Select the airport to view offers for Cheap flights to India
- Aberdeen
- Belfast City
- Belfast Int'l
- Birmingham Int'l
- Bristol
- Cardiff
- Dublin
- East Midlands
- Edinburgh
- Glasgow Int
- Humberside
- Jersey
- Leeds / Bradford
- Liverpool
- London City
- London Gatwick
- London Heathrow
- London Stansted
- Manchester
- Newcastle
- Norwich
- Teesside
Airports in India
- Ahmedabad ( AMD )
- Bangalore ( BLR )
- Calcutta ( CCU )
- Cochin ( COK )
- Delhi ( DEL )
- Goa ( GOI )
- Hyderabad ( HYD )
- Jaipur ( JAI )
- Madras ( MAA )
- Mumbai ( BOM )
- Nagpur ( NAG )
- Trivandrum ( TRV )
- Pune ( PNQ )
- Bhopal ( BHO )
- Guwahati ( GAU )
India is the largest country in the Indian Subcontinent and shares borders with Pakistan to the west, China and Nepal to the north, Bhutan to the north-east, and Bangladesh and Myanmar to the east. Sri Lanka, the Maldives and Indonesia lie to the south-east in the Indian Ocean. It is the seventh largest country in the world by area and, with over a billion people, is second only to China in population. It’s an extremely diverse country, with vast differences in geography, climate, culture, language and ethnicity across its expanse, and prides itself on being the largest democracy on Earth.
India is administratively divided into 28 states and 7 union territories. The states are broadly demarcated on linguistic lines. They vary in size; the larger ones are bigger and more diverse than some countries of Europe. The union territories are smaller than the states—sometimes they are just one city—and they have much less autonomy. In India, it rains only during a specific time of the year. The season as well as the phenomenon that causes it is called the monsoon. There are two of them, the Southwest and the Northeast, both named after the directions the winds come from. The Southwest monsoon is the more important one, as it causes rains over most parts of the country, and is the crucial variable that decides how the crops (and therefore the economy) will do. It lasts from June to September. It hits the west coast the most, as crossing the western ghats and reaching the rest of India is an uphill task for the winds. The western coastline is therefore much greener than the interior. The Northeast monsoon hits the east coast between October and February, mostly in the form of occasional cyclones which cause much devastation every year. The only region that gets rains from both monsoons is Northeastern India, which consequently experiences the highest rainfall in the world.

