Amanbagh occupies a walled oasis where a Maharaja once camped his hunting parties — reborn by Aman as a Mughal garden fantasy of pink marble pavilions, domed cupolas and a jade-green pool at the centre of a palm grove, with the Aravallis standing guard and almost nothing else for miles.
The valley is the secret: Bhangarh, India's most storied ghost town, lies just up the road; Sariska's tigers a dawn drive away; and the villages between them still startle at visitors, pleasantly.
Why We Place Guests Here
- Aman service in a landscape that hasn't been discovered — the rarest combination in Rajasthan.
- Pool pavilions justify every rupee; the private plunge pools sit in walled gardens of total quiet.
- It converts the Jaipur–Ranthambore leg into a destination of its own.
The Table
- The Dining Room and Terrace — garden-sourced Indian and Mediterranean
- Chhatri sundowners above the valley
- Private courtyard dinners by lamplight
The Elevated India Signature
Bhangarh at first light with the resident historian — the ghost town empty, the parakeets in the temples — before the valley wakes.
Questions, Answered
What is there to do near Amanbagh?
The Bhangarh ghost town, Sariska Tiger Reserve, the Somsagar lakes, stepwell and temple walks through Ajabgarh's villages, and the resort's own yoga, spa and camel-cart programmes.
How far is Amanbagh from Jaipur?
About two hours' drive — it sits in the Ajabgarh valley toward Sariska, which also places it well en route between Jaipur and Ranthambore.
Journeys That Take You There
Photography: Photograph courtesy Aman


