
Community Homestay Experience
Authentic Village Life in Hunza, Nagar & Shimshal





Duration
6–8 Days
Difficulty
Easy
Group Size
2–6 people (homestay capacity)
Best Season
Year-round
About This Tour
Three valleys within a day of each other in Gilgit-Baltistan hold three different worlds. Central Hunza is Burusho and Ismaili, speaking Burushaski, a language with no known relative. Nagar, across the river, speaks the same language but follows Shia Islam and lives at a quieter, more conservative rhythm. And Shimshal, at the end of a hair-raising jeep road, is Wakhi-speaking, the highest village in the region at about 3,100 m, and so given to mountaineering that it produced Samina Baig, the first Pakistani woman to climb Everest.
This tour sleeps in all three, in family homes rather than hotels. Homestay here is not a marketing word. In Shimshal there are no conventional hotels at all; tourism is community-managed and beds are in houses. In Hunza and Gojal, village initiatives and family guesthouses have grown out of two decades of community development work, including women-run enterprises like the CIQAM workshop at Altit, where women trained as carpenters and stonemasons restore heritage buildings and run their own guesthouse and restaurant.
Days follow the household, not a schedule. Bread before dawn, apricots drying on the roof in season, water channels to walk, livestock coming down at dusk. Meals are what the family eats: chapshuro stuffed with meat and onion, dawdo noodle soup, giyaling pancakes with butter, tumuro herb tea from the high slopes. Your guide translates real conversation, and evenings end around the stove, not a lobby.
The 6 to 8 day route runs from Gilgit through central Hunza and Nagar to Shimshal, with homestay fees and community charges paid directly to the families and village funds that host you.
Three Valleys, Three Cultures
Hunza gives you the orchard terraces, Baltit and Altit Forts and the most practised hosts; it is the gentle landing. Nagar, just across the Hunza River, sees a fraction of the visitors; from Hopar village you walk to the Hopar Glacier's grey, groaning ice and, with more days, toward Rush Lake. Shimshal is the deep end: 56 km of cliff-cut jeep track from Passu that the villagers built themselves between 1985 and 2003, three lives lost in the work, and a village at the end of it that measures wealth in yaks and summit certificates.
Day-by-Day Itinerary
1Islamabad to Gilgit
Islamabad to Gilgit
2Karimabad, First Homestay
Karimabad, First Homestay
3Hunza Village Life & Baltit Fort
Hunza Village Life & Baltit Fort
4Hunza to Nagar Valley Homestay
Hunza to Nagar Valley Homestay
5Hopar Glacier Walk
Hopar Glacier Walk
6Nagar to Shimshal (jeep)
Nagar to Shimshal (jeep)
7Shimshal Village Day & Return
Shimshal Village Day & Return
8Departure
Departure
What a Homestay Is Actually Like
Expect a clean room in a family compound, bedding that smells of sun, a toilet that may be simple, and electricity that follows the village schedule, solar-backed in Shimshal. Hot water often arrives heated on the stove. What you get back is the thing hotels cannot sell: meals at the family cloth, children practising their English on you, an invitation to whatever the village is doing that week, and a host who refuses to let you leave on an empty stomach.
Travel That Pays Its Hosts
Community-based tourism means the structure, not the slogan: room and board go to the family, village fees go to community funds, and guides and jeeps are hired in the valleys they work. Organisations like AKRSP and KADO spent decades building the skills this tour leans on, and women's enterprises like CIQAM show what the model looks like when it matures. Our part is to keep groups small, two to six people, and to keep coming back to the same houses.
Best Time to Go
April to October is the comfortable window: blossom in April, harvest from July, gold poplars in October. Central Hunza works in winter too, snow-quiet and hospitable, though Shimshal's road makes the full three-valley route a warm-season plan. July and August bring domestic tourists to Hunza's hotels; the homestays stay calm.
Why Book With Us
We have slept in these houses ourselves, which is the only honest way to recommend them. Hosts are long-term partners, not listings; your guide speaks Burushaski or Wakhi as well as Urdu and English; and the money trail is short enough to see. Licensed operator, groups of two to six, flights plus a road plan in reserve.
What's Included
Not Included
Frequently Asked Questions
Can you stay with a family in Hunza?
Can you stay with a family in Hunza?
What is a homestay in Pakistan actually like?
What is a homestay in Pakistan actually like?
Is it safe, including for women travelling solo?
Is it safe, including for women travelling solo?
What will I eat?
What will I eat?
Is Shimshal worth the long jeep ride?
Is Shimshal worth the long jeep ride?
How does the money reach the community?
How does the money reach the community?
When is the best time to go?
When is the best time to go?
Do I need a permit?
Do I need a permit?
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