top of page
Search

Pune to Trimbakeshwar Road Trip

  • Writer: Vihaan  Travel
    Vihaan Travel
  • Jun 17
  • 3 min read
Trimbakeshwar Jyotirlinga Temple
Trimbakeshwar Jyotirlinga Temple

There is something special about this road trip. You roll down the windows, let the breeze rush in, and watch the city slowly melt away into open roads and green hills. The drive from Pune to Trimbakeshwar is exactly that kind of trip that should be short enough to pull off in a day yet rich enough to stay with you long after you are back home.


Pune to Trimbakeshwar Distance


The distance from Pune to Trimbakeshwar is roughly 155 to 165 kilometers. Depending on your route, the weather, and how cooperative the traffic feels that day, you are looking at anywhere between 3.5 and 4.5 hours on the road.


Pune to Trimbakeshwar Route


The route most people take goes like this:


Pune → Nashik Highway (NH 60) → Igatpuri → Ghoti → Trimbak → Trimbakeshwar


Once you are on the Nashik highway, the road stays smooth and well-signed. The real magic kicks in after Igatpuri, where the road starts curving through the Sahyadri ghats. The air gets noticeably cooler, the trees close in, and you will find yourself slowing down not because you have to, but because you genuinely want to soak it in.


If you are heading out with friends or the whole family, many people find it easier to hire a Tata Winger on rent in Pune. Everyone stays together, the ghat driving feels far less stressful, and nobody has to play convoy coordinator on winding mountain roads.


Travelling between June and September means catching the Western Ghats at their most dramatic, with waterfalls spilling down hillsides, a soft mist hanging over everything, and scenery that makes you reach for your phone every five minutes. October through February has its own appeal too: crisp mornings, clear skies, and temperatures that make the drive genuinely comfortable.


What to Expect When You Arrive in Trimbakeshwar?


Trimbakeshwar is one of the twelve Jyotirlingas, so it carries serious religious significance. The temple is dedicated to Lord Shiva, and what sets it apart is its main idol has three faces representing Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva together. Pilgrims travel here from across Maharashtra and well beyond.


The temple opens early, and if you want to avoid long queues, aim to arrive before 9 AM. Dress modestly and shorts and sleeveless tops will not get you through the entrance. Photography inside the sanctum is not allowed, but the exterior stonework deserves a few quiet minutes of your attention.


The streets around the temple are at their most alive in the morning with flower sellers, priests, prasad stalls, and pilgrims filling the narrow lanes with that familiar, organized energy that feels very distinctly Indian.


A Few Things Worth Knowing Before You Leave


Leave early. Out of Pune by 6 AM means minimal traffic and a late-morning arrival, leaving the rest of the day free to explore at your own pace.


Monsoon driving near Igatpuri and Trimbak deserves extra caution as roads get slick and visibility can drop suddenly in heavy rain. Google Maps works well on this route, but download offline maps for the Trimbak area just to be safe. Signal can get patchy in the hills.


For groups of 10 to 15 people, booking a Tempo Traveller on rent in Pune simply makes sense. No convoy stress, luggage fits comfortably, and everyone arrives together, which matters more than people realize on a pilgrimage trip.


Final Thoughts


The Pune to Trimbakeshwar drive gives you more than you expect. It is not purely about reaching the temple but it is the ghats, the cooler air, the small towns you pass through, and that quiet sense of stepping outside your everyday life for a few hours. Whether you're going for the spiritual experience or just want a solid excuse for a good drive, this route delivers on both counts.


And if you are organizing something bigger like an office trip, a temple yatra, or a community pilgrimage a 40 Seater Bus Rental in Pune is worth looking into. It keeps the whole group together, brings the per-person cost down, and takes the logistical headache entirely off your hands.




 
 
 

Comments


bottom of page