Треккинг Fairy Meadows 6-дневный тур — Nanga Parbat | Go With Guide
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Fairy Meadows village and reflection pond below the Raikot face of Nanga Parbat, Gilgit-Baltistan
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Trekking Gilgit-Baltistan

Fairy Meadows Trek and Nanga Parbat View

Stand on the meadow below the Raikot face of Nanga Parbat

Fairy Meadows village and reflection pond below the Raikot face of Nanga Parbat, Gilgit-Baltistan
Local children on the trail at Fairy Meadows with Nanga Parbat rising behind
Two trekkers climbing toward the Raikot face of Nanga Parbat above Fairy Meadows
A horse grazing on the alpine meadows below Nanga Parbat at Fairy Meadows
Trekkers on green meadows above the glacier near Fairy Meadows, Nanga Parbat
Wooden huts scattered across the meadows beneath Nanga Parbat at Fairy Meadows
A glacial stream and log bridge beside the wooden huts of Fairy Meadows below Nanga Parbat
A stream cascading through Fairy Meadows with Nanga Parbat rising behind

Duration

5-6 Days

Difficulty

Easy-Moderate

Group Size

2-20 Travelers

Best Season

May-Oct

About This Tour

Fairy Meadows is a grassy shelf of pine and birch at about 3,300 metres on the northern side of Nanga Parbat, the ninth-highest mountain on Earth at 8,126 metres. It sits in the Diamer District of Gilgit-Baltistan and carries National Park status. Locals call the meadow Joot. From the open ground you look straight at the Raikot face, the wall that helps Nanga Parbat rise roughly 7,000 metres from the Indus valley to its summit in around 25 kilometres, one of the largest local reliefs anywhere on the planet.

You reach the meadow in stages. A 4x4 leaves the Karakoram Highway at Raikot Bridge and grinds up the Tato jeep track, roughly 15 kilometres of single-lane dirt that takes about two and a half to three hours. From the road head above Tato a footpath climbs through forest to the meadow, around 5 to 5.5 kilometres on foot and two to four hours uphill depending on your legs. Horses and porters wait at the trailhead if you would rather ride or hand over a pack.

Once up, the days are about looking and walking, not climbing. An easy hour from the meadow brings you to Beyal Camp at about 3,500 metres, quieter, with a basic restaurant and cabins but no electricity. Push on another hour or so and you reach the Raikot Glacier and the Nanga Parbat viewpoint near base camp at roughly 3,967 metres, three to four hours from the meadow one way. A still pond on the way back can mirror the whole mountain when the air is calm. The meadow itself opens only in the warm months; snow closes it through winter.

This is our standard six-day Fairy Meadows tour: road north to the bridge, the jeep, the hike, and full days at the meadow with cottage nights and walks to Beyal and the base-camp viewpoint. We stay in the wooden cottages that dot the meadow, run on an easy-to-moderate effort level, and keep the group small. Season runs May or June through September or October.

Things You'll See and Do at Fairy Meadows

The headline is the mountain. Nanga Parbat fills the southern skyline from almost every spot on the meadow, and the Raikot face changes colour through the day, going pink at first light before the sun lifts over the ridge. Most people spend the first afternoon doing nothing but staring at it.

The walks fan out from there. Beyal Camp is the gentle one, about an hour each way over easy ground, good for a half day away from the busier meadow. The longer outing follows the Raikot Glacier to the viewpoint near base camp, three to four hours up, where the face stands almost directly overhead, with the reflection pond a short detour on the way back. Evenings are about the sky: with no town for miles the Milky Way comes out hard and clear, and the cottages run on lamplight and a wood fire.

Day-by-Day Itinerary

1

Islamabad to the Karakoram Highway

Drive north on the Karakoram Highway through Abbottabad, Besham and the Indus gorge, a long day of about 10 to 12 hours on the road. Overnight at a guesthouse near Chilas or Raikot Bridge.
2

Raikot Bridge, the Jeep, and the Hike to the Meadow

Join the jeep line at Raikot Bridge and ride the Tato track, roughly 15 kilometres and about two and a half to three hours of single-lane dirt. From the road head walk 5 to 5.5 kilometres uphill through pine forest, two to four hours, to the meadow at about 3,300 metres, with the first full view of Nanga Parbat as you arrive.
3

Beyal Camp and the Meadow

Walk the easy hour to Beyal Camp at about 3,500 metres, quieter than the main meadow and set deeper toward the glacier. Tea and time at the camp, then back to the cottages for the evening fire and the night sky.
4

Nanga Parbat Base Camp Viewpoint

Follow the Raikot Glacier up to the viewpoint near base camp at roughly 3,967 metres, three to four hours one way, where the Raikot face stands almost overhead. Stop at the reflection pond on the return for the mirror shot, or take an easy day at the meadow instead.
5

Fairy Meadows to Raikot Bridge

Walk back down through the forest to the Tato road head, then take the jeep down to Raikot Bridge. Rejoin the Karakoram Highway and drive south, overnighting near Chilas or partway toward Islamabad.
6

Return to Islamabad

Finish the drive south to Islamabad along the Karakoram Highway, arriving by evening. Tour ends.

