Hotel in Udaipur, India
RAAS Devigarh
500ptsMinimalist Palace Conversion

About RAAS Devigarh
A converted 18th-century palace in the Aravalli hills outside Udaipur, RAAS Devigarh pairs a weathered stone exterior with all-marble, contemporary interiors across 39 suites. Positioned roughly 45 minutes from Udaipur Airport, it operates at a starting rate of around $394 per night and draws guests seeking palace-scale architecture without the period-reproduction aesthetic that defines most heritage hotels in Rajasthan.
A Palace That Refuses the Period-Piece Formula
The dominant model for heritage hotel conversions in Rajasthan runs something like this: restore the original interiors to a state of decorated nostalgia, fill the corridors with reproduction furniture, and let the accumulated patina of history do the selling. RAAS Devigarh, sitting in the Aravalli foothills near the Eklingji temple complex roughly 45 minutes north of Udaipur, takes the opposite position. The exterior remains as the 18th century left it, stone weathered and imposing. Step inside and the logic reverses entirely: white marble floors, a stripped-down colour palette, and a contemporary design language that makes no attempt to cosplay as a Rajput court. The contrast is deliberate and, at its leading, genuinely arresting.
This approach places RAAS Devigarh in a small and clearly defined niche within Indian palace hospitality. Properties like Taj Lake Palace and The Leela Palace Udaipur lean into historical grandeur, layering traditional motifs and ornate detailing across their interiors. The Oberoi Udaivilas operates at the upper tier of Udaipur's lakeside hotel market with a more classically luxurious register. RAAS Devigarh's decision to pair a genuine 18th-century shell with pared-down modern interiors is less common, and it appeals to a specific kind of traveller: one who wants the historical weight of a Rajasthani palace without the aesthetic heaviness that often accompanies it.
What the Interiors Actually Deliver
Across 39 suites, the property deploys materials that ensure "minimalist" remains a relative term. Marble floors are one thing; inlays of malachite, lapis lazuli, and mother of pearl are another register entirely. The suites look outward through traditional jharoka windows, the carved stone projecting balconies that historically functioned as viewing galleries for Rajput royalty, now framing views across rugged countryside rather than courtly processions. The juxtaposition of that architectural vocabulary against the quiet, uncluttered interior design is where the hotel earns its critical attention.
At a starting rate of around $394 per night, the property sits above the mid-market heritage hotel tier and in broadly the same price bracket as Raffles Udaipur, though the experience it offers is structurally different: where Raffles operates on a private island with a deliberately resort-style proposition, RAAS Devigarh's value is rooted in its historical fabric and its position in the Aravalli countryside rather than lakeside spectacle.
Service as Spatial Intelligence
In a hotel built around architectural contrast, the service design matters as much as the physical one. The editorial angle here is anticipatory positioning: the property's location, outside the density and noise of central Udaipur, creates a guest profile that is arriving intentionally rather than conveniently. That self-selection tends to produce stays oriented around deliberate exploration rather than casual drop-ins, and the hospitality infrastructure here reflects that. The wellness spa covers massage, beauty treatments, and yoga; a heated swimming pool and a fully equipped gym round out the facilities. These are not remarkable in isolation, but they are coherently assembled for a guest who is using the property as a base for the Aravalli region rather than simply sleeping between city activities.
The restaurant takes a similar bridging approach to the architecture: Indian culinary traditions alongside European frameworks. In Rajasthan's palace hotel circuit, this kind of hybrid kitchen is common enough that it functions as a category norm rather than a distinction. What matters operationally is the quality of execution, which the available record does not allow for specific claims beyond the blended format.
The Location Logic
Distance from a city can read as inconvenience or as a proposition, and at RAAS Devigarh it is clearly the latter. The Eklingji temple complex, a group of 108 temples dedicated to Shiva and considered one of the most significant religious sites in Rajasthan, is within immediate reach. Udaipur itself, with its lake palaces, bazaars, and the City Palace complex, is accessible in under an hour by car. The Aravalli countryside opens out from the property in the other direction, making the hotel a useful operational anchor for travellers moving through this stretch of southern Rajasthan rather than staying fixed in the city.
