Before you ring someone's doorbell and call it a holiday — here is everything you need to know to stay well, travel light, and leave a good impression.
A homestay puts you inside a family's life — not just near it. You sleep where they sleep, eat what they cook, and leave knowing actual people.
Every morning breakfast in a South Indian homestay is a small lesson in regional cuisine. No menu, no waiter — just someone's grandmother and her recipes.
You'll learn the name of the nearby temple, the best tailor in town, and which fruit vendor gives the sweetest papaya. That's local knowledge.
Homestays typically cost a fraction of resort rates. The money stays in the community, and the experience is worth ten times what you pay.
A homestay is exactly what it sounds like — you stay in someone's home. But travel tips for homestay experiences go well beyond booking advice. There is a particular kind of social contract that applies here, and the more aware you are of it, the richer your stay becomes.
Across South India — from the temple towns of Madurai and Rameswaram to the misty slopes of Kodaikanal — family-run homestays have been hosting travellers for generations. These are places where a spare room becomes a portal into someone else's world: their morning rituals, their cooking sounds, their children's school bags by the door.
At Pleasant Tours, we have been arranging homestay stays as part of our South India tour packages since 1994. We have seen what works and what doesn't. The travel tips for homestay travel below are drawn from decades of firsthand experience — and yes, a few memorable mishaps along the way.
"The best travel is when the place you're staying teaches you something the sights never could."
Most travel tips for homestay experiences start at the booking stage. The questions you ask before you arrive determine the quality of your stay far more than the reviews ever will.
This is the single most important question most travellers forget to ask. Is the bathroom attached or shared? Is there a Western-style toilet or an Indian-style squatting toilet? Is hot water available — from a geyser, a solar heater, or a bucket? None of these are deal-breakers if you know what to expect. They only become problems when you don't.
Many homestays in South India include breakfast, some include all three meals, and others have a kitchen you can use yourself. When meals are included, ask whether the food is traditional South Indian or whether they cook to dietary preferences. If you're vegetarian, vegan, or allergic to anything — say it clearly before arrival, not apologetically at the dinner table.
A homestay described as "centrally located" in a Tamil Nadu town might mean it is a fifteen-minute auto-rickshaw ride from the main temple. Ask for the nearest landmark, the distance to bus or train connections, and whether they can recommend local transport. Satellite maps help, but a single honest conversation with your host tells you more in two minutes.
Wi-Fi at a family homestay is not the same as Wi-Fi at a business hotel. It exists, it works most of the time, and occasionally the power goes out for an hour in the evening. If you need reliable connectivity for work, buy a local SIM card the day you arrive and treat any provided Wi-Fi as a bonus rather than a guarantee.
Family-run homestays operate on very tight margins. When you cancel last-minute, that empty room cost a real family real income. Read the cancellation terms before you book, and if your plans are genuinely uncertain, be upfront about it. Most hosts will accommodate flexible timing if you communicate honestly rather than vanishing from the inbox the night before arrival.
When a review says "simple but clean and the family was so warm," that is a very good review. It is telling you everything: no-frills comfort, genuine hospitality. When a review says "felt like a real home," book immediately. What you are looking for is evidence of a real, engaged host — not evidence of a hotel with bad ratings trying to reinvent itself.
The travel tips for homestay packing are different from what you'd pack for a resort. You don't need a power adaptor for a jacuzzi — but you do need a few things that hotel guests take for granted.
Some of the most important travel tips for homestay experiences are never written on any booking platform. They are understood by everyone except the guest who doesn't know them yet.
If your hosts wake at 5 AM for morning prayers and are in bed by 9 PM, adjust. Don't expect a quiet house at midnight. Don't roll out of bed at noon and expect fresh idlis. A homestay is not a hotel — you are borrowing a life, not renting a room.
Vanakkam in Tamil. Nanni for thank you. Sapteenga? — "have you eaten?" — is something Tamil families ask constantly. Attempting even one local word before dinner changes the entire relationship. Your hosts will laugh, correct you warmly, and immediately treat you like family.
If someone puts a second helping of rice on your banana leaf, it is love, not a mistake. You don't have to finish everything — but try everything. Refusing food in a South Indian home without a clear reason is one of the few things that genuinely creates distance between guest and host.
The living room, veranda, and kitchen belong to the family. You are welcome in them — but on their terms. Ask before using the kitchen to make your own food. Don't dominate the TV remote. If there are children doing homework at the table, find another corner.
If the host cooked three meals a day, laundered your clothes, and arranged an auto-rickshaw at 5 AM for your train — that warrants more than the agreed rate. Leave a tip directly, in cash, and say thank you in person. A five-star review helps, but it doesn't pay the cooking-gas bill.
The courtyard altar, the grandmother grinding spices, the sleeping baby in the cradle — all of these make for stunning travel photographs. All of them also belong to a family that didn't sign up to be your content. Ask first, always. Most people will say yes and be genuinely pleased you thought to ask.
The best travel tips for homestay travel aren't about avoiding mistakes — they're about leaning into what makes the experience different from everything else.
Tell your host you have one free day and no fixed plans. Ask them where they would go if they had a day off. This single conversation has resulted in some of the most extraordinary itineraries we have ever seen — private temple tours, early-morning fish market visits, drives to relatives' farms in the hills. No travel app will find you what a host can.
Introduce yourself properly on the first evening. Where are you from, why are you travelling, what do you do. Hosts who know something about you invest more in your experience. The woman who learns you are a schoolteacher will show you the village school. The man who learns you are a chef will take you to the market at 6 AM.
The first night is often slightly awkward — polite strangers finding their rhythm. The second morning is when the real warmth starts. If your travel tips for homestay planning include any flexibility, build in an extra night. Nearly every traveller who has done this has come back with the same verdict: it changed the whole trip.
At Pleasant Tours, every homestay we recommend is one we have personally visited. Not every home that lists on a platform makes our list. We visit, we eat, we talk to the family — and then we decide whether we'd feel comfortable sending our own guests there.
Operating out of Madurai since 1994, we have built relationships with host families across Tamil Nadu, from the temple towns of Rameswaram and Tirunelveli to the hill villages near Kodaikanal. These aren't algorithm-matched stays. They're handpicked homes where we know the family by name and they know ours.
When you travel with us, the travel tips for homestay preparation become our job. We brief you on the house rules, the family's preferences, the nearest landmarks, and the best time to arrive. You show up as a guest, not a stranger.
See Our Homestay PackagesPlanning a South India journey and want to discuss homestay options in person? Our team is in Madurai and happy to walk you through every option — no booking pressure, just honest conversation.
📍 Find Pleasant Tours on Google Maps →You've read the travel tips. Now let us handle the rest — from choosing the right host family to making sure your journey from Madurai to the hills runs without a hitch.
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