Chor Bazaar Delhi is the city's legendary Sunday flea market - a chaotic, exhilarating sprawl that begins at the crack of dawn on Netaji Subhash Marg in Daryaganj and spills out toward the lanes around Jama Masjid. Unlike Mumbai's permanent Chor Bazaar at Mutton Street, the Delhi version is a once-a-week street bazaar: vendors lay tarpaulins on the pavement, traffic is diverted, and for about eight hours you can dig through vintage cameras, antique pocket watches, second-hand books by the kilo, refurbished electronics, retro bell-bottoms, and the occasional brass curio that might or might not be a hundred years old. This May 2026 guide covers exactly when to go, where to enter, what to buy, what to avoid, the metro route, the bargaining script, and the food stops within walking distance that make the whole morning worth setting an alarm for.
What is Chor Bazaar Delhi?
Chor Bazaar Delhi is a Sunday-only open-air bazaar - locals also call it the Daryaganj Sunday Patri Bazaar or Daryaganj Sunday Market - that runs along Netaji Subhash Marg between Delhi Gate and Jama Masjid, with stalls also fanning out into the lanes near Esplanade Road and the Jama Masjid Sunday Bazaar at Urdu Park. The name "Chor Bazaar" (literally "thieves' market") is partly folklore, partly a winking acknowledgement that some merchandise has murky origins. In practice, most of what is sold is overstock, ex-display, refurbished, factory seconds, surplus from auctions and customs seizures, or genuine second-hand items being resold by Delhi households. It is one of the oldest informal markets in the capital and runs in parallel with the famous Daryaganj Sunday Book Bazaar, which sets up on the same stretch.
Where exactly is Chor Bazaar Delhi? (Address)
The bazaar has two anchors that you should mentally map together:
Daryaganj stretch (main): Netaji Subhash Marg service road, from Delhi Gate to Hauz Qazi Chowk, Daryaganj, Old Delhi - 110002.
Jama Masjid Sunday Bazaar: Urdu Park and the lanes behind Gate 1 of Jama Masjid (Matia Mahal Road area), Old Delhi - 110006.
The two stretches are about a 10-minute walk apart. The Daryaganj side is heavier on books, electronics, watches and tools; the Jama Masjid side is denser with clothes, perfumes, bags and refurbished phones. Most regulars do both in a single morning.
Chor Bazaar Delhi timings: when is it open?
Day: Sunday only. Timings: roughly 6:00 AM to 2:00 PM. The best stalls and the freshest stock are out between 7:00 AM and 10:00 AM. By noon the heat and the crowd both peak, and many sellers begin packing up shortly after 1:00 PM. If you arrive after 2:00 PM you will find an empty road.
The market does not operate on weekdays. There is no official notification system, but heavy rain, election days or large security events around Jama Masjid (during major Friday prayers, Eid, Republic Day rehearsal week) can cause an abbreviated Sunday or a one-week shutdown. When in doubt, set off early - if it is rained out you can still do breakfast in the Matia Mahal lanes.
Best things to buy at Chor Bazaar Delhi
Vintage and second-hand cameras: film SLRs, old Yashica and Pentax bodies, FM2-style Nikons, the occasional working Rolleiflex. Expect ranges from Rs. 800 for a basic point-and-shoot to Rs. 6,000-12,000 for a clean film SLR with a working lens. Always test the shutter and the light seals before paying.
Antique pocket and wrist watches: HMT Janata reissues, Soviet Raketas, Seiko 5 mechanicals, and a sea of "vintage-look" quartz. Wind the watch, listen for the tick, and check that the second hand actually moves.
Books at the Daryaganj Sunday Book Bazaar: the most reliable haul of the day - from Rs. 20 for second-hand paperbacks to Rs. 300-500 for hardback coffee-table books and almost-new bestsellers. Stalls extend from Delhi Gate through Asaf Ali Road.
Refurbished electronics and phones: Bluetooth speakers, headphones, chargers, Android phones, older iPhones. Quality is hit-or-miss - buy only if the seller lets you boot the device and connect it to your own hotspot.
Brass, copper and curios: diyas, oil lamps, kitchen utensils, old door handles, Buddha figurines, Ganesh idols, brass scales. Good for interior styling, almost never genuine antiques despite what the seller insists.
Tools and hardware: drill bits, spanners, sockets, soldering irons - useful if you actually know what you are looking at.
Clothing: bell-bottoms, denim jackets, "export surplus" t-shirts, vintage leather belts. Cheaper than Sarojini Nagar but with a narrower hit rate.
