Best Neighborhoods to Stay in Dibrugarh: Where to Book and What to Expect

Photo by  Bikash Debnath

27 min read · Dibrugarh, Assam · best airbnb neighborhoods ·

Best Neighborhoods to Stay in Dibrugarh: Where to Book and What to Expect

RG

Words by

Rituraj Gogoi

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Rituraj Gogoi here, and if you have ever stood on an auto stand at 6:30 AM in winter watching steam rise off a tawa of pitha wrapped in banana leaf, you already understand what makes the best neighborhoods to stay in Dibrugarh a question worth thinking about carefully. Dibrugarh is not a city that hands you a glossy brochure welcome, it reveals itself to you in layers, tea garden mist in the morning, diesel and frying oil by midday, and a sky that turns purple pink behind the Brahmaputra floodplain at dusk. The neighborhood you put your head down in shapes every chai stop you make, every random conversation, every shortcut through a gully that saves you twenty minutes on an already long afternoon. I have lived here more than half my adult life, rented rooms in three different localities, eaten at the same fish thali every week from a place that doesn't even have a signboard, and I still find lanes I have never walked. This is not a list put together from someone else's Google search, it is a standing invitation from someone who knows the hand pump water pressure in Old Dibrugarh Colony on a Tuesday with too much affection to keep it alone.


1. Old Dibrugarh Bazaar Area | The Heartbeat of the City

If you want to understand why Dibrugarh exists at all, start in the Old Dibrugarh Bazaar area. This is the commercial nerve center, the place where tea garden managers once came to settle accounts, where Marwari traders set up cloth shops in the 1940s, and where the fish market still opens before dawn with a chaos that no amount of municipal planning has ever tamed. Staying here means you are within walking distance of the main bus stand, the railway station is barely 2 km away, and you can catch an auto to almost anywhere in the city for ₹30–₹50 during off-peak hours. The area is dense, loud, and unapologetically functional, this is not a curated heritage quarter, it is a living, breathing market district that has been feeding and clothing this town for over a century.

I spent a week staying at a small guest house on Convoy Road, the main artery that cuts through this part of the city, and every morning I walked to a tea stall near the old cinema hall for a ₹10 cup of Assam CTC so strong it could strip paint. The guest house charged me ₹600 per night for a basic room with a window that opened onto a courtyard where someone's grandmother was always sorting dried red chilies. The walls were thin, the fan wobbled, and the bathroom had a bucket system that reminded me of my college hostel, but I was five minutes from the bazaar, ten minutes from the station, and I never once needed an auto for my morning errands. That kind of proximity is what makes this the best area Dibrugarh has to offer for travelers who want to be in the middle of everything.

The fish market near the bazaar is worth a visit even if you have no intention of buying anything. By 7 AM, the vendors are already deep into their rhythm, hilsa from the Brahmaputra laid out on banana leaves, small freshwater fish still twitching, and the smell of dried hukuti (fermented fish paste) so pungent it follows you for three blocks. A full fish thali at any of the small Assamese eateries around the bazaar costs between ₹80–₹150, and you will get rice, dal, a fish curry that changes daily depending on what came in that morning, and a side of tenga (sour curry) that will reset your understanding of what sour means. The best time to eat here is between 12:30 and 1:30 PM, after the lunch rush has thinned but before the cooks start running out of the good stuff.

Local Insider Tip: "If you are staying anywhere near Old Dibrugarh Bazaar, do not book a room facing Convoy Road unless you enjoy being woken up by truck horns at 4 AM. Ask for a room at the back, facing the inner lanes. You will sleep better, and you will also be closer to the small Assamese restaurants that only locals know about, the ones with handwritten menus taped to the wall."

One honest complaint, the area gets genuinely waterlogged during the monsoon months of July through September, and if your guest house is on a low-lying lane, you may find yourself wading through ankle-deep water just to reach the main road. I have seen it happen twice in the last five years, and both times the drainage simply could not keep up with the downpour. If you are visiting during monsoon, ask your host specifically about flooding history before you book.


2. Borbaruah and the Tea Garden Belt | Where the Green Begins

About 8 km east of the city center, Borbaruah and the surrounding tea garden areas offer a completely different version of Dibrugarh, one defined by rolling green estates, colonial-era bungalows, and a pace of life that feels like it belongs to a different decade. This is the safest neighborhood Dibrugarh has in terms of open space and low crime, but it is also the most isolated if you do not have your own transport or a reliable auto connection. The tea gardens here, some of them over a hundred years old, are still operational, and if you walk along the estate roads in the early morning, you will see women with conical baskets picking two leaves and a bud with a speed and precision that is almost hypnotic.

