Following the Prime Minister’s recent push for “domestic tourism” in the travel sector, Indian tourists are scouring the map for their next vacay destination. While the lure of the Swiss Alps or the canals of Venice remains a classic dream, the Indian landscape offers a secret map of “doppelganger” destinations, which are places where the geography and soul mirror international icons, minus the visa queues.
The Venice of the East: Alleppey, Kerala
The comparison to Venice isn’t just about the water; it’s about a lifestyle built around the tides. In Alleppey (Alappuzha), life unfolds on the backwaters. Instead of gondolas, you have ornate houseboats gliding through a labyrinth of canals, lagoons, and palms, offering a pace of life that is purely Venetian in its liquid elegance.

England’s Hilly Counterpart: Ooty, Tamil Nadu
The British didn’t just build Ooty (Udhagamandalam); they transplanted a piece of the English countryside into the heart of the Nilgiris. To walk through Ooty is to experience a living colonial time capsule. Between the Tudor-style cottages and the mist that clings to the valleys, the “Queen of Hill Stations” mirrors the moody, romantic atmosphere of Cumbria or the Scottish Borders.

The Indian ‘Little Switzerland’: Khajjiar, Himachal Pradesh
Nestled in the Chamba district, Khajjiar doesn’t just look like Switzerland; it is officially recognized as such. In 1992, the Swiss Vice Counselor dubbed it “Mini Switzerland,” and for good reason. A saucer-shaped meadow surrounded by a thick cedar forest, with a lake reflecting the Himalayan peaks, it captures the exact stillness of a Berne postcard.

The ‘Mini England’: Munnar, Kerala
The manicured tea gardens of Munnar, with their neat, undulating rows, often evoke the countryside of Devon or the Lake District. The presence of colonial-era bungalows and the “High Range Club” preserves a time-capsule feeling of an English summer retreat, complete with afternoon tea and misty moorlands.

Gandikota: The “Grand Canyon” of the East
While Arizona has the Colorado River, Andhra Pradesh boasts the Pennar River, which has carved a breathtaking limestone gorge through the Erramala hills. Gandikota is a rugged masterpiece of geology that proves you don’t need a flight to the US to witness the raw power of nature. The deep, jagged ravines and the burnt-orange hue of the rocks at sunset are a dead ringer for the American Southwest.

The Sundarbans: A Himalayan-Fed Amazonia
The Amazon may hold the crown for scale, but the Sundarbans offers a more mysterious, saltwater soul. This is the world’s largest mangrove forest, a labyrinthine “mini-Amazon” where the jungle doesn’t just grow; it breathes with the tides. Navigating these narrow, emerald channels by boat provides a visceral thrill—the sense that you are being watched by the apex predator of the marsh, the Royal Bengal Tiger.

The French Riviera of the East: Puducherry
Walk into the White Town of Puducherry, and the scent of filter coffee merges with the aroma of fresh croissants. With its mustard-yellow colonial villas, bougainvillea-draped walls, and clean grid-style streets, this former French colony is the closest you’ll get to the Côte d’Azur.
