The city is still radiating the day’s heat long after sunset, but inside a candlelit lakeside suite in Udaipur, lovebirds linger over a private dinner as the palace shimmers across Lake Pichola. Hundreds of kilometres away, another pair wakes up to the crisp mountain air of Ladakh before setting off on a scenic drive through the Nubra Valley, while others retreat to a vineyard in Nashik or a wellness sanctuary in Rishikesh.
Across India, romance is moving beyond dinner reservations and movie nights into thoughtfully curated escapes where comfort, privacy and shared experiences take precedence. That shift is no longer anecdotal. According to happn’s Summer Dating Index 2026, India’s record-breaking summer has fundamentally changed the way urban singles date, with travel emerging as one of the strongest indicators of modern relationships.

India’s scorching summer may have altered dating habits, but it hasn’t dampened romance. Instead, it has accelerated a shift towards experience-led relationships, where couples are increasingly choosing curated escapes over conventional date nights.
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The survey found that nearly half of Indian singles travelled with their crush or partner this summer and 41% said the experience brought them closer. In an era where quality time has become the ultimate luxury, travel is emerging as the new benchmark of compatibility.

The survey suggested that today’s couples are investing less in grand gestures and more in shared experiences. A weekend away offers uninterrupted conversations, unfamiliar settings and moments that everyday routines rarely allow. It also explains why luxury hospitality is increasingly centring its offerings around bespoke experiences, from private dinners and wellness retreats to curated itineraries and destination-led storytelling.
For India’s premium hotels and resorts, the modern romantic getaway is no longer reserved for anniversaries or honeymoons. It has become an extension of dating itself.

For couples planning a romantic escape this season, the destination matters as much as the experience. The regal lakeside palaces of Udaipur offer timeless romance, while South Goa transforms into a quieter, rain-washed retreat during the monsoon, with luxury beachfront resorts offering privacy and dramatic coastal views. Nashik’s vineyard estates pair wine tastings with boutique stays, while Rishikesh has evolved into a wellness destination where luxury spas, meditation programmes and riverside retreats create space for meaningful connection.
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Further north, Leh and the Nubra Valley are in peak travel season, attracting couples seeking boutique camps, stargazing experiences and dramatic Himalayan landscapes. Closer to Mumbai, Alibaug’s private villas and seaside estates continue to appeal to travellers looking for intimate weekend escapes without venturing too far.

The report also found that more than half of respondents preferred late-night drives over daytime outings, while air-conditioned cafés and restaurants became the preferred dating venues. Meanwhile, one in four singles spent more on climate-controlled spaces, highlighting a growing willingness to pay for comfort.

This comfort premium reflects a broader shift in luxury consumption. Couples are increasingly choosing experiences that feel thoughtful, personalised and effortless over lavish displays of extravagance. Whether it’s a private villa overlooking Lake Pichola, a vineyard picnic in Nashik or a luxury wellness retreat in the Himalayas, romance is becoming inseparable from experiential travel.
The most memorable relationships of 2026 may not be built over a series of dinner dates, but on journeys that offer shared discoveries, uninterrupted time and the kind of experiences that linger long after the holiday ends.