Celebrate Your Anniversary in Goa, India
Goa, India is the kind of destination that makes an anniversary feel like falling in love all over again. Goa is India's most visited beach destination — a former Portuguese colony where European colonial heritage has blended with Hindu culture, Konkani cuisine, and a beach party scene to create something distinctly Goan. The palm-lined beaches, spice farms, and laid-back lifestyle draw visitors year after year.
Goa is India's contradiction resolved — Portuguese colonial churches beside Hindu temples, beach party culture beside sunrise yoga, spice plantations and seafood feasts.
Whether you're celebrating your first, fifth, tenth, or twenty-fifth anniversary, The Wedding Unicorn plans Goa, India anniversary trips that honor the milestone. We arrange vow renewal options where desired, surprise room setups, private dining experiences, and excursions that feel special rather than touristy.
Goa, India offers Portuguese colonial heritage, beach parties, spice plantations, cashew feni, yoga — a combination that creates genuine memories. Best time to visit: November–February. The Wedding Unicorn handles all logistics so you arrive at Goa, India with nothing to do but celebrate.
- Best time to visit: November–February
- 17 hours (via Dubai) from New York City
- Language: Konkani / Hindi / English / Portuguese
- Visa: E-visa required (~$25)
- Currency: Indian Rupee
- Vow renewal ceremony coordination (optional)
- Anniversary suite setup and amenities
- Private dining arrangements
- Surprise and special occasion coordination
- Luxury upgrade negotiations
7 Nights in Goa — Portuguese Spice, Arabian Sea Sunsets & Jungle Waterfalls
Baroque cathedrals, spice plantation lunches, and the most forgiving beach culture in India
Goa is unique in India — 451 years of Portuguese colonial rule created a culture distinct from anything else on the subcontinent: Catholic churches in the jungle, a cuisine that mixes Indian spice with Portuguese technique, colonial-era mansions in towns that feel like the Alentejo transplanted to the tropics, and beaches that combine Indian Ocean warmth with a beach culture more relaxed and welcoming than anywhere else in India. The specific pleasure of Goa is the combination of all of this in a small, beautiful space. For honeymooners, Goa offers a complete package: the luxury resort beaches of the north (Calangute, Baga, Sinquerim) contrast with the quieter, more bohemian south (Palolem, Agonda, Cola), and the interior villages and Old Goa churches give the trip cultural depth. A cooking class in a Goan home, a spice plantation tour, and a sunset cruise on the Mandovi River round out a week that is simultaneously relaxing and genuinely interesting.
1Arrival — Old Goa's Baroque Churches & First Feni Sunset
Goa International Airport at Dabolim is 30km from most resort areas. Before checking into your beach hotel, make a detour to Old Goa — the former Portuguese capital, 9km east of Panaji, which contains the greatest concentration of baroque churches in Asia. The Basilica of Bom Jesus (1605) contains the incorrupt body of St. Francis Xavier in a silver casket in a jasper tomb — one of Catholicism's most important relics. The Se Cathedral, the largest church in India, has an extraordinary gilded interior and the Golden Bell, the finest in Asia. These churches are UNESCO World Heritage Sites and genuinely magnificent: Baroque architecture transplanted to the tropics, with the jungle pressing up against the white-painted facades. Check into your resort and find a beach-facing table at sunset for your first feni (Goa's local cashew or coconut spirit, the correct introduction) with fresh lime.
- ✦ Basilica of Bom Jesus — St. Francis Xavier's incorrupt body in silver
- ✦ Se Cathedral — the largest church in India
- ✦ Old Goa UNESCO Baroque churches in the jungle
- ✦ First feni sunset cocktail on the beach
2Spice Plantation Tour & Panjim's Latin Quarter
A morning at one of Goa's spice plantations (Sahakari Spice Farm or Tropical Spice Plantation near Ponda) is one of the territory's essential experiences: a guided walk through coconut palms, areca nut trees, pepper vines, cardamom, vanilla orchids, and cinnamon to see the full spice range that made Goa so valuable to the Portuguese. An Ayurvedic elephant bath is usually included, and the three-course Goan lunch served on banana leaves after the tour is always extraordinary. Afternoon in Panjim (Panaji) — Goa's capital, a pleasant riverside town with a beautifully preserved Latin Quarter (Fontainhas) of Portuguese-era houses painted in yellow, ochre, and terracotta, with cast-iron balconies and tiled facades. The Mahalaxmi Art Complex and the old Secretariat building. Evening boat cruise on the Mandovi River with Goan music.
- ✦ Spice plantation tour and Ayurvedic elephant bath
- ✦ Goan banana leaf lunch at the plantation
- ✦ Panjim Fontainhas Latin Quarter — Portuguese townhouses in terracotta
- ✦ Mandovi River sunset cruise with Konkani folk music
3North Goa Beaches — Anjuna, Vagator & the Flea Market
North Goa's beaches are livelier and more developed than the south, with the famous beach party scene of Anjuna and the dramatic red laterite cliffs of Vagator. The Anjuna Wednesday Flea Market is one of India's most celebrated markets: 2,000 stalls of Rajasthani textiles, Tibetan jewelry, Kashmiri shawls, Goan spices, and artisan clothing in a beachside palm grove. The hilltop Chapora Fort above Vagator beach (made famous by the Bollywood film Dil Chahta Hai) has the best panoramic view of the north Goa coastline. The beaches of Vagator and Little Vagator — curved bays below the red laterite cliffs — are significantly less crowded and more dramatic than the main Calangute and Baga beaches. Dinner at Thalassa Greek restaurant on Vagator Hill — improbably excellent Greek food with Arabian Sea sunset views.