Imitation perfumes and attars: mostly in the Matia Mahal stretch - cheap, smell pleasant for an hour, do not buy as a gift.
How to reach Chor Bazaar Delhi (metro and otherwise)
By metro (recommended): the closest stations are Chawri Bazar (Yellow Line) and Jama Masjid (Violet Line). From Chawri Bazar take a cycle-rickshaw to Jama Masjid Gate 1 (Rs. 30-50) and walk down Matia Mahal Road, then cut to Netaji Subhash Marg for the Daryaganj stretch. From Jama Masjid metro use Gate 2 - the bazaar is a five-minute walk. Delhi Gate (Violet Line) is also a clean entry for the Daryaganj end of the book market.
By auto: ask for "Daryaganj Sunday Bazaar" or "Jama Masjid Gate 1". Expect Rs. 80-150 from Connaught Place, more if you are coming from south Delhi.
By car: not recommended. Several stretches of Netaji Subhash Marg are closed or partially closed on Sunday mornings, parking is scarce and aggressive, and rickshaws will get you in faster. If you must drive, park near Delhi Gate or behind Asaf Ali Road and walk in.
How to bargain at Chor Bazaar Delhi
The opening price you hear is almost always 2.5x to 4x what the seller will accept. A reasonable rule of thumb: counter at 30-40 percent of the quoted price, settle around 50-60 percent. A few specifics that work:
Never show too much interest in one specific item. Browse three or four, ask prices for all, then return to your target.
Always be ready to walk away once. Most sellers will call you back within ten steps.
Pay in cash, in small denominations - sellers genuinely run out of change and a Rs. 500 note can cost you the bargain.
If you are buying two items from the same vendor, ask for a bundle price at the end, not at the start.
Bring a friend who plays the skeptical accomplice ("yaar, this is too much, let's go"). It works.
What is worth buying vs. common scams
Worth buying: books (almost always genuine), brass and copper decor (priced for what it is), tools, vintage watches if you know how to test them, refurbished Bluetooth speakers, and second-hand cameras with a working shutter.
Watch out for:
Sealed-box electronics: any "brand-new iPhone" or "sealed laptop" at a Sunday street market is almost certainly a clone, a stolen device or a brick. Skip.
"Antique" silver jewellery: mostly nickel-plated brass. If the seller will not let you scratch-test it, walk.
Branded perfumes: the box may look identical to the real Tom Ford or Chanel - the liquid inside is not.
"Original" leather wallets and bags: some are real PU leather, most are coated fabric. Test the smell, test the stitching.
Pickpocketing: the crowd density between Jama Masjid Gate 1 and Matia Mahal can be intense after 10 AM. Carry a cross-body bag, keep phone in a front pocket, leave the second wallet at home.
Best food stops near Chor Bazaar Delhi (Old Delhi food trail)
Half the reason to wake up early for Chor Bazaar is to earn a proper Old Delhi breakfast or post-shopping lunch. Everything below is within a 5-15 minute walk of Jama Masjid Gate 1. All ten outlets are on magicpin - tap to see live deals, save on the bill, and read recent reviews.
The original Karim's, founded in 1913, sits inside the lane next to Matia Mahal. The mutton burra, nihari and the mutton korma are the dishes that built the legend. Get there before 9 AM on Sunday and the queue is short; by 11 AM the wait is real. Address: 16, Gali Kababian, near Jama Masjid Gate 1.
The most popular alternative to Karim's, directly across Matia Mahal Road. The mutton korma is silkier, the chicken jahangiri is richer, and the rumali roti is served at a slightly faster clip. Address: 8, Matia Mahal Road, opposite Gate 1.
The butter chicken here is a wholly different beast - charcoal-grilled chicken tikka pieces drowned in a glossy yellow butter-and-cream gravy. Greasy in the best way. Open till late, but on Sunday they begin serving by mid-morning. Address: 968, Matia Mahal Road, Bazar Matia Mahal.
The original Moti Mahal that invented butter chicken and dal makhani in the 1950s. Sit-down lunch territory - good for after the bazaar wraps up around 1-2 PM. Address: 3703, Netaji Subhash Marg, Daryaganj.
If you want to sit down in air-conditioned calm after three sweaty hours in the bazaar, this 200-year-old restored haveli does refined Mughlai and Awadhi plates in a courtyard setting. Pricier than the street, but worth it once. Address: 2293, Gali Anar, Dharampura, near Gali Guliyan and Jama Masjid.