I stayed at a converted planter's bungalow near Borbaruah for three nights last November, and it cost me ₹1,800 per night including breakfast, which was a spread of Assamese pitha, sabudana, fresh fruit from the estate, and tea so good I drank four cups without thinking. The bungalow had a veranda that overlooked a section of the garden, and in the evenings, the manager, a third-generation tea man whose grandfather came from Jharkhand, would sit with me and explain the difference between first flush and second flush in a way that made me feel like I was learning a language I had always known but never spoken. The rooms were large, the beds were old but comfortable, and the silence at night was the kind of silence that city people pay good money to experience.

Getting here from the city center costs about ₹150–₹200 by auto, and the ride takes 25–30 minutes depending on traffic near the railway crossing. There is no Uber or Ola reliability in this part of town, you will need to negotiate with auto drivers or arrange a pickup through your accommodation. The best time to visit is between October and March, when the weather is cool, the gardens are at their greenest, and the plucking season is in full swing. During the summer months of April through June, the heat combined with the humidity from the gardens can make the afternoons genuinely oppressive, and the monsoon turns the estate roads into mud tracks that even a confident auto driver will hesitate to navigate.

Local Insider Tip: "Ask your host to arrange a walk through the tea factory if one is operating nearby. Most small estates will let you watch the withering and rolling process if you ask politely and show genuine interest. Do not offer money to the workers, it creates awkwardness. Instead, bring a packet of good quality Assam tea from the city as a gift for the manager, it will be appreciated far more than cash."

The one thing that catches most visitors off guard is the lack of restaurants or even basic eateries in the immediate vicinity of the tea gardens. You are dependent on your accommodation for meals, and if they do not offer dinner, you will need to plan ahead. I once had to eat a packet of biscuits and a banana for dinner because I had not arranged anything in advance, and I do not recommend the experience.


3. Khaliharmari and the University Quarter | Young, Loud, Affordable

Khaliharmari, the neighborhood that wraps around Dibrugarh University, is where the city's student population concentrates, and it shows in every aspect of the area's character. The streets are lined with photocopy shops, cheap eateries, stationery stores, and the kind of no-frills lodgings that cater to students visiting from smaller towns across Upper Assam. If you are a budget traveler or a solo backpacker looking for the best neighborhoods to stay in Dibrugarh without spending more than ₹500 a night, this is your area. The university campus itself is worth a walk through, it is large, green, and has a quiet dignity that contrasts sharply with the commercial chaos just outside its gates.

I have stayed in Khaliharmari multiple times, usually in small lodgings that charge between ₹350–₹600 per night for a single room with a shared or attached bathroom. The rooms are basic, think cement walls, a ceiling fan, a single bed, and a plastic chair, but they are clean, and the owners are almost always families who live on the premises and take a genuine interest in making sure you eat properly. One place I stayed at, I will not name it because the owner would be embarrassed by the attention, the landlady insisted on making me a full Assamese breakfast every morning, complete with chira (flattened rice), doi (curd), gur (jaggery), and a boiled egg, and she refused to charge me extra for it. That kind of hospitality is not a marketing strategy here, it is just how people are.

The food scene in Khaliharmari is dominated by student budgets, which means you will find thali meals for ₹60–₹100, momos for ₹40–₹60 a plate, and chai for ₹8–₹12 at dozens of small stalls. The Assamese eateries here serve food that is honest and heavy on rice, with fish curry, dal, and bhaji (fried vegetables) forming the core of most meals. Aloo pitika (mashed potato with mustard oil, onion, and green chili) is the comfort food of this neighborhood, and you will find it at almost every Assamese-run stall, usually for ₹20–₹30 as a side. The best time to eat is during the lunch hour, between 12 and 2 PM, when the thali shops are fully stocked and the food is fresh off the stove.

Local Insider Tip: "If you are in Khaliharmari on a Thursday, walk to the small weekly market that sets up near the university gate. You will find fresh pitha made by women from nearby villages, along with seasonal vegetables, handmade bamboo products, and sometimes live fish brought in from the Brahmaputra tributaries. It is not advertised anywhere, and most tourists have no idea it exists."

