Mango Buying Guide 2026
Mango Buying Guide 2026: Which to Buy, When, How to Pick Ripe & Where | Vanamrit
πŸ›’ Mango Buying Guide β€” Updated May 2026

The Complete Mango Buying Guide
for India β€” 2026 Edition

Which variety to buy, when the season peaks, how to spot a ripe mango, what fair prices look like, and everything you need to never make a bad mango purchase again.

πŸ“… Updated May 2026 ⏱ 14 min read 🌿 By Vanamrit Farms πŸ“ Valsad, Gujarat
Picture yourself at a fruit market in May. There are Kesar mangoes piled in one corner, Alphonso in another, Banganapalli in a third. A vendor waves you over excitedly: “Best quality, fresh from farm, guaranteed sweet.” You pick up a beautiful golden mango, smell it hopefully β€” nothing. You buy it anyway. You get home, cut it open, and the inside is pale, rubbery, and tastes like mildly sweetened air.

That’s a bad mango purchase β€” and it’s more avoidable than you think. The problem isn’t that India doesn’t have extraordinary mangoes. It has some of the finest fruit in the world. The problem is that most buyers walk into mango season without a framework. They go by colour, get swayed by enthusiastic vendors, buy at the wrong time, and then wonder why the mango doesn’t taste like they remembered from childhood.

This guide is your framework. By the time you finish reading, you’ll know exactly which variety fits your needs, when the season peaks in 2026, how to pick a ripe mango in under 60 seconds, how to spot carbide treatment, what fair prices look like this year, and how to store your crate so nothing goes to waste. Let’s get into it.
β†’ Related: Carbide-Free Ripening Explained β€” Full Science Guide

πŸ—ΊοΈ India Has 1,500+ Mango Varieties. Here Are the 8 You Actually Need to Know

India produces around 20 million tonnes of mango every year β€” roughly 40 to 50% of the entire world’s supply, depending on the season. And the country has somewhere between 1,000 and 1,500 named varieties depending on who’s counting. But for a buyer sitting in a city in India in 2026, most of that number is irrelevant. About 8 varieties dominate what you’ll actually encounter in markets and online. Here’s the quick guide:

VarietyRegionSeason 2026Flavour ProfileBest ForPrice Range / kg
Alphonso (Hapus)Ratnagiri, Devgad, Maharashtra + South GujaratFeb–June (peak Apr–May)Butter-rich, complex, no fibreFresh eating, gifting, aamrasβ‚Ή400–₹800
KesarGir (Saurashtra) + Valsad (South Gujarat)May–July (Valsad to July)Saffron-sweet, fragrant, cleanAamras, fresh eating, dessertsβ‚Ή150–₹400
Banganapalli (Safeda)Andhra Pradesh, TelanganaApril–JuneMild, gently sweet, largeEveryday fresh eating, bulkβ‚Ή60–₹130
LangraVaranasi, UP, BiharJune–AugustTangy-sweet, green skin even ripeFresh eating, North India favouriteβ‚Ή80–₹150
DasheriMalihabad, Lucknow, UPJune–AugustAromatic, golden-yellow, fiberlessFresh sliced eatingβ‚Ή70–₹130
RajapuriSouth Gujarat (Valsad, Navsari)June–AugustMild, excellent pulp yieldBulk aamras, pulp-freezing, valueβ‚Ή60–₹120
HimsagarWest Bengal, OdishaMay–JuneCustardy, intensely sweet, no fibreFresh eating, East India premiumβ‚Ή120–₹200
ChaunsaUP, Bihar, Pakistan borderJuly–AugustHoney-sweet, aromatic, late seasonLate-season premium fresh eatingβ‚Ή100–₹180

The question you should ask yourself before buying isn’t “which mango is the best?” β€” it’s “what am I going to do with it?” Because the best mango for eating whole while standing over the kitchen sink (Alphonso, arguably) is not the same as the best mango for making 3 litres of frozen aamras (Kesar or Rajapuri). More on this shortly.

β†’ Complete state-by-state variety guide β€” 20+ mangoes mapped

πŸ“… The Season Calendar β€” When Each Mango Peaks in 2026

If there’s one thing that separates experienced mango buyers from frustrated ones, it’s this: they know when to buy. Timing isn’t just about getting the best price β€” it’s about getting a genuinely ripe, naturally developed fruit that hasn’t been forced with chemicals to look ready before it is.

