Assam, India
Homage to the cultural and ecological diversity of Northeast India's tribal communities, each Irroi property is inspired and informed by the landscape and culture it resides within. Woven through that is an attention to detail that underpins seamless, discreet service. A deep love and respect for our rivers and rainforests, craftsmanship of Assam and the tribal communities who have long lived in harmony with nature.
Our Properties
Bokakhat · Golaghat · Assam
Inside a restored Baari beside Kaziranga National Park. 22 rooms. 268 biodiverse species. The one-horned rhinoceros moves through the grasslands 3km away.
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Guwahati · Assam
An urban sanctuary rooted in the same philosophy — indigenous craft, locally sourced meals, community-first hospitality in the heart of Assam's capital.
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100% Organic
Vocal for Local
The Indigenous
Net Zero Initiative
Every decision at Irroi — from who we hire, to what you eat, to which species we're protecting — falls under one of these four commitments.
The word IRROI is a celebratory word from Majuli — the world's largest river island, where the Mishing community usher in the New Year by sharing food, rohi and the word greeting a new harvest and year — IRROI ®.
Both our properties in Guwahati and Kaziranga are designed with eco-conscious luxury materials. To ensure a comfortable stay, each room comes with a shared living and dining space.
A homage to the indigenous knowledge passed down by our ancestors. For the wildlife enthusiasts, cultural curators and design connoisseurs.
Two properties. One philosophy. Come experience Northeast India the way it was meant to be.
Book Now"The land is the luxury. The people are the story. The forest is the reason."
By the people · Of the forest · For the land
From the Journal
She moved through the Kohora grasslands as if the land itself was breathing around her. The one-horned rhinoceros has roamed Kaziranga for thousands of years.
Every dish at Irroi begins not in the kitchen but in the Baari — 40 steps from the stove. The garden is the menu. The season sets the table.
The name IRROI comes from the Mishing people of Majuli — a celebratory word for a new harvest, a new year. That spirit of welcome is how we built this place.
Fewer than thirty golden tabby tigers exist on Earth. Most of them live here, in the tall elephant grass between Bagori and Kohora. Our love affair with the rarest tiger in the world.
The drums began at sundown. Five hundred years of Assamese devotional song, alive in the naamghors that still stand in every village from Majuli to Kaziranga.
The water was warm. The forest was not yet awake. For 20 minutes, between 5:40 and 6:00am, nothing asked anything of us.
Kohora, Bagori, Agoratoli — three ranges, three ecosystems, one national park. How to see all of it from Irroi in three nights.
Khar, tenga, bamboo shoot, rohi — cooked the way they have always been cooked here. The Baari is not just Irroi's garden. It is the restaurant.
No spa. No programme. Just a forest, a tea garden at dawn, and three days without a signal.
In Majuli, the Mishing community greets the New Year with rohi — rice wine brewed over three days. The name IRROI comes from that moment of shared harvest.
Two lovers who disappeared into the tall elephant grass of the Brahmaputra plain. The land held them. The land took their names.
14°C at 5:30am, 26°C by noon. What to bring, what to leave behind, and why your khaki is welcome.
The drums began at 7pm. The Karbi performers arrived with costumes folded in cloth bags. By 9pm, three guests had learned the steps.
NH27 in the early morning, a roadside tea stall at Nagaon, and the moment the landscape opens into grassland. The road is part of the experience.
Kamakhya at dawn, Saturday Haat, the Brahmaputra ferry at dusk. Guwahati rewards those who slow down enough to see it properly.