Eau: Drink only sealed bottled water. There are no refill stations inside the fort — carry your own.

Astuces d'Initiés

🌅 Vue Secrète: Walk to the upper terrace of Khas Mahal at 5 PM — the Yamuna and Taj Mahal align in the distance and most tour groups have already left.

🎯 Astuce Anti-Foule: Tour buses from Delhi arrive 9:00–10:00 AM. Visit at 6:00 AM opening or after 4:00 PM to have the palaces nearly to yourself.

💎 Fait Curieux: Only about 25% of the fort complex is open to the public — the remaining 75% is still under Indian Army occupation as a strategic cantonment, just as it was under the British and the Mughals.

Visite Express

90 minutes — Amar Singh Gate, Diwan-i-Am, Diwan-i-Khas, Musamman Burj, exit. Skip Jahangiri Mahal.

🔭 Visite Approfondie

Half day — 6 AM Agra Fort opening, 9 AM breakfast at Ram Babu Paratha Bhandar, then continue to Itmad-ud-Daulah and Mehtab Bagh for sunset.

Chronique

Histoire

Agra Fort was constructed by Emperor Akbar between 1565 and 1573 on the site of an earlier Lodi-era fort he had captured. Akbar relocated the Mughal capital from Delhi to Agra and built the fort as both military stronghold and imperial residence. His grandson Shah Jahan transformed much of the interior in the mid-17th century, demolishing several of Akbar's red sandstone palaces to build the white marble Khas Mahal, Diwan-i-Khas, and Musamman Burj for himself and Mumtaz Mahal. After Shah Jahan was deposed by his son Aurangzeb in 1658, he was imprisoned in the fort's Musamman Burj for the last eight years of his life, gazing across the Yamuna at the Taj Mahal he had built for Mumtaz. The fort later passed to the Marathas, the Jats, and finally the British East India Company in 1803, who used it as a military base and continue to occupy three-quarters of its area as an Indian Army cantonment to this day.

🏛️ Architecte: Akbar's court architects directed the original 1565–73 red sandstone construction in a robust Indo-Islamic style, while Shah Jahan's additions a century later — Khas Mahal, Diwan-i-Khas, and the Musamman Burj — were executed in white marble with pietra dura inlay by the same workshops then building the Taj Mahal nearby.

Importance

Designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1983, Agra Fort is one of the finest examples of Mughal military and palace architecture and chronicles in stone the artistic evolution of three emperors — Akbar, Jahangir, and Shah Jahan. Its strategic Yamuna-side location made it the political nerve-centre of the Mughal Empire for over a century. The fort's emotional weight derives from Musamman Burj, where the deposed Shah Jahan spent his final years gazing at his masterpiece across the river — a tableau central to the Mughal historical imagination in India and beyond.

Catégories

Patrimoine et Culture

Étiquettes

Site UNESCOArchitecture AncienneSite EmblématiqueSpot PhotoEntrée PayanteFamilialPrès du MétroParking DisponiblePoint Lever du SoleilÉducatif
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