Mango season in India 2026 began in mid-April with the first arrivals from southern and western states, according to market data from SalemMango and regional agricultural reports. But “available” and “at peak” are very different things. Early-season mangoes β€” especially before May β€” are often underdeveloped in sugar content and, as multiple food safety reports from April 2026 have noted, carry the highest risk of carbide treatment. The demand is high, the natural supply is low, and that gap is exactly where chemicals fill in.

πŸ“… Season Calendar β€” 2026

Alphonso (Hapus): Mid-February to June, peak April–May | Kesar (Gir): Mid-April to June, peak May–June | Valsad Kesar: May to July β€” the extended South Gujarat advantage | Banganapalli: April to June | Langra / Dasheri: June to August | Rajapuri: June to August | Chaunsa: July to August

Here’s a counter-intuitive truth that most buyers learn the hard way: the most expensive mangoes aren’t always the best ones. Early-season Kesar in late April costs 30–60% more than peak-season June Kesar β€” and delivers 20–30% less flavour in return. You’re paying a premium for earliness, not quality. The sweet spot for both taste and value is the peak window: May and June for Kesar, April to early May for Alphonso.

And here’s Vanamrit’s specific advantage worth knowing about: Valsad Kesar runs through July. When Gir Kesar supply drops off by late June, buyers who want genuine Kesar still have a full month of South Gujarat coastal Kesar available. That’s not a small detail β€” it’s the difference between getting your mango fix in the season’s second half or settling for whatever’s left in the market.

β†’ Week-by-week Kesar season guide with quality windows for 2026

🚨 The Carbide Problem β€” The Most Important Thing in This Guide

We need to talk about the pale, rubbery mango from the opening story. Because it wasn’t just a disappointing purchase β€” it was almost certainly a calcium carbide-ripened mango. And understanding what carbide is and how to spot it is the single most impactful thing you can do as a mango buyer in India.

Calcium carbide β€” called “masala” in the trade β€” is an industrial chemical used in welding. When it contacts moisture, it releases acetylene gas that forces the mango’s skin to turn yellow in 24–36 hours. It doesn’t complete the natural ripening biochemistry. The starch doesn’t convert to sugar properly. The aromatic compounds never form. The carotenoids don’t develop. The result is a mango that looks ripe but isn’t β€” and may carry traces of arsenic and phosphorus from the chemical’s impurities.

It’s illegal. FSSAI banned it in 2011. FSSAI’s April 2026 enforcement directive ordered all State Food Safety Commissioners to intensify raids on mandis, godowns, and ripening facilities. And yet, as food safety experts have noted, many traders who use it don’t fully understand they’re breaking the law. Carbide sells for β‚Ή5–10 per kg in open markets. The economic incentive is brutally clear.

How do you spot it? Three fast checks before you buy anything:

No aroma = walk away. Hold the mango near the stem and breathe in. A naturally ripe Kesar or Alphonso has a fragrance so powerful it practically announces itself. If there’s nothing β€” not even a hint of fruit smell β€” the mango is not naturally ripe, no matter how golden it looks.

Uniform flat yellow = red flag. Natural ripening produces gradual colour change β€” green patches at the tip, a reddish blush at the shoulder, golden body for Kesar. Perfectly uniform, artificially bright yellow skin all over is how a carbide-treated mango announces itself visually.

White or grey powder in the crate = leave immediately. This is direct physical evidence of calcium carbide. If you see powdery residue on the fruit or inside the packaging, that crate has been treated.

β†’ Full carbide science guide: health risks, detection tests, FSSAI 2026

πŸ‘ƒ How to Pick a Ripe Mango β€” 5 Tests That Take Under 60 Seconds

You don’t need to be a mango expert to pick a good one. You need five senses and about 45 seconds. Here’s the method, in the exact order you should use it:

