Old Goa Travel Guide: The UNESCO Churches

★ Old Goa · Goa

Travel to Old Goa: A Guide to the UNESCO Churches

A practical guide to Old Goa — the grand Portuguese churches and cathedrals, led by the Basilica of Bom Jesus and Sé Cathedral. What to see, how long it takes, how to get there, and how to pair it with Panjim.

Written byAshvinee
Updated
Reading time7 min read
Days needed
Half day
Best time
Year-round
Daily budget
₹500–3,000
Base in
Panjim, 10 km away
Vibe
Heritage · History

Ten kilometres east of Panjim, Old Goa (Velha Goa) was once the thriving capital of Portuguese India — a city said to rival Lisbon before disease and a shifting river emptied it out. What remains is one of India’s most striking colonial-religious ensembles, collectively a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and an easy, flat half-day visit that pairs naturally with Panjim.

★ The short version

Old Goa is the UNESCO-listed cluster of Portuguese churches 10 km east of Panjim, led by the Basilica of Bom Jesus (with the relics of St Francis Xavier) and the vast Sé Cathedral. One to two hours covers the highlights; a relaxed half day sees it all. Base in Panjim and combine the two for a single heritage day.

Why visit Old Goa

Three reasons this quiet green complex is one of Goa’s great half days.

A UNESCO ensemble

A rare concentration of 16th–17th-century churches and convents — among the finest European religious architecture in Asia.

Bom Jesus & Sé

The Basilica of Bom Jesus holds the relics of St Francis Xavier, and the Sé Cathedral is one of the largest churches in Asia.

Easy & close

Flat, walkable and only 20 minutes from Panjim — the simplest big-hitter heritage stop in Goa.

Portuguese-era churches in Old Goa, including the Basilica of Bom Jesus and Sé Cathedral

The Portuguese churches of Old Goa, a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

When to go

Year-round: the churches are open through every season, and a heritage stop works even on a wet monsoon day when the beaches don’t. Mornings are cooler and quieter.

November to February: the most comfortable months for walking the grounds, in line with the rest of Goa’s dry season.

Early December: the Feast of St Francis Xavier (around the 3rd) fills Old Goa — atmospheric, but expect big crowds and plan ahead.

⚠ Worth knowing

These are active churches — dress modestly, with shoulders and knees covered, and follow photography rules during services. The saint’s relics are shown up close only at rare expositions held roughly every ten years.

Top things to do in Old Goa

A compact group of monuments, all within an easy walk of each other on the green.

1
Headline

Basilica of Bom Jesus

The most famous of the churches — laterite walls and gilded Baroque interiors, housing the preserved remains of St Francis Xavier.

◷ 30–45 min◉ Old Goa₹ Free
2
Grand

Sé Cathedral

One of the largest churches in Asia, with a soaring nave and the famous ‘Golden Bell’. Its single surviving tower stands out on the green.

◷ 30 min◉ Old Goa₹ Free
3
Quiet

Church of St Cajetan

Modelled on St Peter’s in Rome, with a domed Corinthian façade — calmer than its famous neighbours.

◷ 20 min◉ Old Goa₹ Free
4
Art

St Francis of Assisi & museum

Richly painted interiors and an adjoining Archaeological Museum of Portuguese-era art and artefacts.

◷ 30–45 min◉ Old Goa₹ Low
5
Riverside

Viceroy’s Arch

The old ceremonial gateway down by the river, marking the entrance to the former city — a short walk from the green.

◷ 15 min◉ Riverside₹ Free
6
Seasonal

Feast of St Francis Xavier

Each December, Old Goa fills for the feast — a huge, atmospheric gathering if your dates line up.

◷ Event◉ Old Goa₹ Free
Old Goa is where a vanished Portuguese capital survives as a handful of vast, quiet churches on a green — history you can walk right into.— Ashvinee

What to eat

There’s little dining at the site itself, so plan lunch in Panjim — and carry water on warm afternoons.

Nearby

Lunch in Panjim

◉ Fontainhas

Save the meal for Panjim’s Indo-Portuguese cafes after your visit — sorpotel, fish curry and bebinca.

Best option close by
On-site

Snack & drink stalls

◉ By the churches

Simple stalls for cold drinks, water and light snacks around the monuments — enough to keep you going.

