Destination Guide

Astore Valley

Nanga Parbat from the other side — pine meadows, the world's highest mountain face, and a high-altitude plateau most travellers never reach.

📍 Astore District, GB
2,600m Astore town
🚗 3h from Gilgit
🌿 Best: Jun – Sep
Fetching conditions…

Explore Astore Valley

Tap markers to explore meadows, base camps, and the Deosai access route

Overview

Nanga Parbat
from the South

Astore is a long, green valley south of Gilgit that runs toward the base of Nanga Parbat from the opposite side to Fairy Meadows. Where Fairy Meadows sees the Raikot (north) face, Astore leads to the Rupal Valley and the south face — the Rupal Face at 4,600m is the highest mountain face on earth, taller than the entire height of Mont Blanc.

Rama Meadows (3,500m) is the accessible showpiece: a wide pine forest and alpine meadow above Astore town with direct views of Nanga Parbat's eastern ridges. The PTDC hotel here is basic but well-placed. The meadow is carpeted in wildflowers June–August and draws a fraction of the visitors Fairy Meadows receives.

The Astore–Minimarg–Deosai road is also the Astore approach to Deosai National Park — a completely different entry point than the Skardu side, with the advantage of seeing the Astore Valley en route. The drive from Astore town to Sheosar Lake via Minimarg is one of the finest day drives in all of GB.

NOC note: Parts of the Astore Valley near the Line of Control (particularly toward Gurais and Gurikot) may require an NOC from the Deputy Commissioner's office in Astore town. The core tourist sites — Rama Meadows, Rupal Valley, Minimarg, Deosai entry — do not.
2,600m
Astore town
3,500m
Rama Meadows
4,600m
Rupal Face height
4,114m
Deosai Plains entry
Top Attractions

What to See
in Astore

3,500m · pine forest · wildflowers Jun–Aug
Rama Meadows
Wide alpine meadow above Astore with forest-framed views of Nanga Parbat's eastern ridges. Far quieter than Fairy Meadows. The PTDC hotel sits at the meadow edge. A 2h walk above the meadow leads to a high viewpoint (Rama Lake) with the full Nanga Parbat massif in view.
3,800m base camp · tallest mountain face on earth
Rupal Valley
The Rupal face of Nanga Parbat rises 4,600m from valley floor to summit — the highest mountain face anywhere on earth. Base camp at 3,800m is reached by a full-day drive and hike from Astore. Reinhold Messner made the first solo ascent of this face in 1978. The base camp area is reachable without a permit.
3,500m · en route to Deosai · wildflowers
Minimarg
A broad alpine meadow at 3,500m on the Astore-to-Deosai road. Often overlooked as a destination in its own right — most people just drive through. Stop for an hour. The meadow has rivers running through it, wildflowers in June–July, and an unobstructed view of the surrounding peaks. Camping possible (no facilities).
4,114m · via Minimarg · brown bears
Deosai (Astore Side)
The Astore approach to Deosai National Park via Minimarg is the less-used entry — and the more dramatic one. The Sheosar Lake (4,142m) is the same, but the approach road through alpine terrain is wilder. Himalayan brown bears more commonly sighted on this approach in July–August. Entry permit at park gate.
Above Rama · 2h walk · glacier
Rama Lake
A small glacial lake above Rama Meadows at approximately 3,600m. The 2h walk from the PTDC hotel follows a clear path through pine forest then climbs to open terrain. The lake sits under permanent snow and has a small glacier feeding it. The view from the lake back over the meadow and valley is exceptional.
Traditional Shina culture · rarely visited
Astore Town & Bazaar
Astore town itself is a traditional Shina-speaking settlement at 2,600m with a weekly bazaar (Thursday market) where farmers from surrounding villages sell livestock, local honey, walnut oil, and dried fruit. The town has genuine local life largely untouched by tourism — worth a full morning of wandering.
Off the Beaten Path

