A moderate walk from the village of Tarashing in the Astore valley up to the meadows below the Rupal Face — the sheer southern wall of Nanga Parbat (8,126m), and the highest mountain face on earth.
Nanga Parbat (8,126m) is the ninth-highest mountain in the world and the western anchor of the Himalaya, where the great range finally drops away towards the plains. Of its three enormous faces, the Rupal Face is the one that stops people in their tracks: a single unbroken wall of rock and ice rising about 4,600m from the valley floor to the summit. There is no greater vertical relief anywhere on the planet — it is, quite literally, the world's highest mountain face.
What makes this trek special is how directly you reach that spectacle. You do not need to be a mountaineer or commit to a long expedition. A moderate walk from the last village brings you to grassy meadows at the foot of the wall, where you can sit at roughly 3,600m and crane your neck up nearly five vertical kilometres of mountain. For most visitors that view, more than any single summit photo, is what they remember of Nanga Parbat.
Getting to Astore: The journey starts well before the walking does. From the Karakoram Highway near Jaglot, a road turns east into the Astore valley. It is a long, rough drive on a mountain road — comfortable in a sturdy vehicle but not quick — and it is part of the adventure rather than a quick transfer.
Tarashing (the roadhead): The last village reachable by road is Tarashing, set on a high shelf with the Rupal Face already filling the sky above it. This is where the trek begins and where most people base themselves, with simple guesthouses and camping ground.
To Rupal village and the meadows: From Tarashing the path leads through the village of Rupal and across open meadows towards the wall. The walking is moderate and the gradients gentle compared with steeper Karakoram approaches.
Herrligkoffer Base Camp (~3,600m): The traditional base camp, named for the German expedition leader, sits at roughly 3,600m in meadow beneath the face. Many trekkers reach it in around a day from Tarashing and return the next; others add camps to explore further along the foot of the wall.
The trek itself is moderate. The base camp sits at around 3,600m, the gradients to reach it are forgiving, and no technical skills are needed on the standard meadow route — reasonable fitness and broken-in boots are enough. The real challenge of any Nanga Parbat trip is rarely the walking; it is the long approach and the high mountain weather.
Honest warning: the road into Astore is long and rough, and getting there is a full day's commitment in itself. Up at the meadows the weather in this corner of the Himalaya can turn fast, and cloud can hide the face entirely — so build in spare time rather than racing up and back.
| Best months | Roughly June to September, the most reliable window for clear weather and snow-free meadows |
| Snow on route | Possible at the meadows early and late in the season |
| Max altitude | Roughly 3,600m at the Rupal / Herrligkoffer base camp |
| Access | Astore valley off the Karakoram Highway near Jaglot, then jeep to Tarashing — a long, rough road |
| Costs & permits | Confirm current costs and any permit or local requirements with an operator before you travel |
Read more on the Nanga Parbat mountain page, compare the Fairy Meadows side, browse other treks across Gilgit-Baltistan, find a vetted local agency, or plan a full itinerary around it.
It is the southern wall of Nanga Parbat (8,126m), rising about 4,600m from the valley floor to the summit. That makes it the highest mountain face anywhere on earth — a single, almost unbroken sweep of rock and ice.
Most people do it over 2–4 days from Tarashing, reaching the meadow base camp at roughly 3,600m and returning. You can keep it to a short out-and-back or add camps to explore along the foot of the wall.
From the Karakoram Highway near Jaglot, a road turns into the Astore valley and on to Tarashing, the last village and roadhead. The walk to the Rupal meadows begins there. Be warned the Astore road is long and rough.
The walking is moderate — base camp is around 3,600m on gentle gradients with no technical skills required. The harder parts are the long approach drive and the changeable high-mountain weather, so allow spare time.
No. Fairy Meadows and the Raikot base camp are on the northern side of Nanga Parbat, reached by a different approach. The Rupal Face is the southern wall, reached from Astore and Tarashing. They are two separate treks to the same mountain.