A short jeep ride and gentle walk from Gilgit to the famous turquoise Blue Lake — alpine meadows, pine forest and some of the most vivid water in the Karakoram, reachable in a single day.
The Naltar valley is one of those places that locals quietly treasure and outsiders never quite believe until they see it. A green side-valley reached from Gilgit, it is best known for the cluster of high lakes at its head — the vivid Blue Lake chief among them, along with the lakes locals call Satrangi ("seven-coloured") and Bashkiri. Set among pine forest and alpine meadows, their water shifts through impossible shades of blue, green and turquoise depending on the light and the season.
What makes Naltar special for travellers is how accessible all this beauty is. Unlike the big Karakoram base camps, the lakes do not demand a multi-day expedition or technical skill. From Gilgit you take a jeep up to Naltar, then walk a relatively short distance on to the lakes — many visitors do the whole thing as a long day out, while others stretch it over a night to enjoy the meadows in peace.
Gilgit to Naltar (by jeep): The journey begins with a road and jeep-track ride up from Gilgit into the Naltar valley. The lower section is on a normal road, but the track higher up is rough and unpaved — the kind of drive best left to local jeep drivers who know the surface and the weather. This is the part of the trip that varies most: conditions on the track change with rain and season.
Naltar village and meadows: The jeep drops you in the Naltar valley among pine forest and open pasture. This is the base for the walk and where any overnight stay or guesthouse arrangement is usually made.
On to the lakes (on foot): From the valley a relatively short and gentle trek leads up to the lakes. The lower lakes, including the celebrated Blue Lake, come first; the upper Bashkiri lakes sit higher and a little further on for those who want to keep going. The walking is easy — meadow paths and gradual climbs rather than steep alpine slogs — though the upper lakes are a little higher and the air thins as you climb.
For most visitors the return is the same way: walk back to the jeep at Naltar and ride down to Gilgit, either the same evening or the next day.
This is an easy trek and one of the gentler high-valley outings in Gilgit-Baltistan. The lakes lie at moderate altitude — a few thousand metres, with the upper lakes higher — so this is nothing like a high-altitude expedition. Reasonable fitness and decent footwear are enough; no technical skills are required on the walk to the main lakes. The harder, more variable part is honestly the jeep track, not the trail.
Because so much depends on the road and the weather, give yourself a little flexibility. The jeep track can be rough and is affected by rain and seasonal conditions, and mountain weather turns quickly — an early start and a margin in your plans both help.
| Best months | Roughly May/June to September; midsummer is the most reliable |
| Access | Jeep track from Gilgit up to Naltar, then a short walk on to the lakes |
| Max altitude | Moderate — around 3,050–3,150m at the lakes, with upper lakes higher |
| Road condition | Rough, unpaved jeep track higher up; check locally before travelling |
| Costs & permits | No expedition-style permit for the standard lake walk; confirm current costs and any local requirements with an operator |
Pair this trek with time in the Naltar valley destination guide, browse other treks across Gilgit-Baltistan, find a vetted local agency, or plan a full Gilgit itinerary around it.
Many visitors do it as a single long day from Gilgit — a jeep ride up to Naltar and a short walk on to the lakes — while others stretch it over one or two days with a night in the valley to enjoy the meadows. The walking itself is short; the time is mostly in the jeep journey.
The lakes sit at moderate altitude, around 3,050–3,150m, with the upper Bashkiri lakes a little higher. This is far below the big Karakoram base camps, so serious altitude problems are uncommon, though you will still notice the thinner air on the climbs.
You reach Naltar from Gilgit by road and jeep. The lower part is a normal road but the track higher up is rough and unpaved, so a local jeep and driver are the usual way up. Confirm current costs and the track condition with a local operator before you go.
It is easy — gentle meadow and forest paths rather than steep alpine climbing, with no technical skills needed for the main lakes (the upper lakes are a little higher). The more variable part is the rough jeep track, which depends on weather and season.
Roughly May or June through September, with midsummer the most reliable for clear weather and an open jeep track. Outside this window snow and rough road conditions can make access difficult, and Naltar shifts to its winter skiing season.