1
🌸 The Fragrance Test β€” Start Here, Always
Hold the mango near the stem end and breathe in naturally. A genuinely ripe mango β€” especially Kesar or Alphonso β€” has a powerful, unmistakable fragrance that fills your palm instantly. Think of it like this: a ripe mango’s aroma is its way of introducing itself. If nothing comes to greet you, that mango isn’t ready β€” or was never allowed to get ready. This single test eliminates most bad purchases before you’ve spent a rupee.
2
🀏 The Gentle Press β€” Near the Stem End
Apply light pressure with your thumb near the stem end β€” the point where ripening always progresses first, from inside out. A ripe mango yields gently, like a ripe avocado or a perfectly ripe peach. Not mushy β€” mushy means overripe and already fermenting inside. Not hard β€” rock-hard means it needs 3–4 more days. Gentle, consistent give is what you’re looking for. If different parts of the mango feel different β€” soft in one spot, hard in another β€” that’s a textbook sign of carbide treatment: surface softening without internal ripening.
3
🎨 The Colour Read β€” Don’t Judge Too Quickly
Natural ripening paints a mango the way an artist would β€” gradually, unevenly, with personality. A naturally ripened Kesar has a golden-saffron body with often a slight green tip and a reddish-yellow blush at the shoulder. Banganapalli develops a warm golden-yellow with natural variation. Alphonso has a yellow-green to deep golden gradient. What you’re looking for is this character. What you’re avoiding is that uniform, flat, airbrushed yellow that looks too perfect β€” because it was chemically forced to look that way. Colour alone cannot confirm ripeness; it can only raise or lower your suspicion level.
4
🌿 The Stem Check β€” Freshness at a Glance
Look at the stem. A recently harvested, naturally handled mango has a plump, slightly moist stem. Sometimes there’s a trace of dried sap around it β€” which is actually a very good sign, indicating it was harvested not long ago and the sap hadn’t time to fully dry. A shrivelled, dessicated stem that looks like it’s been baked in the sun tells you this mango has been sitting around for a while β€” in storage, in transit, or on display β€” longer than you’d ideally want.
5
βš–οΈ The Weight Test β€” Density Is Everything
Pick up two same-sized mangoes and compare. The heavier one wins. Weight in a mango means dense, developed, juice-rich flesh. A mango that feels surprisingly light for its size has underdeveloped flesh β€” either it was harvested too early (before full sugar development) or it’s lost moisture during extended storage. This test is especially useful when buying in bulk and trying to pick the best dozen from a crate.
🌿 Pro Tip for Online Orders

When your farm-direct delivery arrives, apply the fragrance test the moment you open the box. Green-mature mangoes won’t have the full fragrance yet β€” but you should detect the beginning of it, like a quiet introduction. By day 3 at room temperature, that introduction should have become a full conversation. If there’s absolutely nothing β€” no hint of aroma even after 4 days at room temperature β€” contact the seller immediately. That’s not a normally ripening mango.

β†’ 5-sign guide to authenticating Kesar mango specifically

πŸ† Which Mango Should You Actually Buy? β€” A Decision Guide by Use Case

This is the question everyone wants answered. And the honest answer is: it depends entirely on what you’re doing with it. Picking the “best” mango without knowing your use case is like picking the “best” knife without knowing what you’re cutting. Let’s match varieties to needs.

🍽️ For Fresh Eating β€” Premium Experience
Kesar or Alphonso. If you want the most extraordinary mango experience β€” the fragrance, the colour, the complex sweetness β€” these are your two. Alphonso for buttery richness and international prestige. Kesar for that deep saffron sweetness and powerful aroma that stays with you.
πŸ₯£ For Aamras / Mango Pulp
Kesar, clearly. Deep saffron colour, fiberless texture, honey-clean sweetness without acidity. This is what Gujarat’s traditional aamras is built on. Alphonso works beautifully too. For large-volume aamras at lower cost, Rajapuri’s high pulp yield makes it the smart choice.
🎁 For Gifting
Alphonso or Kesar in farm-direct packaging. Premium gifting needs traceability β€” the recipient should be able to verify what they’re eating. A named farm, carbide-free confirmation, and distinctive variety (not anonymous “mango”) is what separates a premium gift from an expensive market box.
πŸ“¦ For Bulk Buying / Everyday Value
Banganapalli or Rajapuri. Banganapalli’s large size, mild sweetness, and 7–14 day shelf life make it excellent for household bulk eating. Rajapuri gives the best pulp yield per rupee for families planning to freeze aamras through the year.
β†’ Full Kesar vs Banganapalli comparison β€” taste, Brix, shelf life, verdict

🌿 Kesar vs Alphonso vs Rajapuri β€” Vanamrit’s Three Varieties Compared

We grow three varieties at our Chikhli, Valsad orchard. Here’s an honest, side-by-side look at all three β€” because the right choice depends on you, not on which one we’re keenest to sell.