The downside of Khaliharmari is that it can get noisy, especially on weekends when students are out in force, and the roads, while paved, are narrow and often clogged with two-wheelers and the occasional auto. If you are a light sleeper, bring earplugs. Also, during exam season, which typically falls in March-April and October-November, the area takes on a tense, hushed quality that is the opposite of the usual energy, and some of the eateries reduce their hours or close entirely.


4. Convoy Road and the New Market Area | The Commercial Spine

Convoy Road is the main commercial artery of Dibrugarh, running roughly east-west through the heart of the city, and the New Market area that branches off it is where most of the city's formal retail, banking, and government offices are concentrated. Staying along or near Convoy Road puts you within easy reach of almost everything, pharmacies, ATMs, clothing stores, mobile repair shops, and the kind of multi-cuisine restaurants that cater to Dibrugarh's growing middle class. This is the best area Dibrugarh offers for travelers who want convenience above all else, a place where you can step out of your hotel and find everything you need within a five-minute walk.

I have stayed at several hotels along Convoy Road over the years, ranging from budget options at ₹800–₹1,200 per night to mid-range business hotels that charge ₹2,000–₹3,500. The mid-range hotels typically offer air conditioning, Wi-Fi, room service, and breakfast included, and they are popular with business travelers, government officials, and the occasional tourist who prefers a known quantity over the unpredictability of a guest house. The food at these hotels is generally decent, a mix of Assamese, North Indian, and Chinese dishes, with thali lunches priced around ₹150–₹250 and à la carte items ranging from ₹120–₹400 depending on what you order.

The New Market area, just off Convoy Road, is where you will find Dibrugarh's best-known restaurants and cafes. A plate of chicken momos at one of the popular Tibetan-style eateries costs ₹80–₹120, and a full Chinese meal for two at a sit-down restaurant will run you ₹400–₹700. The market itself is a covered structure that sells everything from fresh produce to electronics, and it is a good place to stock up on Assam tea, the local variety sold here is often fresher and cheaper than what you will find in Guwahati or other cities. A 250-gram packet of good quality Assam tea leaves costs between ₹100–₹250 depending on the brand and grade.

Local Insider Tip: "If you are staying on Convoy Road and want to avoid the worst of the traffic, learn the back lane that runs parallel to the main road, connecting the New Market area to the old cinema hall. It is narrow and not marked on any map, but it will save you 15–20 minutes during peak hours, and you will pass by a small Assamese sweet shop that sells tilor laru (sesame balls) for ₹5 each. They are the best in the city, and I will fight anyone who says otherwise."

The honest complaint about Convoy Road is that it is one of the noisiest and most polluted stretches in Dibrugarh. The traffic is constant, the honking is relentless, and the air quality, especially during the dry winter months when dust kicks up from the unpaved shoulders, is not great. If you have respiratory issues, this is not the area for you. Also, parking along Convoy Road is a nightmare, and if your hotel does not have its own parking, you will need to use a paid lot that charges ₹30–₹50 for a few hours.


5. Jyoti Nagar and the Residential Calm | Where Locals Actually Live

Jyoti Nagar is a residential neighborhood on the western side of Dibrugarh, and it represents the kind of quiet, tree-lined, middle-class locality that most tourists never see. This is where school teachers, government employees, and retired tea garden managers live, in modest but well-maintained houses with small gardens, boundary walls, and the occasional mango tree that drops fruit on your head if you are not paying attention. Staying here gives you a window into the everyday life of Dibrugarh that no hotel on Convoy Road can offer, and it is arguably the safest neighborhood Dibribrugarh has, with low crime, friendly neighbors, and a pace that feels almost rural despite being only 3–4 km from the city center.

I rented a small apartment in Jyoti Nagar for two months last year while working on a writing project, and it cost me ₹5,500 per month, which included a bedroom, a small kitchen, a bathroom, and a balcony that faced a neighbor's guava tree. The landlady, a retired school teacher, would occasionally leave a plate of narikela ladoo (coconut balls) at my door, and we would sit on her veranda in the evenings discussing everything from the price of rice to the latest political scandal in Dispur. The nearest auto stand was a ten-minute walk away, and autos to the city center cost ₹40–₹60, but I often walked the entire distance because the route passed through a series of small lanes that were shaded by jackfruit and betel nut trees.

