A one-hour flight from Islamabad over some of the highest mountains on earth — when the weather lets it fly. Here's how the route really works.
Skardu Airport (code KDU) is served by daily flights from Islamabad operated by PIA, taking roughly an hour in the air. It is widely regarded as one of the most scenic flights in the world — the route threads between Nanga Parbat and the wall of the Karakoram, and on a clear morning the views are genuinely unforgettable. That is the good news, and it is worth flying for.
The honest news is that this is a difficult route to rely on. Flights are weather-dependent and approach Skardu through a narrow mountain valley with no instrument landing margin, so they are frequently cancelled or delayed when cloud closes in — and that can happen on otherwise sunny days. Cancellations cluster across consecutive days, and seats are often over-booked, so a confirmed ticket is not the same as a confirmed journey. Treat the flight as a bonus rather than a fixed plan.
| Route | Islamabad (ISB) ⇄ Skardu (KDU), operated by PIA. |
| Flight time | Approximately 1 hour each way in the air. |
| Frequency | Scheduled daily, though actual operation depends entirely on weather. Confirm the current timetable before booking. |
| Cost | Typically somewhere in the region of Rs.20,000–45,000 one-way, varying widely with season and demand. Confirm current fares at the time of booking. |
| Reliability | High cancellation rate, especially in poor weather and over winter. Flights can be scrapped at short notice; rebooking onto the next available seat is common. |
| Backup | Road journey of roughly 20–24 hours via the Karakoram Highway. Slower but far more dependable. |
Book as early as you can. The Skardu route fills quickly, particularly in the May–October travel season, and last-minute seats are scarce. Morning flights tend to have the best weather window, since cloud often builds over the mountains as the day warms up — an early slot gives you the best odds of actually getting off the ground.
Build buffer days into your itinerary at both ends. If you must connect to an international flight out of Islamabad, never plan to fly out of Skardu on the same day; give yourself at least a day of slack, ideally two. When a flight is cancelled, head to the airline counter or your booking agent promptly to be rebooked — seats on the next operating flight go fast, and over-booking means the calmest, quickest travellers tend to get away first. Keep an eye on conditions and have the road option ready so a string of cancelled days doesn't strand your whole trip.
The flight is at its most reliable in the clearer stretches of spring and autumn, and least reliable through the deep winter and monsoon-affected periods. When it does fly, take a window seat: the line over Nanga Parbat and into the Karakoram is the reason this route has the reputation it does, and on a clear day it is worth every bit of the uncertainty getting there.
PIA operates the scheduled service between Islamabad and Skardu (KDU). The flight takes about an hour in the air.
They are scheduled daily, but actual operation depends entirely on the weather. Always confirm the current timetable when you book, and don't assume a daily flight means a guaranteed one.
Skardu sits in a narrow mountain valley and the approach needs clear visibility, so flights are cancelled or delayed whenever cloud closes in. Cancellations often run across several consecutive days.
Fares vary widely with season and demand, often in the region of Rs.20,000–45,000 one-way. Confirm the current price at the time of booking.
The road journey from Islamabad to Skardu via the Karakoram Highway takes roughly 20–24 hours. It is slower but far more dependable, so build it into your plan in case the flight doesn't operate.
Check live conditions and road status before you travel on the road & travel status page, and the weather guide to judge your flight window by season. Planning the wider trip? Start with the trip planner, then read up on Skardu itself and the gateway town of Gilgit for an alternative way into the region.