Hidden Gems
in Astore

Full day · drive + hike · permit-free
Rupal Base Camp
Most people who visit Astore go to Rama and stop there. The Rupal Valley — another 2h drive south from Astore — leads to the south face base camp and the most dramatic close-up of any mountain face in the world. Drive from Astore to Tarashing village (2h on a rough road), then a 3h walk to base camp. You are standing at the foot of 4,600m of vertical mountain. No permit required for the base camp approach. Bring camping gear for an overnight — sunrise on the face is extraordinary.
Astore town · Thursday · farm produce
Astore Thursday Bazaar
Every Thursday, farmers from villages throughout the Astore Valley come down to the district bazaar. Livestock, honey (Astore black bee honey is particularly prized), dried apricots, walnuts, local medicinal herbs. Almost no tourists attend this market — it's a functioning agricultural market, not a tourist one. If your timing allows, organise your Astore trip around arriving on a Wednesday night to attend Thursday morning.
Camping · no facilities · June–August
Minimarg Overnight
Nearly everyone uses Minimarg as a drive-through on the Astore-to-Deosai route. Staying overnight (wild camping — no infrastructure) gives you the meadow in the morning light before anyone else arrives. The Astore River runs through the meadow. At night the sky is completely dark. Bring full camping gear — there is no guesthouse here and no food. The reward is a 6am meadow with no other humans in it.
3-day loop · Astore → Deosai → Skardu
The Astore–Deosai–Skardu Loop
The most complete way to do Astore is as a 3-day loop: Day 1 Gilgit to Astore (overnight), Day 2 Rama Meadows + Rama Lake, Day 3 drive Minimarg → Deosai → Sheosar Lake → exit Deosai on the Skardu side → Skardu overnight. This puts Deosai in the middle of the journey rather than as a day trip, maximises the wildlife window (dawn and dusk on the plateau), and connects Astore directly to the Skardu itinerary without backtracking.
Getting There

How to Reach
Astore Valley

Road note: The road from Gilgit to Astore via Jaglot on the KKH is fully paved. From Astore town to Rama the road is mostly paved (some rough sections). To Rupal Valley it becomes a 4WD track — a jeep is essential. The Minimarg–Deosai road requires 4WD throughout.
From GilgitShared jeep to Astore town: PKR 400–700 (3h via Jaglot on KKH). Private jeep: PKR 5,000–9,000. Depart Gilgit transport stand early morning for best availability.
From SkarduVia Deosai National Park: 4–5h (seasonal, June–October). Via road through Jaglot: 5–6h. The Deosai route is far more scenic but requires 4WD and Deosai entry permit.
Astore to RamaShared jeep: PKR 300–500 (45 min). Private jeep: PKR 2,000–4,000 return. Road is mostly manageable for regular cars in dry conditions.
Astore to RupalPrivate jeep only: PKR 5,000–8,000 to Tarashing village. 4WD essential. No shared transport. Arrange in Astore town the evening before.
PermitsNo NOC for Rama, Minimarg, Rupal base camp approach, or standard Deosai entry. Deosai Park requires entry permit at gate (PKR 200–500). Areas near LoC may require DC-issued NOC.
Accommodation

Where to Stay
in Astore

Budget
PKR 1,200 – 3,000
per night · basic room + meals
  • Local guesthouses in Astore town — simple but clean; home-cooked meals included
  • Basic lodges at Rama Meadows (non-PTDC) — PKR 1,500–2,500; bring warm layers
  • Camping at Minimarg, Rupal approach, or Rama Lake — free; no facilities
Mid-Range
PKR 3,500 – 8,000
per night · private room
  • PTDC Motel Rama — the benchmark in the valley; at meadow edge, mountain views, reliable meals
  • Astore Inn — best mid-range in town; useful for an arrival night before Rama
  • Book PTDC Rama ahead in July–August — only a handful of rooms
Self-Sufficient
PKR 0 – 500
camping · bring all gear
  • Rupal Valley approach — outstanding wild camping near Tarashing; no infrastructure
  • Minimarg plateau — wild camping at 3,500m; bring 3-season sleeping bag
  • Rama Lake area — camp above the meadow at ~3,600m for sunrise on Nanga Parbat
Best Time to Visit

When to Go

MaySnow clearing. Rama accessible by late May. Rupal Valley may still have snow on the approach road. Very quiet.
JuneBest month. Wildflowers at Rama and Minimarg. Deosai just opens. Rupal fully accessible. Almost no tourists.
July – AugustPeak season for Deosai (brown bears). Wildflowers throughout valley. Warm days, cool nights at Rama. Some weekend visitors from Gilgit/Skardu.
SeptemberSecond-best month. Autumn colour, clear skies, empty trails. Deosai still open until mid-October.
OctoberDeosai closes. Minimarg road gets icy. Astore town and Rama stay accessible into November. Cold but beautiful.
Trekking

Treks from
Astore

Rupal Face Circuit

A 5–7 day trek circling the south and west faces of Nanga Parbat via Rupal Base Camp, Mazeno Pass (5,377m), and Fairy Meadows. One of the great mountain circuit treks in Pakistan — technically challenging at the pass. Requires a registered guide and camping gear. PKR 3,000–5,000/day for a guide.

Rama Lake to Nanga Parbat View

A 2-day hike from Rama Meadows up to the high viewpoint above Rama Lake. No technical difficulty but good fitness required. The view at 4,000m looks directly at the east and south faces of Nanga Parbat. Camp at Rama Lake (first night), return second day.

Minimarg to Deosai Trek

A 3-day traverse from Minimarg across alpine terrain to Sheosar Lake on the Deosai plateau. No high passes — this is a plateau approach. Wildlife sighting probability highest on this approach. Guide recommended: PKR 2,000–3,500/day.