The food options in Jyoti Nagar are limited to a few small Assamese eateries and one or two general stores that sell basic groceries, but the quality of the home-style cooking available here is exceptional. A plate of rice with dal, fish curry, and a side of bhaji at a local eatery costs ₹70–₹100, and the portions are generous. The neighborhood also has a small temple that hosts an annual Bihu celebration in April, and if you are in town during that time, it is worth attending, the community dancing, the dhol beats, and the shared meal afterward are as authentic an Assamese experience as you will find anywhere.

Local Insider Tip: "If you are staying in Jyoti Nagar, wake up early and walk to the small pond at the edge of the neighborhood. In winter, you will see kingfishers, egrets, and sometimes a monitor lizard sunning itself on the bank. The pond is not a tourist spot, it is just a pond, but it is one of the most peaceful places in Dibrugarh, and I have never seen another visitor there."

The one drawback of Jyoti Nagar is its distance from the main tourist attractions and commercial areas. If you are in Dibrugarh for only a day or two, staying here will cost you time in commuting, and the auto availability drops significantly after 9 PM. Plan your evenings accordingly, or be prepared to walk.


6. Bogaichuck and the Brahmaputra Edge | River Views and Raw Beauty

Bogaichuck, on the northern fringes of Dibrugarh where the city begins to give way to the Brahmaputra floodplain, is not a neighborhood most tourists consider when thinking about where to stay in Dibrugarh, and that is precisely what makes it interesting. This is a semi-rural area where the river is close enough to smell, where the evenings are marked by the sound of boat engines and the occasional call of a fishing eagle, and where the landscape opens up in a way that the congested city center never allows. There are no hotels here in the traditional sense, but there are a handful of homestays and guest houses that cater to the occasional traveler who wants something different.

I stayed at a homestay in Bogaichuck for two nights during the winter of 2023, and it cost me ₹900 per night including meals. The family who ran it were farmers who also kept a small fishing boat, and every morning, the father would go out on the river and return with whatever the Brahmaputra had offered that day. Dinner was always fish, sometimes ilish, sometimes rohu, sometimes something I could not identify but ate anyway because it was fresh and cooked with mustard oil and green chilies in a way that made identification irrelevant. The room was simple, a bed, a fan, a mosquito net, and a window that looked out toward the river, and the silence at night was broken only by the occasional dog bark and the distant hum of a generator.

Getting to Bogaichuck from the city center requires an auto ride of about 20–25 minutes, costing ₹100–₹150, and the last stretch of road is unpaved and can be difficult during the monsoon. There is no Uber or Ola coverage here, and mobile network coverage can be spotty, especially during heavy rain. The best time to visit is between November and February, when the weather is cool, the river is at a manageable level, and the floodplain is green with winter crops. During the monsoon, the area can be affected by flooding, and access becomes unreliable.

Local Insider Tip: "Ask your homestay host if they can arrange a short boat ride on the Brahmaputra at sunrise. It will cost you maybe ₹200–₹300, and it is an experience that no amount of money can buy in a more commercial setting. The river at dawn, with the mist rising and the birds starting to move, is something I have seen dozens of times and it never gets old. Bring a scarf, the wind on the water is colder than you expect."

The honest reality of Bogaichuck is that it is not for everyone. The amenities are basic, the connectivity is poor, and if you are the kind of traveler who needs a café, a pharmacy, and a shopping option within walking distance, you will be frustrated. But if you want to see the Dibrugarh that exists beyond the city, the Dibrugarh that is defined by the river and the land, this is where you come.


7. Lezai and the Suburban Fringe | Quiet, Connected, Underrated

Lezai, a suburban area on the southern side of Dibrugarh, is one of those neighborhoods that most guidebooks ignore entirely, and I think that is a mistake. It is well-connected to the city center by road, with autos available at most hours for ₹50–₹80, and it has a growing number of small hotels and guest houses that cater to travelers who want a quieter alternative to Convoy Road without sacrificing access. The area is primarily residential, with a mix of older Assamese homes and newer concrete buildings, and it has a small but functional market area where you can buy groceries, toiletries, and basic medicines.

I stayed at a guest house in Lezai for a week during the Durga Puja season in October, and it cost me ₹750 per night for a clean, air-conditioned room with Wi-Fi and hot water, a combination that is harder to find in Dibrugarh than you might think. The guest house was run by a young couple who had moved back to Dibrugarh after working in Bangalore, and they had put genuine thought into making the place comfortable without making it feel corporate. Breakfast was included and consisted of porridge, toast, eggs, and a pot of Assam tea that was refilled without asking. The neighborhood itself was quiet during the day, with most people at work or school, and the evenings were marked by the sound of children playing in the lanes and the occasional pressure cooker whistle from a nearby kitchen.