πŸ₯­ Valsad Kesar
Vanamrit’s flagship Β· May–July
Brix18–22Β° at peak
ColourDeep saffron-orange, all the way to the seed
FragranceRoom-filling, unmistakable saffron-sweet
Size200–280g, medium
Season edgeRuns to July β€” 3–4 wks longer than Gir Kesar
Best forAamras, gifting, premium fresh eating
πŸ₯­ Valsad Alphonso
Hapus from South Gujarat coast Β· Feb–May
Brix18–22Β° at peak
ColourSaffron-yellow, creamy fiberless texture
FragranceRich, floral, complex β€” fills a room
Size150–200g, small-medium
Unique noteCoastal soil terroir β€” mild tartness that lifts the sweetness
Best forFresh eating, gifting, aamras, premium desserts
πŸ₯­ Rajapuri
South Gujarat’s bulk hero Β· June–August
Brix14–17Β° β€” milder, clean sweetness
ColourGolden-yellow, thick skin
Size350–500g β€” one of India’s larger varieties
Unique noteExceptional pulp yield per kg β€” low waste, high aamras volume
SeasonJune–August β€” perfect late-season choice
Best forBulk aamras, pulp-freezing, households wanting volume
πŸ€” Which One Is for You?
Quick decision guide
Best fragranceKesar wins clearly
Best for aamrasKesar (colour + taste) or Rajapuri (yield + cost)
Most complexAlphonso β€” the nuanced choice
Best value/kgRajapuri by a significant margin
Season rangeAlphonso (Feb–May), Kesar (May–July), Rajapuri (June–Aug)
β†’ Valsad Kesar vs Gir Kesar β€” what’s actually different between the two?
🌿 All Three Varieties β€” Available Now

Farm-Direct from Chikhli, Valsad β€” Carbide-Free, Hay-Ripened

Kesar, Alphonso, and Rajapuri. Grown on our own orchard in South Gujarat, naturally ripened in hay, and shipped pan-India. No middlemen. The fragrance test on arrival day will tell you everything.

πŸ₯­ Browse & Order at vanamrit.in β†’
Vanamrit β€” From Our Orchard, To Your Table 🌿

πŸ’° Mango Price Guide 2026 β€” What Fair Prices Look Like

Let’s talk honestly about prices β€” because most buyers have no real reference point, which makes them vulnerable in two directions: overpaying for mislabelled “premium” fruit, or underpaying and getting carbide-treated stock that should have been priced differently.

As of May 2026, market data from commodity platforms shows wholesale mango rates averaging β‚Ή61/kg across the country β€” but that’s a misleading average that lumps Totapuri with Alphonso. Premium varieties have a completely different price architecture.

VarietyMarket Price/kgFarm-Direct OnlineEarly vs Peak Season PremiumWatch Out For
Alphonso (GI-tagged)β‚Ή200–₹400β‚Ή350–₹700 (includes delivery)Up to 40% more in March vs April“Alphonso” under β‚Ή100/kg is not genuine
Kesar (Gir)β‚Ή150–₹350β‚Ή200–₹400 + deliveryPeak May–June is best valueEarly April Kesar: very high carbide risk
Valsad Kesarβ‚Ή120–₹280β‚Ή150–₹350 + deliveryPrices drop slightly in July vs MayExtended season = more buying opportunities
Banganapalliβ‚Ή60–₹130β‚Ή80–₹150 + deliveryMinimal premium for timingShelf life advantage: buy slightly firm
Rajapuriβ‚Ή50–₹110β‚Ή80–₹130 + deliveryBest June–July valueBest pulp yield per rupee spent

The principle that matters most here: there is a real cost floor for quality. Naturally ripened, genuinely sourced Alphonso or Kesar cannot be sold at β‚Ή100–₹120/kg at a premium online retailer and remain authentic. The cost of farming, harvesting by hand, quality-checking, packaging, and shipping across India simply doesn’t fit at that price. When you see numbers far below market, ask what corner was cut. Usually, it’s either the variety (mislabelled), the ripening method (carbide), or the quality (damaged, oversized, or overripe reject stock).

⚠️ The Early Season Trap β€” Every Year Without Fail

Early-season Kesar (late April) costs 30–60% more than peak-season June Kesar but delivers measurably less sweetness, lower Brix, and significantly higher carbide risk. Unless you have a specific occasion that falls in that window, waiting for May–June delivers better fruit at a better price. Patience is almost always rewarded in mango season.

β†’ Kesar season timing guide β€” best windows for quality and value

πŸ›’ Online vs Local Market β€” Where Should You Actually Buy?

I want to give you an honest comparison here, not a sales pitch. Both channels have legitimate use cases. The question is which one fits your specific situation.

