Free Prep Guide

India Shopping & Bargaining Guide

What's negotiable and what isn't, how to bargain without the awkwardness, and the regional specialties worth bringing home.

Shopping in a traditional Indian bazaar

Why this guide

Bargaining in India can feel intimidating to first-timers: too aggressive and it's uncomfortable, too passive and you overpay significantly. The bigger confusion is usually knowing which shops expect it at all. This guide separates fixed-price retail from negotiable markets, and gives you a workable approach for the latter.

What's fixed-price vs negotiable

Mixing these up is the most common shopping mistake.

  • Government emporiums, branded stores, malls, and most shops with printed price tags are fixed-price: bargaining there is unnecessary and can come across oddly
  • Open-air markets, bazaars, street stalls, and most souvenir sellers near tourist sites expect negotiation
  • Auto-rickshaw and unmetered taxi fares are effectively negotiable unless you're using a metered or app-based ride
  • Hotels and houseboats sometimes have flexibility on rate in low season, though this is a quieter negotiation, not market-style haggling
  • Handicraft cooperatives and artisan-direct shops often have fixed, fair-trade pricing: read signage before assuming you should haggle

How to bargain well

Good bargaining in India is unhurried and good-natured, not combative.

  • Start by asking the price, then counter at roughly half to two-thirds of the first quote as an opening move: adjust as you get a feel for the seller and item
  • Stay friendly and smile: bargaining is a social exchange in most markets, not a confrontation
  • Walking away (politely) is a legitimate tactic: sellers will sometimes call you back with a better price
  • Buying multiple items from one seller usually gets you a better combined rate than buying single items from several
  • Know roughly what you're willing to pay before you start, and stop once you're there rather than chasing the lowest possible number
  • Comparing prices at two or three stalls before committing gives you a real sense of the going rate

Bargaining norms vary by region and by how touristed a market is: watch how locals negotiate nearby for a sense of fair local pricing.

What to look for, by region

Each region has specialties worth seeking out specifically.

  • Rajasthan: block-printed textiles, mojari leather shoes, blue pottery, miniature paintings
  • Kerala: spices, Ayurvedic oils, coir products, kathakali masks
  • Agra & Uttar Pradesh: marble inlay work (look for genuine pietra dura craftsmanship, not painted imitations), leather goods
  • Varanasi: Banarasi silk sarees and stoles
  • Kashmir & the Himalayas: pashmina shawls, walnut wood carving, hand-knotted carpets
  • Goa: cashews, feni, beachwear, flea-market finds

For silk, pashmina, and gemstones, buy only from reputable sellers: these categories have a high rate of misrepresented or synthetic substitutes sold to tourists.

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Take it as a PDF to keep handy on the road, or open Canva to tailor it before sharing with clients.