Kake Di Hatti - Church Mission Road, Chandni Chowk
A vegetarian counterpoint to the Matia Mahal meat circuit. The paneer-stuffed naan and dal makhani are the orders. Address: Church Mission Road, Katra Ghel, Khari Baoli, Chandni Chowk.
Qureshi Kabab Corner, opposite Gate 1, Jama Masjid
The seekh kababs and chicken changezi here are the local favourites - cheaper than Karim's, smaller queues, equally smoky. Good for a takeaway plate to eat at Urdu Park. Address: Opposite Gate 1, Matia Mahal Road.
A solid breakfast nihari and paya stop right at the start of the Matia Mahal lane - good if Karim's and Al Jawahar are full. Address: Bazar Matia Mahal, Kalan Mehal, near ZamZam Perfume.
Hafiz Ji Parathe Wale, Mohalla Nihariyan, Shah Ganj
If you arrive via Chawri Bazar metro, do the parathas here before walking into the bazaar. Mughlai-style nihari parathas, freshly fried. Address: 2631, Mohalla Nihariyan, Shah Ganj, Ajmeri Gate.
Blue Ribbon Bakers, Sir Syed Ahmed Road, Daryaganj
Old-school Daryaganj bakery for the trip back - patties, plum cakes, fresh bread. Useful if you want to carry something home rather than another second-hand camera. Address: 3109, Sir Syed Ahmed Road, Kucha Alam, Daryaganj.
Chor Bazaar Delhi vs Mumbai vs Bangalore
Delhi (Daryaganj Sunday Bazaar): Sunday-only, open-air, strongest for books, vintage cameras and brass curios. Best paired with an Old Delhi food walk. Read our companion guide on Chor Bazaar Mumbai.
Mumbai (Mutton Street, Bhendi Bazaar): permanent, open six days a week (closed Friday), the deeper antique market - genuine colonial-era gramophones, brass nautical instruments, Bollywood film posters. Pricier than Delhi.
Bangalore (Gowri Shankar / Russell Market area): smaller, weekday-ish, mostly second-hand electronics and refurbished phones. Less of a destination market, more of a neighbourhood haunt.
Frequently asked questions about Chor Bazaar Delhi
Q. Is Chor Bazaar Delhi open today? Only if today is Sunday. The market runs from roughly 6 AM to 2 PM every Sunday and is shut the rest of the week.
Q. What time does Chor Bazaar Delhi open? Stalls begin setting up between 5:30 and 6:00 AM, the bazaar is in full swing by 7:00 AM, and most vendors start packing up after 1:00 PM. Plan to arrive between 7:00 and 9:00 AM for the best selection.
Q. Where is Chor Bazaar Delhi located - Daryaganj or Jama Masjid? Both. The main book and electronics stretch is on Netaji Subhash Marg, Daryaganj. A second concentration of clothing, perfume and refurbished-phone stalls runs around Urdu Park and Matia Mahal Road near Jama Masjid. They are a 10-minute walk apart.
Q. What is the nearest metro station to Chor Bazaar Delhi? Chawri Bazar on the Yellow Line and Jama Masjid on the Violet Line are both within a 5-10 minute walk. Delhi Gate on the Violet Line is the cleanest entry for the Daryaganj book bazaar.
Q. Is it safe to buy electronics at Chor Bazaar Delhi? Small accessories (chargers, Bluetooth speakers, headphones) are usually fine if you test them. Phones, laptops and any "sealed-box" branded electronics are high-risk - many are clones, stolen, or non-functional. If you cannot boot the device and connect it to your own SIM or Wi-Fi at the stall, do not buy it.
Q. How much should I budget for a morning at Chor Bazaar Delhi? Plan for Rs. 500-2,000 in small-denomination cash for shopping, plus Rs. 300-500 for a proper Old Delhi breakfast. Books typically run Rs. 20-300 each, brass curios Rs. 100-800, vintage watches Rs. 500-3,000, used cameras Rs. 800-12,000.
Q. Is Chor Bazaar Delhi the same as the Daryaganj Sunday Book Market? They overlap. The Daryaganj Sunday Book Market is the book-heavy stretch of the same Sunday bazaar - same day, same road, just a different specialty. Most people do both in one visit.
Q. Can I buy online from Chor Bazaar Delhi? No - it is strictly an in-person Sunday street market with no official online presence. Items you see one Sunday may not be there the next.
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