India is home to more wild Asian elephants than any other country on earth. Roughly 60 percent of the world’s Asian elephant population walks its forests – from the grasslands of Kaziranga in the northeast to the tea country of Kerala in the south. For anyone who wants to see wild Asian elephants in their native range, India is the best country to do it.
There are around 27,000 wild elephants in India, spread across 32 designated Elephant Reserves. The best places to see them are Kaziranga National Park (Assam), Periyar (Kerala), Nagarhole and Bandipur (Karnataka), Mudumalai (Tamil Nadu), Jim Corbett (Uttarakhand), and Wayanad (Kerala). Sightings are most reliable between October and June, outside the monsoon, and elephants should always be observed on jeep or boat safaris – not at rides or temple performances.
This guide covers the best national parks and wildlife reserves for seeing elephants in India, when to visit each one, what to expect, and how to avoid the unethical tourist traps that still exist around elephant rides, temple elephants, and overcrowded camps.