The case for your local market or fruit vendor

You can smell before you buy. You can pick individual fruit rather than committing to a whole crate. You get immediate access β€” no delivery wait. If you have a trusted vendor who knows their sourcing, a good local relationship can deliver excellent mangoes at fair prices season after season. For Banganapalli or Langra β€” varieties where carbide risk is lower and quality variation is less dramatic β€” your neighbourhood market works just fine.

The case for farm-direct online

For premium varieties where origin and ripening method determine the entire experience β€” Kesar, Alphonso, Rajapuri β€” the risk calculation changes. The supply chain for premium mangoes in retail markets is opaque by design. You don’t know which farm, which district, which ripening method. A vendor selling “Kesar” in April is almost certainly not selling genuinely naturally ripened Gir or Valsad Kesar at that price and at that time of year. You’re relying on trust without traceability.

Farm-direct online brands give you the opposite: a named farm, a declared district, a specific ripening method you can verify, customer reviews, and direct accountability if something goes wrong. That’s not a convenience advantage β€” that’s a food safety and quality guarantee that a market transaction simply can’t offer.

🌿 About Platform Aggregators (Amazon, BigBasket, etc.)

Convenient, yes. Trustworthy for premium mango varieties? Generally no. Most aggregator platform mango listings source from wholesale markets and fulfillment centres where the supply chain is identical to a retail market β€” just delivered to your door. Consistency is low, origin traceability is near-zero, and carbide risk is the same as at any market stall. For premium varieties, go direct to the farm.

β†’ How to identify a genuine Kesar before and after buying

πŸ“¦ Your Box Just Arrived β€” What to Do Right Now

This is where first-time online mango buyers most often panic. The box arrives and the mangoes are… green. Firm. Not what you expected. Did something go wrong?

Nothing went wrong. This is exactly right. A fully ripe mango cannot survive 5–6 days of transit across India without turning to mush. Farm-direct brands ship mangoes at the green-mature stage β€” fully developed inside, but not yet ripe on the outside. The ripening completes in your kitchen. Here’s what to do the moment the box arrives:

1
Open the box immediately
Never leave mangoes sealed in the shipping box. Open it, remove all the fruit, and let them breathe. Check each one for transit damage β€” any bruised pieces should go to the front of the eating queue.
2
Arrange in a single layer at room temperature
Place mangoes in a single layer on a tray or counter β€” not stacked on each other. Room temperature between 22–28Β°C is ideal. Keep away from direct sunlight. This is all you need to do β€” the mango handles the rest.
3
Use the newspaper wrap to speed things up
Wrapping each mango in newspaper or a paper bag traps the ethylene gas the fruit naturally produces, creating a miniature ripening environment around each piece β€” exactly what hay does in the traditional penda method. This can accelerate ripening by 1–2 days without any chemical intervention.
4
Check daily with the fragrance test
Each morning, hold a mango to your nose and smell the stem end. As natural ripening progresses, the fragrance builds. When you get a full, powerful saffron-sweet aroma and a gentle yield near the stem β€” it’s ready. Most farm-direct Kesar reaches this point in 2–4 days at typical home temperatures in May or June.
5
Refrigerate only once fully ripe
This is the most important rule: never refrigerate before ripening is complete. Chilling injury permanently stops the natural ripening process β€” a cold, unripe mango will stay hard and flavourless forever. Refrigerate only once the mango is fragrant, soft near the stem, and showing the right colour. Then it’ll last another 5–7 days in the fridge.
β†’ 5 natural at-home ripening methods β€” full guide

🧊 Mango Storage β€” Making Your Crate Last the Full Season

The most common mango waste story in Indian households goes like this: a whole crate arrives, life gets busy, and four days later half of them are overripe and the other half still aren’t ready. Sound familiar? The solution is a simple sorting strategy, not complicated storage technology.

Before ripening: Room temperature, 22–28Β°C, single layer, not wrapped. Check daily. Sort by ripeness stage as the days progress β€” the most advanced go first, the firmest ones can wait.

Once ripe: Whole ripe mangoes last 5–7 days in the refrigerator crisper drawer, unwrapped (some airflow is good). Cut and stored in an airtight container: 3–5 days. For the surplus that’s ripening faster than you can eat it β€” freeze it.

Freezing pulp: Peel and blend at peak ripeness. Fill in freezer-safe bags or containers. Kesar pulp frozen correctly retains roughly 85–90% of its colour, aroma, and flavour profile for up to 6 months. This is the move for anyone buying a 10 kg or 15 kg box β€” eat fresh for the first week, freeze the rest as pulp to enjoy through Diwali and beyond.

