A 7th-century standing Buddha carved into a cliff face above the Kargah gorge. One of the oldest monuments in GB — and one of the least visited.
Most tourists fly into Gilgit, drive straight to Hunza, and never know this exists. That's a mistake. Ten kilometres from Gilgit's Saddar Bazaar, up the Kargah Nala gorge, a standing Buddha figure approximately three metres tall is carved directly into the cliff face. It dates to the 7th century CE — the height of the Silk Road's Buddhist cultural influence through this region.
The carving shows a standing figure in monastic robes, hands in a gesture of blessing. It's worn by weather but unmistakably Buddhist — a reminder that before Islam came to GB in the 9th–11th centuries, this entire region was part of a Buddhist cultural sphere stretching from Gandhara to Central Asia.
I've brought guests here dozens of times. The reaction is always the same: they had no idea this was here. It doesn't show up on most itineraries, isn't marketed by agencies, and gets almost no visitors compared to the mountain viewpoints. Which is exactly why you should go.
| Location | Kargah Nala, 10km southwest of Gilgit city |
| By car/jeep | 20 minutes from Saddar Bazaar. Road is paved to the gorge entrance, then a short track. |
| By tuk-tuk/rickshaw | Rs.300–500 from city centre, ask driver to wait (30 min). Total cost: Rs.600–800. |
| Walk from road | 5-minute walk from where vehicles stop to the base of the cliff. |
| Entry fee | Free. No ticket, no guide required. |
| Best time | Morning (8–11am) — light hits the carving front-on. Afternoon is backlit. |
| Combined with | Go to Kargah Buddha first, then continue to Naltar Valley — same general direction from the city. |
The Gilgit region was part of an ancient Buddhist kingdom — records suggest it was known as "Bolor" and connected the Gandhara civilization (Peshawar basin) with Central Asian Buddhist culture via the Silk Road. Chinese Buddhist pilgrim Xuanzang passed through this area in the 7th century and recorded Buddhist monasteries and monuments in the region.
The Kargah Buddha is contemporaneous with Xuanzang's travels. It would have stood along a trade and pilgrimage route, visible from the valley as a marker of sacred space. Similar rock-carved Buddhas exist across Baltistan (the famous Buddha at Manthal, near Skardu, is another example) — GB was once densely populated with such markers.
When Islam arrived in the region (gradually, through the 9th–11th centuries), most Buddhist monuments were either destroyed, abandoned, or incorporated into local folk traditions. The Kargah Buddha survived because of its remote position up the gorge.