The food scene in Lezai is modest but reliable. A few small restaurants serve Assamese thalis for ₹80–₹120, and there is a popular Chinese joint that does a decent chicken chowmein for ₹100–₹140. The area also has a small tea garden on its outskirts, not large enough to be a major estate but big enough to walk through, and the morning mist there in winter is one of those small, unremarkable beauties that you remember long after you have forgotten the names of the hotels you stayed at.

Local Insider Tip: "If you are in Lezai during Durga Puja, walk to the pandal in the nearby field in the evening. It is a community-organized affair, not a commercial one, and the bhog (prasad) they serve afterward, khichdi, labra (mixed vegetable curry), and payesh (rice pudding), is some of the best festival food you will eat in Assam. Go after 8 PM when the main aarti is over and the crowds have thinned."

The one issue with Lezai is that it is not well-signed, and auto drivers sometimes get confused about exactly where your guest house is, especially if it is on one of the smaller lanes. Save the phone number of your accommodation and be prepared to guide the driver by landmarks, the big banyan tree, the blue mosque, the shop with the green shutter, rather than by street names, which are often missing or incorrect.


8. Mohanbari and the Airport Vicinity | For the Time-Pressed Traveler

Mohanbari, the area surrounding Dibrugarh's airport, is not where you come for culture or charm, it is where you come because your flight leaves at 6 AM and you do not want to risk the 30-minute drive from the city center in pre-dawn darkness. The airport itself is small, functional, and about 15 km from the main city, and the area around it has a handful of hotels and lodgings that cater almost exclusively to travelers with early or late flights. If you are in Dibrugarh for a single night and your schedule is dictated by air travel, this is the most practical where to stay in Dibrugarh option, even if it is the least inspiring.

I have stayed at two different hotels near Mohanbari, both within 3 km of the airport, and paid between ₹1,000–₹1,800 per night. The rooms were clean, the beds were adequate, and the Wi-Fi worked about 70% of the time, which is roughly the Wi-Fi reliability standard for this part of Assam. Both hotels offered airport pickup and drop-off, either free or for a small charge of ₹100–₹150, and both had a small restaurant that served basic Assamese and North Indian food. A chicken curry with rice cost around ₹150–₹200, and a vegetarian thali was ₹100–₹130. Nothing exceptional, but nothing terrible either, which is roughly the best you can ask for in an airport-adjacent hotel in a small Indian city.

The area around Mohanbari is flat, agricultural, and largely unremarkable in terms of things to see or do. There is a small market about 2 km from the airport where you can buy snacks, water, and basic supplies, and there are a few tea stalls that serve strong Assam CTC for ₹8–₹12. The drive from Mohanbari to the city center takes 25–40 minutes depending on traffic and the condition of the road, which has improved in recent years but still has patches that are more pothole than pavement. An auto from the airport to the city costs ₹200–₹300, and a private cab, if you can arrange one, will charge ₹400–₹600.

Local Insider Tip: "If you have a late-night or early-morning flight and are staying near Mohanbari, confirm your pickup time with the hotel the night before and then set your own alarm as a backup. I have seen hotel pickups fail twice in the last year, both times because the driver overslept. Keep the number of a local auto stand handy as a backup, and agree on the fare before you get in, ₹200 to the city center is the standard rate, and anyone asking for more is taking advantage of your situation."

The honest complaint about staying near Mohanbari is that there is genuinely nothing to do in the evenings. No restaurants worth walking to, no markets, no cultural spots, just the hotel room and whatever is on your laptop. If you are the kind of traveler who likes to explore after dark, book yourself into the city center and accept the early morning drive. You will thank me when you are eating fish tenga at a bazaar stall at 7 AM instead of staring at a hotel ceiling.


When to Go and What to Know

Dibrugarh's weather is the single biggest factor that will shape your experience, and choosing the right season is as important as choosing the right neighborhood. The sweet spot is November through February, when temperatures hover between 10°C and 25°C, the skies are clear, the Brahmaputra is at a manageable level, and the tea gardens are lush and active. This is also the peak tourist season, so book your accommodation at least a week in advance, especially if you are visiting during the Magh Bihu festival in mid-January, when the city fills up with people returning from across the country.

