Route Guide

Karakoram
Highway

1,300km of road from Islamabad to the Chinese border at Khunjerab Pass (4,693m). The highest paved international road in the world, built through terrain that should have made it impossible.

📏 1,300km total length
4,693m Khunjerab Pass
🛣 3 countries traversed
📅 Apr – Oct recommended
Overview

The Eighth
Wonder

The Karakoram Highway (N-35) took over 20 years to build, claimed the lives of more than 800 Pakistani and Chinese workers, and opened to civilians in 1986. It follows the ancient Silk Road trade route through the Indus, Hunza, and Gilgit river gorges — terrain where a road seemed impossible to most engineers who first surveyed it.

The full route runs from Hasan Abdal near Islamabad to Kashgar in China's Xinjiang region. The Pakistani section covers roughly 800km from Islamabad to Khunjerab Pass. This is the section most travellers drive, and it is one of the great road journeys in the world.

What makes the KKH extraordinary is the contrast: desert gorges, terraced apricot orchards, glacier meltwater lakes, Pakistani Army checkpoints, centuries-old watchtowers, roadside chai stalls, and mountains so tall they seem structurally implausible.

Reality check: The KKH is not a smooth motorway. Sections in Kohistan and near Chilas are rough, narrow, and frequently hit by rockfall. The road through the Hunza valley is well-maintained. Plan 3–4 days minimum Islamabad to Hunza if driving yourself. NATCO buses cover it in 18–20 hours.
The Route

Key Stops:
ISB to Khunjerab

Distances measured from Rawalpindi/Islamabad. All stops listed are worthwhile — this is not a drive-through route.

0km
Starting point

Islamabad / Rawalpindi

Fuel up, stock food, and get all permits sorted here. The KKH officially starts at Hasan Abdal, 40km north. Leave early — you want daylight for the Kohistan section. Overnight in Rawalpindi before a 6am start is the standard approach.

310km
Archaeological site

Besham & Komila

Besham is the first decent overnight stop with functional guesthouses. The surrounding Swat Kohistan district has some of the most dramatic gorge scenery on the route. Komila, just north, has Buddhist rock carvings often missed by through-travellers.

500km
Stop required

Chilas

The main overnight point in Diamer District. Hot, dry, conservative. The Chilas Rock Carvings — thousands of Buddhist petroglyphs along the riverbank — are 10 minutes from town and almost entirely unvisited. If you're heading to Fairy Meadows, the Raikot Bridge turn-off is 40km east.

540km
Side trip

Raikot Bridge → Fairy Meadows

Turn-off for the Fairy Meadows jeep track. 15km unpaved road to Tato Village, then 1.5h hike to the meadow with direct views of Nanga Parbat. Worth a 2-night detour. Rejoin the KKH from the same junction.

600km
Hub city

Gilgit

The capital of GB and the KKH's main logistics hub. Fuel, ATMs, supplies, guesthouses at all price points, and the departure point for roads east to Skardu and west toward Chitral. Allow half a day for the bazaar and Kargah Buddha. Gilgit is also where the KKH splits from the Karakoram range road east.

660km
Unmissable

Hunza Valley — Karimabad

The most famous stretch of the KKH. The road runs below Rakaposhi (7,788m) and Diran, past Attabad Lake (turquoise water in a canyon formed by a 2010 landslide), and into Karimabad above. Plan 2–3 nights. The view from Baltit Fort at dawn is the standard postcard shot — for good reason.

700km
Stop here

Passu & Gojal

The Passu Cones — six limestone spires rising to 6,000m — are visible from the road but best viewed from the footbridge over the Hunza River. The Batura Glacier terminates near the road. Upper Gojal is the last densely settled area before the Chinese border zone.

790km
Permit zone

Sost — Last Pakistani Town

The last Pakistani settlement of significance. Customs and immigration checkpoint for China-bound travellers. Small market, a few guesthouses, fuel. The road to China continues north from here through Khunjerab National Park.

840km
Border crossing · 4,693m

Khunjerab Pass

The highest international border crossing in the world. Snow is present year-round. Yaks and Marco Polo sheep are frequently seen on the approach. The pass is open to tourists May–October. The view south into Pakistan from the top is one of the most spectacular on the entire route.

Planning

Practical
Information

Transport optionsNATCO bus (Rs. 1,200–1,500, 18–20h Rawalpindi to Gilgit), private car (Rs. 25,000–40,000 hired in Islamabad), shared jeep (Rs. 400–800 per leg between towns). Self-drive in a 4WD is viable and recommended if you want flexibility.
FuelAvailable in Islamabad, Besham, Chilas, Gilgit, Karimabad, and Sost. Don't rely on finding it elsewhere. Fill up at every opportunity north of Chilas.
Road conditionIslamabad to Besham: mostly paved. Besham to Chilas: rough in places, active rockfall zones. Chilas to Gilgit: improved in recent years. Gilgit to Khunjerab: excellent, Chinese-built. Carry a spare tyre.
SecurityKohistan district (Besham to Chilas) requires care. Travel in daylight, don't stop unnecessarily. The Hunza valley and north are safe and popular. Check FCDO/travel advisories before departure.
Best monthsApril–October for the full route. Khunjerab Pass is closed November–April. Spring (April–May) has blossom. Autumn (September–October) has clear skies and less traffic.
Permits

What You
Need

Foreign nationalsNo special permit required to travel the KKH within Pakistan. Standard tourist visa covers the full KKH including Khunjerab National Park.
Khunjerab National ParkRs. 500 entry fee per person, payable at the Sost checkpoint. Required even if not crossing to China.
China crossingRequires Chinese visa (obtained in Islamabad or your home country). The border crossing is Sost (Pakistan) to Tashkurgan (China). Open May–October, daylight hours only.
PhotographyMilitary installations, checkposts, and bridges are officially off-limits for photography. In practice: be discreet and ask first near checkpoints.
Note on driving time: Every estimate you'll read online for KKH driving times is optimistic. Add 30–40% for stops, chai breaks, military checkposts (where you must sign a register), rockfall delays, and the fact that you will stop repeatedly because the road is that scenic.