A 400-year-old royal fort with carved wooden balconies, restored into one of Pakistan's finest heritage hotels.
Shigar Fort (Fong Khar) was built approximately 400 years ago by the Raja of Shigar, the ruler of the independent principality of Shigar. The fort's carved wooden architecture — balconies, pillars, and ceiling work — is among the finest surviving examples of traditional Balti royal craftsmanship. In the late 1990s, the Aga Khan Cultural Service partnered with Serena Hotels for an 8-year restoration project, widely considered one of South Asia's best heritage conservation efforts.
| Location | ~45km from Skardu, ~2h drive. In Shigar town. |
| Day visit | Entry fee around Rs.500 — confirm current rate. Roughly 9am-5pm. Guided tour recommended. |
| Hotel rooms | 20 rooms inside the fort. Rs.12,000-20,000/night including breakfast. |
| What to see | Carved wooden balconies (extraordinary), throne room, royal garden, museum. |
| The garden | Mughal-style terraced garden with fruit trees and mountain views. |
The standout feature of Shigar Fort is its woodwork. The balconies, pillars, and ceilings show traditional Balti carving at its most refined, and much of it survived because the Aga Khan Cultural Service and Serena Hotels restored the building over an eight-year project rather than rebuilding it from scratch. The result is a fort that still feels like the royal residence it once was.
Inside you can see the throne room and a small museum of objects from the principality of Shigar. Outside, the Mughal-style terraced garden with its fruit trees and mountain backdrop is worth lingering in. Even if you are not staying overnight, the day visit gives you access to all of this with a guided tour.
Yes. A day visit costs Rs.500 entry, open 9am to 5pm, and a guided tour is recommended.
It is approximately 400 years old, built by the Raja of Shigar who ruled the independent principality of Shigar.
It is about 45km from Skardu, roughly a 2-hour drive, in Shigar town.
Yes. The fort operates as a Serena Heritage Hotel with rooms from roughly Rs.12,000 to Rs.20,000 per night, including breakfast.
It is known as Fong Khar, which means "Palace on the Rock."