Where You'll Stay at Ekam: A Guide to Accommodations

Where You'll Stay at Ekam: A Guide to Accommodations
Ekam doesn't advertise itself as a luxury resort, and that's not what you'll find. This is a spiritual retreat center built for thousands of seekers, not leisure travelers hunting for thread counts and minibar snacks. The accommodations reflect that purpose—functional, clean, designed to support your practice rather than distract from it. Understanding what to expect will help you choose wisely and avoid disappointment when you arrive in the Deccan hills.
Room Categories: From Dormitories to Deluxe
The accommodation ladder at Ekam runs from basic dormitories up through standard and deluxe private rooms. Dormitories house multiple participants in bunk-bed configurations—expect six to twelve roommates, sometimes more during peak programs. You'll have a bed, a small shelf or locker, and shared bathroom facilities down the hall. Privacy is minimal. These rooms exist for pilgrims on tight budgets or those embracing austere practice.
Standard rooms typically offer private or semi-private arrangements—two beds, modest furnishings, a ceiling fan, perhaps a small desk. They're spare but adequate, resembling simple hotel rooms stripped of decorative pretense. Deluxe accommodations add air conditioning, private bathrooms, possibly better mattresses and additional space. But "deluxe" here means comfortable simplicity, not opulence. Even at the top tier, you're still in a retreat center where the eight-thousand-person meditation hall matters more than your sleeping quarters.
What's Included (And What Isn't)
Rooms come with the essentials: a bed with basic linens, pillows, and typically a light blanket. Many participants bring their own towels, though some accommodation packages include them. Don't expect bathrobes, slippers, or toiletry kits. This isn't that kind of place. You'll want to pack shampoo, soap, and anything else you need for personal care.
Climate control varies dramatically by room category. Dormitories and standard rooms usually rely on ceiling fans and natural ventilation—adequate during cooler months but potentially uncomfortable when the Deccan sun beats down. The red earth outside radiates heat. Air-conditioned deluxe rooms become significantly more appealing if you're visiting between March and September or if you sleep poorly in heat.
The Bathroom Situation
In dormitories and many standard rooms, bathrooms are shared facilities down the corridor. Expect Western-style or squat toilets, basic showers, and morning queues before meditation sessions begin at dawn. These bathrooms are cleaned regularly but serve many people. Private bathrooms in deluxe rooms offer obvious advantages in convenience, privacy, and personal hygiene control.
Quietness, Neighbors, and Hallway Life
Silence is part of the practice at Ekam, but it's imperfectly maintained in accommodation areas. Dormitories mean navigating other people's schedules—someone arriving late, another waking early, rustling bags, snoring. Even in private rooms, walls can be thin. You'll hear footsteps in hallways, doors closing, neighbors returning from evening programs.
The peacocks that roam the gardens don't respect meditation schedules. They call at dawn, sometimes earlier. If you're a light sleeper, bring quality earplugs regardless of room category.
Picking the Right Room for Your Trip
Consider your priorities honestly. If you're here for intense practice and can sleep anywhere, dormitory costs make sense—channel those savings toward donations or extending your stay. If you're older, dealing with health issues, or know you need good sleep to function, the deluxe upgrade isn't indulgence; it's supporting your practice.
First-timers often benefit from mid-tier standard rooms—private enough to decompress but affordable enough not to feel wasteful at a spiritual center. Multiple-week stays might justify air conditioning's daily comfort. Short visits during cool seasons can manage with fans.
The Honest Tradeoffs
Cheaper accommodations at Ekam mean real compromises: less sleep due to roommates or heat, bathroom inconvenience, less personal space when you're emotionally processing difficult inner work. These aren't trivial concerns. But thousands practice here successfully in basic conditions, and the dormitory experience can deepen teachings on ego, attachment, and impermanence.
The meditation hall welcomes everyone equally—dormitory pilgrims and deluxe guests walk the same marble floors barefoot. Your room matters less than you think once programs begin. But it matters enough. Choose with clear eyes, pack accordingly, and remember that discomfort sometimes serves the practice, but unnecessary suffering doesn't make you more spiritual.



