Puri Travel Guide Part 11: The Cash-Only Economy — Money, UPI, and Budget Management
Complete budget breakdown for a day trip to Puri. Cash denomination strategy, UPI availability, total cost estimate for two people, and money safety tips.
Part 11: The Cash-Only Economy — Money, UPI, and Budget Management
Puri operates on a dual economy. Outside the temple — at restaurants, modern shops, and ride-hailing services — UPI and digital payments work reasonably well. But inside the temple compound, along the Grand Road, and in the traditional services sector (auto-rickshaws, e-rickshaws, shoe stands, mobile counters, Ananda Bazar, flower vendors, tea stalls), cash is king.
Your digital wallet is useless when you are standing barefoot inside the temple wanting to put ₹10 in the Hundi, or when you are negotiating with an e-rickshaw driver at 9:30 AM outside Puri Railway Station. For a smooth, stress-free day, carry the right amount of physical cash in the right denominations.
The Ideal Cash Carry for Two People
Here is the recommended cash distribution for your Saturday day trip:
Denomination Breakdown
| Denomination | Quantity | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| ₹10 notes | 10 | Donations (Hundi), shoe stand, mobile counter, tea |
| ₹20 notes | 10 | Auto tips, flower garlands, small snacks |
| ₹50 notes | 5 | E-rickshaw fares, coconut water, Mahaprasad items |
| ₹100 notes | 5 | Auto fares, Mahaprasad meal, emergency purchases |
| ₹200 notes | 2 | Craft museum entry, bottled water bulk purchase |
| ₹500 notes | 2 | Emergency fund, auto from station to Niladri Vihar on return |
| Total | ₹2,500 – ₹3,000 |
Why Small Notes Matter
In the temple economy, change is scarce. If you hand a ₹500 note to an e-rickshaw driver for a ₹50 ride, he will either:
- Claim he does not have change (and pocket the ₹500), or
- Genuinely not have change, forcing you to visit a nearby shop to break the note.
Small notes eliminate this friction entirely. They also give you precise control over donations — you donate exactly what you intend, not more.
Complete Budget Breakdown: Two People, One Day
Here is a realistic, itemised budget for the entire day:
| Expense | Estimated Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Auto: Niladri Vihar → BBS Station | ₹150 – ₹200 | Pre-negotiated |
| Train Tickets: BBS → Puri (2 General) | ₹90 – ₹120 | Via UTS app or counter |
| E-Rickshaw: Puri Station → Temple | ₹40 – ₹80 | Shared or private |
| Shoe Stand + Mobile Counter | ₹10 – ₹20 | Nominal fees |
| Flower Garland (Optional) | ₹10 – ₹20 | For offering at temple |
| Coconut Water (2) | ₹50 – ₹80 | Before entering temple |
| Temple Donation (Hundi) | ₹20 – ₹100 | Whatever your heart says |
| Mahaprasad (2 Abhada meals) | ₹200 – ₹400 | At Ananda Bazar |
| Khaja Sweets | ₹30 – ₹50 | Dry prasad to take home |
| Sudarshan Craft Museum (2 entries) | ₹10 | ₹5 per person |
| Bottled Water (3-4 litres) | ₹40 – ₹80 | Throughout the day |
| Tea/Snacks at Beach | ₹30 – ₹60 | Evening refreshments |
| Auto: Temple area → Beach → Station | ₹60 – ₹120 | Two rides |
| Train Tickets: Puri → BBS (2 General) | ₹90 – ₹120 | Return journey |
| Auto: BBS Station → Niladri Vihar | ₹150 – ₹250 | Evening/night rate |
| Miscellaneous | ₹100 – ₹200 | Unexpected expenses |
| TOTAL | ₹1,080 – ₹1,900 | For two people, entire day |
Budget Tiers
| Tier | Total Budget | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Ultra Budget | ₹800 – ₹1,000 | General train, shared e-rickshaws, minimal food |
| Comfortable | ₹1,200 – ₹1,500 | Private e-rickshaws, full Mahaprasad, snacks |
| Premium | ₹1,800 – ₹2,500 | AC train, private auto throughout, extra shopping |
For your situation (mother-son, comfort priority): Budget ₹1,500 to ₹2,000 total. Carry ₹2,500 to be safe.
Where UPI Works and Where It Doesn’t
| Location | UPI Accepted? |
|---|---|
| Bhubaneswar Railway Station shops | ✅ Most |
| Mo Bus / Ama Bus fare | ✅ Via app |
| Puri Railway Station shops | ⚠️ Some |
| E-Rickshaw / Auto-Rickshaw | ❌ Almost never |
| Temple shoe/mobile counter | ❌ No |
| Ananda Bazar (inside temple) | ❌ No |
| Flower/garland vendors | ❌ No |
| Grand Road tea stalls | ❌ No |
| Sudarshan Craft Museum | ⚠️ Maybe |
| Beach vendors | ❌ No |
| Modern restaurants in Puri | ✅ Yes |
| Puri town shops | ✅ Many |
The Rule of Thumb: If it is inside the temple compound or involves a traditional service provider (auto, e-rickshaw, vendor), use cash. If it is a modern establishment with a shop counter, UPI probably works.
Money Safety Tips
-
Distribute your cash. Do not keep all your money in one pouch. Give your mother ₹500 to keep in a separate pocket. Keep the bulk in your cloth pouch, strapped across your body (cross-body, not dangling from a shoulder).
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Pickpocket awareness. The Bada Danda area and the temple queue are prime zones for pickpockets. Keep your hand on your pouch at all times. Do not put cash in back pockets.
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Do not flash large notes. When paying for a ₹20 e-rickshaw ride, pull out a ₹20 note — not a ₹500 note and then ask for change. Displaying large notes attracts unwanted attention.
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ATMs in Puri. There are ATMs near the railway station and on the Grand Road if you run out of cash. However, Saturday afternoon ATMs in Puri can be crowded and sometimes out of cash. Do not rely on ATMs as your primary cash source.
Next: Part 12: The Dress Code Deep-Dive — What You and Your Mother Should Wear
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