There is a road that traces the very edge of India. This is the East Coast Road, or simply the ECR. Eventually, you reach the very bottom of the map at Kanyakumari, the “rock bottom” tip where the land finally ends.
But the trip doesn’t end there. Taking this dive into the ECR means you aren’t tailing the coast; you’re exploring parts of the state that the water doesn’t reach.
Everything kicks off at Marina Beach. Once you’re driving south on the ECR, the city buildings just stop and the palms in Muttukadu take over. The backwaters are super still, dead flat and it’s the best place to rent a kayak.
Then the vibe totally flips once you hit Covelong. You see people out catching waves at sunrise and you can actually grab a lesson right on the beach.
This place is way more than just a beach town. It’s a landmark heritage almost like a huge, outdoor workshop where people are constantly carving stone. You’ve got the 8th century Shore Temple sitting right on the rocks. Honestly, it’s just cool to see how those old carvings have stayed standing with the ocean spray hitting them for that long.
If you walk inland, you will witness the Five Rathas (Chariots). These are huge chariots carved straight out of single, solid boulders. The beach is wide and gold. If the sun gets to be too much, you can just duck into the Crocodile Bank.
Next up, Pondicherry’s French Quarter, or White Town, has a distinct layout that feels entirely European. The Promenade is the central feature, a 1.5 km rocky seawall with the streets lined with colonial buildings and balconies covered in bougainvillea, with some converted into cute cafes and French bakeries.
Paradise Beach is next on the list. Visitors can ride a ferry through the Chunnambar backwaters. You can also visit the Auroville area and the Auro Beach.
Pichavaram Backwaters is located 10 kilometers from one of the Pancha bhootha Stalam, Thillai Nataraja Temple in Chidambaram. This is the world’s 2nd largest mangrove forest made up of a network of 4,000 small canals. You use traditional rowboats to get into the narrower “inner tunnels.” There is a heavy tree canopy overhead that keeps the sun out, and the roots stay in the brackish water.
Rameshwaram is a bewitching drive across the Pamban Bridge. The main landmark in town is the Ramanathaswamy Temple. It has an eccentric layout with a thousand pillars in the corridors.
Further end is Dhanushkodi, a ghost town since the 1964 cyclone. The land is a light path between the Bay of Bengal and the Indian Ocean. If you are at Arichal Munai, you’re only 18 km from the coast of Sri Lanka and can still find the ruins of the railway station from the ’64 storm.
Kanyakumari is the town where you run out of road at the very fringe of India. It’s where the three seas, the Arabian, the Indian Ocean, and the Bay of Bengal; all collide at the Triveni Sangam. Vivekananda Rock Memorial is a literal complete experience with a quick ferry ride to look back and glance at the land you travelled so far.
To finish the trip, you leave the ocean behind and head north to Madurai. It’s a really old city that basically grew around the Meenakshi Amman Temple. The main things people look at are the 14 gopurams because they have thousands of painted stone figures on them. The biggest one stands 52m high.
You’ve followed the coastline through a lot of different landscapes, from the busy city stretches to the quiet mangrove canals. To make sure you didn’t miss any of the key landmarks or activities on your way down, you can use this checklist to track the main beaches and backwaters covered in the journey.