March through June is summer, and it is brutal. Temperatures regularly exceed 35°C, the humidity is stifling, and the combination of heat and moisture makes outdoor exploration genuinely unpleasant after 11 AM. If you must visit during this time, stay somewhere with reliable air conditioning, plan your activities for early morning and late evening, and carry water everywhere. The monsoon, from July through September, brings heavy rainfall that can cause flooding in low-lying areas, disrupt road access to outlying neighborhoods, and make the tea garden roads impassable. It also brings leeches, mosquitoes, and a general dampness that seeps into everything, including your clothes, your luggage, and your mood.

For local transport, auto-rickshaws are the backbone of Dibrugarh's intra-city mobility. They are plentiful, cheap, and willing to go almost anywhere, but they do not use meters, and you will need to negotiate the fare before you start your ride. Short hops within the city center cost ₹20–₹40, cross-city trips run ₹50–₹100, and trips to outlying areas like Bogaichuck or Borbaruah can go up to ₹150–₹200. Ola and Uber have limited presence in Dibrugarh, and their availability is unreliable outside the city center, do not depend on them. Local buses exist but are infrequent and crowded, and I would not recommend them unless you are on a very tight budget and have a high tolerance for discomfort.

UPI and digital payments are increasingly accepted at restaurants, shops, and hotels in the city center, but cash is still essential for auto rides, street food, small tea stalls, and vendors in the weekly markets. Carry at least ₹1,000–₹2,000 in small denominations at all times, and do not rely solely on your phone for payments, network coverage can be patchy in some areas, and not every shop has a working QR code.


Frequently Asked Questions

Is UPI or digital payment widely accepted across Dibrugarh's restaurants, markets, and tourist spots, or is cash still essential for street food and local vendors?

UPI and digital payments are accepted at most sit-down restaurants, mid-range hotels, and larger shops in the Convoy Road and New Market areas, but cash remains essential for auto-rickshaws, street food stalls, tea vendors, weekly market sellers, and small Assamese eateries in neighborhoods like Khaliharmari and Jyoti Nagar. Carry at least ₹1,000–₹2,000 in small denominations, as change for ₹500 or ₹1,000 notes can be hard to find at small vendors.

What is the most practical way to get around Dibrugarh — auto-rickshaw, metro, local bus, or app-based cab — and which is best for short hops versus cross-city travel?

Dibrugarh does not have a metro system. Auto-rickshaws are the most practical and widely available option for both short hops (₹20–₹40 within the city center) and cross-city travel (₹50–₹100 for longer routes). Ola and Uber have limited and unreliable coverage outside the central areas. Local buses exist but are infrequent and not recommended for visitors unfamiliar with the routes. For trips to outlying areas like Borbaruah or Bogaichuck, negotiate an auto fare in advance, ₹150–₹200 is standard.

What is the standard service charge or tipping norm at sit-down restaurants in Dibrugarh, and it mandatory or discretionary?

Most sit-down restaurants in Dibrugarh do not add a mandatory service charge to the bill. Tipping is discretionary, and a tip of ₹20–₹50 on a bill of ₹300–₹500 is considered generous and appreciated. At small local eateries and thali shops, tipping is not expected, and leaving small change is sufficient if you wish to.

Is Dibrugarh expensive to visit? Give a realistic daily budget in ₹ for mid-tier travelers covering accommodation, food, and local transport.

A mid-tier traveler can expect to spend approximately ₹2,000–₹3,500 per day, covering a mid-range hotel room (₹1,200–₹2,000), three meals at local and sit-down restaurants (₹400–₹800), and local auto transport (₹200–₹400). Budget travelers using guest houses and street food can manage on ₹800–₹1,200 per day, while those staying at premium accommodations and dining at upscale restaurants should budget ₹4,000–₹6,000 per day.

What is the average cost of a filter coffee, masala chai, or specialty brew at a mid-range cafe in Dibrugarh?

A cup of masala chai at a mid-range cafe or restaurant in Dibrugarh costs between ₹15–₹30. Filter coffee is less common but available at a few South Indian or multi-cuisine restaurants for ₹25–₹50. Specialty tea brews, including first flush Assam tea, are available at select cafes and tea lounges for ₹50–₹150 per cup. At street-side tea stalls, a strong cup of Assam CTC costs as little as ₹8–₹12.

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