The golden valley of the Karakoram — apricot orchards, turquoise lakes, and peaks that stop you mid-sentence.
Tap markers to explore key sites, hidden spots, and day-trip distances
Hunza is the valley that makes people cancel their flight home. The combination of hanging glaciers, terrace-farmed apricot and cherry orchards, and the sheer scale of Rakaposhi and Ultar Sar overhead creates a landscape that doesn't feel real.
The main town is Karimabad, perched above the Hunza River at 2,438m. From here you can day-trip to Attabad Lake through five CPEC-built tunnels, drive up to Khunjerab Pass at the Chinese border, hike to Eagle's Nest for one of the most spectacular sunrises in Asia, or disappear into Ultar Meadow above town where few tourists go.
Most visitors spend 3–4 days and leave wishing they had more time. The valley is compact but the side trips — Passu, Gulmit, Shimshal, Hispar, Nagar — could fill a month. Budget at least 7 days to scratch the surface.
Six must-see sites — with entry fees, exact locations, and what no one tells you before you arrive.
These spots don't appear in standard itineraries. Locals go here. You should too.
Built around actual travel times, not wishful thinking. All assume you're based in Karimabad.
| By air | Fly Islamabad → Gilgit Airport (GIL) (~45 min, PKR 8,000–18,000). Flights are weather-dependent — book the morning flight (PIA/Serene Air) and always hold a day buffer. Then 3–4h by road to Karimabad via KKH. |
| By road (KKH) | Islamabad to Karimabad: 16–20h by NATCO coach or private car via the Karakoram Highway. Break the journey overnight at Besham or Chilas. The road is spectacular but long — don't rush it. |
| From Gilgit | Shared jeep PKR 400–600 (3–4h). Private jeep PKR 5,000–9,000 one-way. NATCO bus PKR 350–450. All depart from Gilgit's KKH intersection near the General Bus Stand. |
| Within Hunza | Shared jeeps run Karimabad–Passu–Sost (PKR 200–600 per leg). Full-day private jeep hire PKR 7,000–12,000. Cycle hire available in Karimabad (PKR 500–800/day) for the valley floor. |
| Khunjerab day trip | Private jeep return from Karimabad PKR 12,000–18,000. Shared van from Sost PKR 600–800. Bring CNIC or passport. The pass closes October–April. |
| Permits | No NOC required for Karimabad, Attabad, Passu, or Khunjerab (CNIC at checkposts). Shimshal Valley requires an NOC from the Deputy Commissioner's office in Aliabad (1–2 days to arrange). |
Prices per room per night in peak season (May–Sep). Family-run guesthouses offer better value and more honest hospitality than larger hotels. Book ahead in July–August.
A flat bread stuffed with minced meat and onions, baked on a flat stone until slightly charred. The closest thing to a Hunzai pizza. Small bakeries off Karimabad's main bazaar — PKR 150–300. Eat it hot. It does not survive takeaway.
Buckwheat flatbread cooked in walnut oil. Eaten with apricot kernels and local butter. One of the oldest foods in the valley — the same recipe for centuries — and genuinely unlike anything else you'll eat in Pakistan.
Served everywhere in Hunza, made from the bright orange sea buckthorn berry that grows wild on the valley slopes. Sour, warming, and supposedly the reason Hunzais live to 100. About PKR 80–150 a cup. Order it instead of chai at least once.
Hunza is one of the very few places in Pakistan where locally produced wine is made and sold openly. The mulberry harvest in July–August produces a sweet, low-alcohol wine. Small shops near Baltit Fort. Don't expect Bordeaux — expect something honest and singular.
June–July is apricot season. Eat them fresh off trees on the terraces (ask first — most farmers don't mind). Dried apricots, apricot oil, and apricot jam are all worth buying to take home. The cold-pressed oil is used in Ismaili cooking and is genuinely good on bread.
A slow-cooked wheat and meat porridge (similar to haleem) eaten in winter but sometimes available year-round at local homes. If a family offers you this, accept.
| March – April | Cherry & almond blossom. Cold nights (0–5°C), clear skies. Tourist numbers low. Baltit and Altit orchards in flower — one of the most visually extraordinary times of year. |
| May – June | Peak trekking season begins. Khunjerab Pass opens (May). Wildflowers on glacier moraines. Best overall balance of weather, access, and crowd levels. |
| July – August | Apricot and mulberry harvest. Warmest weather (max 25–30°C in Karimabad). Highest visitor numbers — book guesthouses 2–4 weeks in advance. Eagle's Nest is spectacular in this light. |
| September – October | Autumn gold. Cooler (5–18°C day), crowds thin, light is warm and long. Borith Lake fills with migratory birds in September. Khunjerab closes late October. |
| November – February | Karimabad stays accessible but cold (nights well below freezing). Khunjerab Pass closed. Limited guesthouses open. Some roads to Passu impassable in winter. For serious off-season visitors only. |
The best short trek accessible from Hunza. Orchards to glacier moraine in two days. The close-up of Rakaposhi's 5,500m south face from base camp is one of the clearest views of a major Himalayan peak you will ever find.
Read full guide →The highest lake in Pakistan. A genuinely strenuous two-day climb above Minapin to a lake at 4,694m with Rakaposhi dominating the entire skyline. Guide required. Snow possible even in July. Worth every step.
Read full guide →One of Pakistan's great glacier crossings: from Nagar across Hispar Pass to Askole in Skardu district. Remote, physically demanding, and almost entirely off the tourist trail. Snow bridge crossings require experience and a reliable guide.
Read full guide →