This positioning distinguishes it from Udaipur's lake-facing properties, which compete on views and immediate urban access. Travellers planning trips to the Jain temples scattered through the surrounding countryside, or those approaching from a broader Rajasthan circuit through The Leela Palace Jaipur or rural properties like Suján Jawai in Pali and Amanbagh in Ajabgarh, will find RAAS Devigarh sits sensibly along that routing. Udaipur Airport (UDR) is the arrival point, with the drive to the property running approximately 45 minutes.
Where It Sits in the Udaipur Market
Udaipur's premium hotel market is stratified enough that positioning matters. At one end sit properties like The Oberoi Udaivilas, which operates with the full weight of the Oberoi group behind it and prices accordingly. At the other, Aurika Udaipur operates in a more accessible bracket within the Lemon Tree portfolio. RAAS Devigarh occupies the independent, design-led tier, comparable in spirit if not in setting to the approach taken by properties like Alila Fort Bishangarh in Manoharpur, which similarly converts a Rajasthani fortification into a contemporary design statement. The 39-room scale keeps it intimate by the standards of the category, and the countryside location removes it from the competitive pressure of the lake-view market entirely.
For travellers assembling a broader India itinerary, the property connects logically with The Oberoi Amarvilas in Agra or The Taj Mahal Palace in Mumbai as reference points for understanding where RAAS Devigarh sits in the wider hierarchy of Indian luxury hospitality. See our full Udaipur guide for how it maps against the city's other properties.
Planning Your Stay
RAAS Devigarh rates start at approximately $394 per night across 39 suites. The property is located on NH8 near the Eklingji Temple in Delwara, roughly 45 minutes by car from Udaipur Airport (UDR). The cooler months between October and March are the conventional window for Rajasthan travel, when daytime temperatures allow for outdoor exploration without the heat that makes the summer months difficult. The hotel's countryside position, away from Udaipur's densest tourist traffic, means the shoulder months of September and late March can offer a more open experience than the peak-season lake properties.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the standout quality of RAAS Devigarh?
The architectural contrast is the defining characteristic: a genuinely 18th-century palace exterior, preserved and weathered, containing contemporary all-marble interiors with a stripped-back colour palette. At a starting rate around $394 per night across 39 suites, it operates in the independent, design-led tier of Rajasthani palace hotels rather than the historical-reproduction category that most heritage conversions occupy. The location near Eklingji and within 45 minutes of Udaipur adds practical depth to what is primarily an architectural proposition.
What is the signature room type at RAAS Devigarh?
The suites are the property's primary offering, built around the contrast between traditional jharoka window architecture and contemporary all-white marble interiors finished with materials including malachite, lapis lazuli, and mother of pearl. The views from these carved stone balcony windows look across the Aravalli countryside, making the room's relationship to its surroundings as considered as the interior design itself.
What is the leading way to book RAAS Devigarh?
Property's website is the direct booking route for confirmed rates. Given that only 39 suites are available across the property, advance booking is advisable for the October-to-March high season, when demand across Rajasthan's palace hotel circuit tightens considerably. If travelling as part of a wider India itinerary, booking the Udaipur leg first and building outward is a practical approach given this property's limited key count.
Who tends to stay at RAAS Devigarh?
Property draws guests who are primarily interested in architecture and design-led heritage rather than lakeside spectacle or the social energy of Udaipur's city centre hotels. At a starting price point around $394 per night, it attracts travellers already operating in the premium tier of Indian hospitality who want a quieter, more removed base for exploring the Aravalli region and the Eklingji temple circuit. Couples and design-focused independent travellers make up the likely core.
How does RAAS Devigarh's restaurant approach differ from other Rajasthani palace hotels?
Kitchen at RAAS Devigarh blends Indian culinary traditions with European frameworks, a format that places it in a hybrid category rather than a strictly regional Rajasthani one. This reflects the property's broader design philosophy of pairing historical structure with contemporary sensibility, applying the same bridging logic to its food offering that it applies to its architecture. Guests seeking deep-format Rajasthani cuisine may find the city's standalone dining options a useful complement.
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