Whether it's your first time or your fifth β this is the exact 3-day Goa plan that covers beaches, heritage, nightlife, food, and hidden gems. No filler. Just the best of Goa in 72 hours.
Three days in Goa is the sweet spot. Enough time to cover North Goa's beaches, Old Goa's heritage, one night market or beach party, and still feel like you actually lived there β not just passed through. More than 5 days and Goa starts to repeat itself. Less than 3 and you'll leave with a list of regrets.
Calangute Β· Baga Β· Anjuna Β· Vagator Β· Sunset at Chapora Fort
Arrive at Goa airport or Madgaon station. Head straight to your accommodation in North Goa. Rent a scooter (βΉ300/day) β this is non-negotiable for Day 1. It's the only way to hop between beaches efficiently.
Goa's most famous beach. Busy, vibrant, and the best place to get the classic Goa feel. Don't stay long β it gets crowded by 11 AM. Walk the shore, take photos, grab a coconut (βΉ30) and move on.
5 min ride from Calangute. More vibrant energy β beach shacks, parasailing, banana boat. If you want to try water sports, this is the place. Parasailing βΉ600, banana boat βΉ300 per person. Skip if on budget.
If it's Wednesday β Anjuna Flea Market is on. Wander through 200+ stalls selling jewelry, clothing, antiques. Best street food here β grilled corn, falafels, Tibetan momos. Budget βΉ150β250 for lunch.
The most photogenic beach in North Goa. Red laterite cliffs, turquoise water, and far fewer tourists than Baga. Walk down the cliff path to Little Vagator β it's a hidden pocket beach that most tourists miss.
10 min from Vagator. This is the Dil Chahta Hai fort β and the sunset from here is genuinely one of the best views in India. Free entry. Arrive 30 mins before sunset to get a good spot on the ramparts.
Tito's Lane for the full Goa night experience. Or pick a quieter beach shack at Anjuna β live acoustic music, seafood, cold beer. Goa fish curry rice at a local joint = βΉ150. At a shack = βΉ350+.
Old Goa Churches Β· Panjim Β· Palolem Beach Β· Saturday Night Market
Basilica of Bom Jesus (holds St. Francis Xavier's remains), SΓ© Cathedral (largest church in Asia), and Church of St. Cajetan. All within 10 min walk of each other. Entry free. Spend 1.5β2 hours here β it's genuinely humbling architecture.
Goa's old Portuguese quarter β narrow lanes, colorful houses, tiny art galleries and coffee shops. Walk the streets for 45 minutes. Most Instagrammed street in Goa for good reason. Free to explore.
1.5 hr drive south β worth every minute. Palolem is a crescent-shaped paradise beach with calm water, colorful boat-shaped beach huts, and a completely different vibe from North Goa. Have fresh seafood lunch here (βΉ250β400).
Butterfly Beach is 20 mins by boat from Palolem (βΉ400 round trip shared). Only accessible by boat or a tough trek β worth it for the isolation. Alternatively, Agonda beach is 10 min north of Palolem β quieter, turtle nesting site.
If it's Saturday β Arpora Night Market is mandatory. 300+ stalls, international food, live bands, Russian and Israeli expat community, great energy. Budget βΉ200β400 for food and drinks. Worth staying till 11 PM.
Arambol Β· Dudhsagar OR Spice Plantation Β· Morjim Sunset Β· Departure
Two options based on your vibe β choose one:
Option A: Dudhsagar Waterfall β Book a shared jeep tour (βΉ600β700). Start by 7 AM. 310m waterfall in the jungle. Back by 3 PM. Best natural experience in Goa.
Option B: Spice Plantation Tour β Drive to Ponda (45 min). Sahakari or Tropical Spice Plantation tour + lunch (βΉ600β800). Walk through cardamom, vanilla, pepper, and cashew plantations. Totally different side of Goa.
If not going Dudhsagar, spend the afternoon at Arambol β the northernmost beach, least touristy, best community. Walk to Arambol Sweet Lake (15 min from beach) β a freshwater lake next to the ocean. Bizarre and beautiful.
The quietest, cleanest beaches in North Goa. No hawkers, no music β just golden light on the Arabian Sea. Perfect last memory of Goa. Sit with a coconut and watch the sun go down.
Final Goa meal β Goan fish curry + sol kadi + prawn rawa fry at a local restaurant near your hotel. Head to airport/station for late night departure. Flights and buses from Goa operate through the night.
| Category | Budget Option | Mid-Range Option |
|---|---|---|
| π Stay (2 nights) | βΉ800β1,200 (hostel dorm) | βΉ3,000β6,000 (hotel) |
| π΅ Scooter (3 days) | βΉ900 (βΉ300/day) | βΉ900 (same) |
| β½ Fuel | βΉ200 | βΉ200 |
| π½οΈ Food (3 days) | βΉ900 (dhabas) | βΉ2,400 (shacks + restaurants) |
| π― Activities | βΉ700 (Dudhsagar only) | βΉ2,000 (water sports + spice plantation) |
| ποΈ Shopping + misc | βΉ300 | βΉ1,000 |
| Total (excl. travel) | βΉ3,800β4,300 | βΉ9,500β12,500 |
Goa beaches fill up fast. Early morning is magical β soft light, fewer crowds, best photos. Leave by 11 AM and explore inland until 4 PM, then return for sunset.
Taxis are 4β5x more expensive. A scooter gives you freedom to stop anywhere. Carry your license (or international permit if needed). Most rental shops don't check β but traffic police do.
Red flag = no swimming. Yellow = caution. Green = safe. Goa currents are unpredictable, especially NovβFeb. Stick to guarded stretches at Calangute and Baga.
Network drops in North Goa's interiors, near Dudhsagar, and in South Goa jungles. Download Google Maps offline for the entire Goa region before leaving home.
Goa has some of India's cheapest alcohol. Buy beer at a Maya supermarket or liquor shop (Kingfisher βΉ60β80) vs a beach shack (βΉ200β250). Same beer, massive saving over 3 days.
You'll be on a scooter most of the day. A small backpack beats a suitcase. Pack 2 sets of beach wear, one evening outfit, sunscreen, and a waterproof bag for your phone near water.
My first 3-day Goa trip, I made every classic mistake β stayed near Mall Road, took taxis everywhere, and never left North Goa. I saw four beaches and called it done. I spent βΉ14,000 and felt slightly cheated.
The second time I went with this exact itinerary. I rented a scooter on Day 1 and rode to Chapora Fort twenty minutes before sunset. Standing on those 16th century Portuguese walls, watching the sun melt into the Arabian Sea with the river curving below β that was the moment Goa finally clicked for me.
Day 2, Fontainhas was the surprise. A 45-minute walk through yellow and blue Portuguese houses, tiny cafes selling bebinca (Goan sweet), and streets so narrow that two scooters can't pass each other. No entry ticket. No crowds. Just Goa's real identity β layered, colonial, quietly stunning.
Palolem on the same afternoon felt like a completely different country from Baga. Calm waves, crescent-shaped bay, a silence that North Goa doesn't offer. If you only have 3 days β make the drive south. You won't regret it.
Three days in Goa, done right, is not about ticking beaches off a list. It's about riding through a coconut tree corridor at 7 AM with the whole day ahead of you and no fixed plan beyond the next beach. That feeling is what Goa actually is.