Basic
Treat

Goan sweets

◉ Stalls & shops

Look for bebinca and other Goan sweets sold near the site and in nearby Panjim.

Take some home

Where to stay

Old Goa is a monuments site, not a base — sleep nearby and visit on a half day.

Best base

Panjim

◉ 10 km west

Heritage guesthouses in Fontainhas and city hotels by the river — the natural base for a heritage day.

All budgets
Beach base

North Goa

◉ Day trip

Stay at the beaches and visit Old Goa on a half-day trip — it’s an easy drive in.

Varies
Offbeat

Divar / Chorao islands

◉ Across the river

Quiet river-island stays nearby for a slower, offbeat angle on old Goa.

Niche

How to get to Old Goa & around

Old Goa is close to Panjim and simple to reach — then it’s all on foot.

By air
About 30 min from Dabolim (GOI); roughly 45 min from Mopa (GOX).
By road
A 20-minute, 10 km drive east from Panjim by taxi or scooter.
Bus
Local KTC buses run from the Panjim stand straight to Old Goa.
On foot
The churches sit close together around a central green — walk between them.
✦ Good to know

Go in the morning to beat the heat and the tour-bus crowds, and combine Old Goa with Panjim for one well-rounded heritage day rather than two separate trips.

A simple half-day plan

How to see Old Goa, whether you have a quick window or a full heritage day.

Day1

The essentials

Start at the Basilica of Bom Jesus and the Sé Cathedral, then look in at St Cajetan across the green.

◷ 1–2 hrs★ Easy
Day2

Full heritage day

Add St Francis of Assisi and its museum, then drive to Panjim for Fontainhas, lunch and a sunset cruise.

◷ Full day★ Cultured

Practical tips that actually help

Dress modestly

Shoulders and knees covered — these are working churches.

Go early

Mornings are cooler and far quieter than midday.

Pair with Panjim

Make it one efficient heritage day.

Carry water

Shade and dining are limited around the site.

Mind photo rules

Don’t photograph where signs ask you not to, especially during services.

Don’t rush

Give the two main churches their due before moving on.

Mistakes first-time visitors make

  • Expecting to see the relics up close. Full expositions are rare — roughly once a decade.
  • Trying to stay overnight here. Base in Panjim or at the beaches instead.
  • Visiting in harsh midday heat. Mornings are cooler and quieter.
  • Treating it as a quick photo stop. The interiors are the point — go inside.

Want a smooth Goa heritage day?

Old Goa and Panjim make one easy, rewarding day between beach stays. Tell me your dates and base, and I’ll fit a heritage day neatly into your Goa plan.

Plan my Goa trip →

Old Goa FAQs

Why is Old Goa a UNESCO site?

Its cluster of 16th–17th-century churches and convents from Portuguese India — led by the Basilica of Bom Jesus and Sé Cathedral — are among the finest examples of European religious architecture in Asia, and were collectively listed by UNESCO.

Which churches should I prioritise?

The Basilica of Bom Jesus and the Sé Cathedral are the two essentials. With more time, add the Church of St Cajetan and the Church of St Francis of Assisi with its museum.

How long does Old Goa take?

One to two hours covers the highlights; a relaxed half day lets you see the whole complex. Many people combine it with Panjim to fill a full heritage day.

Can I see the body of St Francis Xavier?

His preserved remains rest in the Basilica of Bom Jesus, but they’re displayed up close only during rare expositions held roughly every ten years. Normally you view the ornate tomb and casket from the church floor.

How do I get to Old Goa?

It’s about 10 km east of Panjim — a 20-minute drive by taxi or scooter, or a local KTC bus from the Panjim stand. The churches are then all within an easy walk.

Related guides

Keep planning your Goa trip with these:

Region guide

Goa Travel Guide

◉ The whole state

North and South beaches, Portuguese heritage and a jungle waterfall — how to plan Goa.

Latin Quarter

Travel to Panjim

◉ 10 km west

Goa’s walkable capital and its painted Fontainhas lanes — the heritage-day pairing.

Ashvinee Nagle, travel writer at Travel India
About the author

Ashvinee Nagle

I’m Ashvinee — I help first-time travellers plan India trips that actually work. I’ve spent years exploring the country’s regions, from Rajasthan’s forts to Goa’s beaches, and I write the guides I wish I’d had on my own first trips.

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