A growing interest into a manner of tourism in general that provides the holistic experience has had stakeholders of one of the Indian states, Rajasthan, which has much of the healing practices and alike, to research into models that can optimally turn wellness tourism and cultural tourism into one. The researchers of this paper pay attention to this potential mix of these two sectors in order to develop a sustainable framework of medical tourism. To capture motivation, satisfaction and local impact data, this was conducted through the use of a mixed-methods design where stakeholders, tourists and a field trip to major heritage-wellness destinations (e.g. Pushkar, Ajmer, Jaipur) were surveyed to provide data on motivation, satisfaction, and local impact. The results indicate that blending Ayurvedic medicine, spiritual journeys as well as history experiences helps make visitors satisfied, local income improvement as well as an interest in preserving nature and culture. However, there exist problems relating to infrastructure, coordination of regulators and coordination of stakeholders. We propose a multi -stakeholding pro-sustainability model where they can balance economic growth with the maintenance of the cultural integrity. Going forward, the research should be experimented, regarding the long-term outcomes and applicability in new grounds.