Pakistan holds four of the world's fourteen 8,000m peaks. Most of their base camps are walkable without technical climbing skills — if you know what you're doing.
Gilgit-Baltistan has two categories of trek: open zones (no special permit) and restricted zones (NOC or trekking permit required). Most popular short treks — Fairy Meadows, Rakaposhi Base Camp, Naltar — are open zones.
K2, Gondogoro La, Hispar, and any route crossing glaciers above 6,000m require a Ministry of Tourism trekking permit. These are obtained in Islamabad and typically take 3–5 working days. Some routes also require a registered guide — this is enforced, not optional.
On easy to moderate treks (Fairy Meadows, Rakaposhi BC, Deosai): no, if you have navigation skills and offline maps. On anything involving glaciers, high passes, or remote valleys: yes, both for safety and legal compliance. A good local guide costs Rs. 3,000–5,000/day and is worth every rupee.
No permit needed. Just show your CNIC (Pakistani) or passport (foreign). Includes: Fairy Meadows, Rakaposhi BC, Naltar Lakes, Deosai (park entry fee only), Passu Glacier.
NOC required from Deputy Commissioner. Apply 1 week in advance. Includes: Shimshal Valley, Chapursan Valley, Karambar Lake. Available locally in Gilgit or online.
Ministry of Tourism permit required. Apply in Islamabad minimum 2 weeks in advance. Includes: K2 Base Camp, Gondogoro La, Hispar Pass, Biafo Glacier. Guide mandatory.
The Baltoro Glacier circuit. Concordia, four 8,000m peaks in one frame. Requires MOT permit, registered guide, and high-altitude fitness. Most demanding non-technical trek in Pakistan.
Read full guide →The classic K2 circuit extension. Cross Gondogoro Pass (crampons required) from Hushe Valley to Concordia. You descend into K2 base camp from the top. Outstanding.
Read full guide →The longest glacier traverse outside the polar regions. Hispar Pass connects Hunza (Nagar) to Baltistan (Askole). Remote, serious, and unforgettable. A route for experienced trekkers only.
Read full guide →Pakistan's most accessible mountain vista. Open zone, no permit. Jeep to Tato, 2h hike to meadow, optional 4–5h return to base camp. Families do this regularly.
Read full guide →Best short trek in Hunza. Orchards to glacier in one day. One of the clearest close-up views of a 7,000m+ peak anywhere in Pakistan. No permit, no guide required.
Read full guide →Three glacier-fed lakes at different elevations — each a different colour from blue to turquoise to green. Easy hike, dramatic scenery. Best in autumn when the larch trees turn gold.
Read full guide →Laila Peak (6,096m) has a near-vertical granite face that is one of the most dramatic in the Karakoram. The approach through Hushe Valley is stunning. Underrated and rarely crowded.
Read full guide →Across the world's second highest plateau. Wildflowers, Himalayan brown bears, and a sky that feels closer than it should. No technical difficulty. Deosai entry permit required (Rs. 500).
Read full guide →One of Pakistan's most remote trekking routes. Shimshal village is only accessible by a narrow road cut into cliff faces. The pass itself leads to yak pastures used by nomadic herders. NOC required.
Read full guide →For technical routes and high passes, a registered agency is both legally required and genuinely valuable. These are the ones I'd use.
Most experienced Baltoro/K2 operator. Their high-altitude guides are trained and reliable. Prices are honest. Best for first-time K2 trekkers.
Run by Shimshal villagers. If your route goes off the standard circuit — Shimshal Pass, Karambar Lake, Chapursan Valley — nobody knows it better.
Best budget option for guided treks on open-zone routes. Fairy Meadows, Rakaposhi, Naltar — honest prices, no surprises. Good for solo travellers who want company.