Spring

Cherry Blossom
in Hunza

Every year I'm surprised again. You've lived here your whole life and it still stops you — the trees are so white against the dark mountains it looks edited.

📍 Hunza Valley
🗓 Late Mar – Mid Apr
📸 Best: Altit & Ganish
🌸 Cherry, apricot & almond
By Faisal Zaman·Local from Gilgit-Baltistan·Updated June 2026
The Season

Three Weeks
That Change Everything

The blossom season in Hunza is technically three different events happening simultaneously: cherry, apricot, and almond trees all flowering within the same 3–4 week window in late March to mid-April. At valley level (Karimabad, ~2,500m), cherries and apricots bloom first, around late March. Higher villages (Gulmit, Passu, ~2,500–2,800m) bloom 2–3 weeks later in mid-April.

This staggering of bloom by elevation is the single most useful thing to understand about planning a blossom trip. You can spend 3 weeks in Hunza following the bloom northward — starting in Altit and Ganish in late March, moving through Karimabad in early April, continuing to Gulmit and Passu in mid-April. You're always in blossom.

The combination of white flowers against the dark brown-grey Karakoram rock is genuinely unlike anything else. Japan has cherry blossoms but it doesn't have 7,788m Rakaposhi as the backdrop. That's what makes Hunza's blossom season unique.

Timing variability: Exact dates shift by 1–2 weeks year to year depending on winter temperatures and snowpack. A warm winter means early bloom (mid-March in some years). A cold winter pushes it to late April. Check online communities or ask your guesthouse a week before you plan to arrive — they monitor it closely.
Best Villages

Where to
Go

Altit villageBelow Altit Fort, 2,350m. Ancient stone walls + white blossom. The most photogenic combination in the valley. Altit Fort terrace gives an elevated view.
Ganish village300-year-old village near Karimabad. Narrow lanes, traditional architecture, apricot trees against old wood. Very few tourists venture into the actual village.
MurtazaabadSmall village below Karimabad with a dense concentration of apricot orchards. Good for wide-angle landscape shots with Ultar Sar behind.
Karimabad terracesThe agricultural terraces around Karimabad town are blossom-filled. Walk any trail down from the bazaar toward the river for orchard views.
Gulmit, Upper HunzaRoughly 35–40km north of Karimabad, ~2,500m — blooms about 2 weeks after Karimabad. Combines with Passu Cones photography. Less crowded than the main valley.
Photography

Getting the
Best Shot

Best light: Morning (7–10am) when the low sun hits the white blossoms front-on and the mountains are often cloud-free. Late afternoon (4–6pm) gives golden warmth. Midday is flat and harsh.

Composition: Look for blossoms in the foreground with a peak in the background. Rakaposhi from below Karimabad is the classic. Ultar Sar from the Altit terraces is equally strong. The Hussaini Bridge area in Upper Hunza gives Passu Cones as backdrop.

Crowds: The blossom season draws significant numbers, particularly on weekends. Karimabad bazaar area can be crowded. Walk 15 minutes into any actual village (Altit, Ganish, Murtazaabad) and you'll have the orchards nearly to yourself.

Weather: Blossom season weather is variable — spring storms are common. Build 2–3 buffer days into any blossom photography trip to wait for clear skies. The best blossom images are made after a rain storm when the air is washed clean.

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