- ✦ Anjuna Wednesday Flea Market — 2,000 stalls in a beach palm grove
- ✦ Chapora Fort hilltop panorama over North Goa
- ✦ Vagator and Little Vagator — dramatic red-cliff bays
- ✦ Thalassa Greek restaurant — sunset views over the Arabian Sea
4South Goa — Palolem, Agonda & Quiet Beauty
Drive south from Panjim to South Goa — a completely different atmosphere from the developed north: quieter, less built-up, and with some of the most beautiful beaches in India. Palolem Beach is a perfect crescent of white sand in a sheltered bay between two headlands — palm-thatched beach huts at the back, calm turquoise water, and a series of islands visible offshore. The beach is home to a colony of spinner dolphins that can often be seen in the morning from shore. Agonda Beach, 10km north of Palolem, is even quieter — a long empty strand backed by jungle where Olive Ridley sea turtles nest between November and March. Cola Beach, accessible by a short walk through the jungle from a parking area, has a freshwater lagoon separated from the Arabian Sea by a sandbar — one of the most dramatic beach formations in India. Lunch at one of the Palolem beach hut restaurants: catch of the day grilled with recheado masala.
- ✦ Palolem Beach — a perfect crescent bay with spinner dolphins offshore
- ✦ Agonda Beach — empty jungle-backed strand with turtle nesting
- ✦ Cola Beach freshwater lagoon separated from the sea by a sandbar
- ✦ Recheado masala fish at a Palolem beach hut restaurant
5Dudhsagar Waterfall & the Goan Interior
Dudhsagar Falls ("Sea of Milk") on the Goa-Karnataka border is India's fifth tallest waterfall — a four-tiered cascade of white water dropping 310 meters from the Western Ghats, visible from the Goa-Bangalore railway line where the train passes on an old Portuguese viaduct directly beside the falls. Jeep tours run daily from Mollem National Park in the Goan interior; the jeep ride through the forest to the falls takes 30 minutes on forest tracks. Swimming in the plunge pool at the base of the falls, surrounded by tropical forest, is an extraordinary experience. The route passes through the Mollem National Park where gaur (Indian bison), sambar deer, and occasionally leopard are seen. Return via the Ponda temple complex — Goa's most important Hindu temples, built after the Portuguese expelled Hindu worship from coastal areas, cluster in a small area around Ponda with richly decorated interiors.
- ✦ Dudhsagar Falls — 310-meter cascade, India's fifth tallest
- ✦ Swimming in the jungle plunge pool at the waterfall base
- ✦ Mollem National Park — gaur, deer, and possible leopard sightings
- ✦ Ponda Hindu temple complex — Goa's most important temples
6Goan Cooking Class & the Beach at Leisure
A morning cooking class in a Goan home or at one of the established cooking schools is one of the most enjoyable experiences in Goa — the cuisine is unlike any other in India, combining coconut milk, tamarind, vinegar, and a specific blend of spices (the recheado paste, the xacuti masala) with fish, pork, and rice preparations that reflect both Indian and Portuguese influences. Make prawn balchao (a spicy pickle-preserved prawn dish that keeps for months), chicken cafreal (Portuguese-influenced green herb marinade), and bebinca (the 7-layer Goan coconut milk cake that requires extraordinary patience to prepare). The afternoon belongs to the beach — sunbed, cocktail, Arabian Sea. An evening shack dinner with fresh pomfret and kingfish grilled over coals, Kingfisher beer, and a Goan sunset as unhurried as any in the world.
- ✦ Goan cooking class — prawn balchao, chicken cafreal, bebinca
- ✦ Afternoon beach leisure with fresh coconut water
- ✦ Beach shack dinner — grilled pomfret and kingfish over coals
- ✦ Goan sunset over the Arabian Sea
7Final Morning & Departure
Goa International Airport (GOI) is 30-60 minutes from most beach areas depending on traffic. A final morning might include one more swim, a last kingfish curry at a beach shack, or a browse through the local cashew nut vendors — Goan cashews are the finest in India, roasted in clay pots over wood fire and sold everywhere. Take home Goa sausages (chouriço, the Portuguese-influenced pork sausage cured in vinegar and spices), a bottle of Port wine from Goa's own production, and a bag of the recheado masala paste that will recreate Goan evenings in your own kitchen. Goa is one of those places that attracts repeat visitors because it manages to be simultaneously Indian and entirely unlike the rest of India — and the combination is impossible to resist.
- ✦ Final beach swim and kingfish curry at a beach shack
- ✦ Goan cashews, chouriço sausage, and recheado masala to take home
- ✦ Transfer to Goa International Airport GOI
Where to Stay
The finest resort hotel in Goa on a private stretch of Benaulim beach, with spacious rooms in Portuguese-colonial style, a pool facing the Arabian Sea, and the most accomplished Goan restaurant of any hotel in the territory.
A beautifully designed boutique hotel in a Portuguese colonial building in North Goa, with a pool in a tropical garden, near the Wednesday flea market and the Vagator clifftop restaurants.
A collection of private houses on the Cola lagoon — essentially a private estate rental, with a freshwater lagoon separated from the Arabian Sea by a sandbar and complete privacy in one of the most extraordinary beach settings in India.
This is a sample — your actual itinerary is fully custom.
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