The one rule that eliminates most crate disasters: Never wash mangoes before storage. Moisture on the skin creates the perfect environment for mould to take hold within 24–48 hours. Store dry. Wash only immediately before eating.

β†’ Complete storage guide β€” crate, fridge, freezer, and pulp instructions

❓ Mango Buying Questions β€” Answered

Which is the best mango to buy in India in 2026?
There’s no universal answer β€” it depends on what you need. Alphonso for butter-rich texture, international prestige, and gifting. Kesar for fragrance, saffron colour, and aamras. Banganapalli for large size, long shelf life, and everyday value. Rajapuri for bulk pulp at the best price per kg. Buy by use case, not by ranking.
How do I know if a mango is naturally ripe?
The fragrance test is your most reliable tool: hold the mango near the stem and breathe in. A naturally ripe mango β€” especially Kesar or Alphonso β€” has a powerful, unmistakable sweet fragrance. No aroma means not naturally ripe, regardless of colour. Secondary checks: gentle yield near the stem when pressed, gradual (not uniform) colour development, and dense weight for its size.
Is it safe to buy mangoes online in India?
Yes β€” if you buy from verified farm-direct brands with a named farm address, transparent ripening method, and carbide-free confirmation. Avoid anonymous platform aggregators where origin traceability is zero. For premium varieties like Kesar and Alphonso, farm-direct online is actually safer than most local markets, because the supply chain is transparent and accountable.
When is the best time to buy Kesar mango in 2026?
Peak season for Gir Kesar is May–June 2026. Valsad Kesar from South Gujarat extends through July β€” giving buyers an additional 3–4 weeks of genuine Kesar after Gir supply winds down. Avoid early April: high carbide risk, significantly lower Brix, and 30–60% higher price for inferior fruit.
How many mangoes are in a 10 kg box?
Approximately: Kesar (200–250g each) = 40–50 fruit. Alphonso (150–200g) = 50–65 fruit. Banganapalli (400–600g) = 18–25 fruit. Rajapuri (350–500g) = 20–28 fruit. Actual count varies by batch and grade.
Can I order mangoes online and send them as a gift to family in another city?
Yes. Farm-direct brands like Vanamrit ship pan-India in 5–6 days. Provide the recipient’s full address and phone number when ordering. For corporate or bulk gifting (10 kg+ orders), WhatsApp Vanamrit directly for bulk pricing and coordination.
How long do mangoes last after a farm-direct delivery?
Farm-direct mangoes arrive green-mature. They need 2–4 days at room temperature to ripen naturally. Once ripe: 5–7 days refrigerated whole, or 3–5 days cut in an airtight container. Freeze as pulp at peak ripeness for up to 6 months. Never refrigerate before fully ripe β€” chilling injury permanently stops ripening.
What is the actual difference between Gir Kesar and Valsad Kesar?
Same variety, different geography. Gir Kesar grows in Saurashtra’s red laterite mineral-rich soil, holds a GI tag, and is internationally recognised with a concentrated intense-sweet flavour profile. Valsad Kesar grows in South Gujarat’s coastal alluvial soil, has a slightly extended season running to July, and offers a distinctive flavour nuance from the coastal microclimate. Both are premium, genuine Kesar β€” the choice depends on preference and timing.

🌿 The Short Version of Everything Above

Buy in-season, not before the natural season starts. Choose your variety based on use, not reputation alone. Trust your nose over your eyes β€” always. Know what fair prices look like so you’re not vulnerable to either end of the price spectrum. Buy from sources you can verify when you’re spending real money on premium varieties. And when your box arrives green, breathe, and give it 2–4 days. The mango knows what it’s doing.


The mango experience you get is almost entirely determined by the decisions you make before you take the first bite. Get those right and the fruit takes care of the rest.


“A good mango doesn’t need you to choose it carefully. It announces itself the moment you bring it close.” πŸ₯­πŸŒΏ

🌿 Ready to Order?

Vanamrit β€” Farm-Fresh Kesar, Alphonso & Rajapuri β€” Pan-India 2026

Three varieties. One orchard. No carbide. No middlemen. Naturally ripened in hay at our Chikhli, Valsad farm and shipped directly to your door. The fragrance test on arrival day will tell you everything you need to know.

πŸ₯­ Browse & Order at vanamrit.in β†’
Vanamrit β€” Honest Farming. Real Flavour. 🌿

Bulk orders, corporate gifting or questions: vanamrit.in/contact | WhatsApp: +91 9033595016