How to Reach Fairy Meadows

Fairy Meadows hangs off the Karakoram Highway about 80 kilometres south of Gilgit and roughly 400 kilometres north of Islamabad. The road day is long, so we usually break it with a night near Chilas or the bridge rather than push straight through. The turn-off is Raikot Bridge, where the tarmac ends and the jeeps wait.

From the bridge the only way up is by 4x4. The drivers at Raikot work as a fixed-price collective, so there is no bargaining and no booking a different jeep; you take the next one in the line. A vehicle holds about five or six people and the round trip runs into the thousands of rupees, with rates that have climbed year on year, so confirm the current fare when you arrive. The track is roughly 15 kilometres and about two and a half to three hours, after which you walk.

Is the Fairy Meadows Jeep Road Really That Dangerous?

You will see the Tato track called the second most dangerous road in the world, often pinned to a WHO ranking. Treat that as travellers' folklore with a grain of truth: WHO does not actually rank roads, and the line has been passed hand to hand by bloggers for years. What is true is that the track is narrow, unpaved, single-lane, and cut into a steep hillside with real drops and no barriers.

In practice the local drivers run it daily through the whole season and know every turn and passing place. It is a genuinely exposed ride and nervous passengers do feel it, but it is not a stunt; it is simply how everyone gets to the meadow. If the exposure worries you, our family version frames the road more gently and leans on horses for the hike.

Best Time to Visit Fairy Meadows

The meadow is a summer place. It opens around May or June once the snow clears and closes again by September or October, and through winter the track and the meadow are shut. June through August is the peak, with the wildflowers out and the longest settled spells of weather.

Each window has a trade. Early season is greenest and quieter but can stay cold and damp; high summer brings the warmest days and the clearest mountain alongside the largest crowds in the cottages; September thins the visitors and sharpens the air. Whenever you come, pack for cold after dark, because nights are cold here even in July.

Why Book With Us

We have run the Raikot Bridge to Fairy Meadows route since 2015 and treat it as a fixed sequence we know well: when to leave Islamabad to reach the bridge in daylight, which jeep line to join, and how to pace the hike so nobody arrives wrecked. Our guides are mountain people who read the weather and the face, and we keep groups small so the cottage evenings stay calm. We tell you the road is exposed and the nights are cold because that is the truth of the place, and being straight about it is how we have kept guests coming back.

What's Included

Private transport Islamabad-Raikot Bridge and return
Jeep to/from Tato village
Camping at Fairy Meadows or rustic hut accommodation
All meals during the trek (breakfast, lunch, dinner)
English-speaking mountain guide
Permits and park entry fees

Not Included

International flights
Travel insurance
Personal expenses and tips

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Fairy Meadows road safe?

The Tato jeep track is exposed but driven daily all season by local drivers who know it intimately. It is narrow, unpaved and single-lane with steep drops, so it feels alarming, but the labels calling it the world's second most dangerous road are travel-blog folklore rather than any real ranking. Treat it as a serious mountain road handled by people who run it for a living.

How long is the hike from Tato to Fairy Meadows?

It is about 5 to 5.5 kilometres and roughly two to four hours uphill, depending on fitness. The grade is steady through pine forest and rated moderate. Horses and porters are available at the trailhead if you would rather ride or have a pack carried.

How do I get to Fairy Meadows from Islamabad?

Drive north on the Karakoram Highway about 400 kilometres to Raikot Bridge, usually with a night near Chilas because it is too far for one day. At the bridge you switch to a 4x4 jeep for the roughly 15-kilometre Tato track, then hike the final stretch to the meadow. Plan on the better part of two days door to meadow.

How much does the jeep cost?

The drivers at Raikot Bridge run as a fixed-price collective with no haggling, and one jeep carries about five or six people. The round-trip fare has risen steadily over the years into the thousands of rupees per jeep, so confirm the current rate on the day. Our tour price already covers the jeep for your group.

What is the altitude of Fairy Meadows?

The meadow sits at about 3,300 metres. Beyal Camp is around 3,500 metres and the viewpoint near Nanga Parbat base camp is roughly 3,967 metres. None of it requires technical climbing, but the height means cold nights and easier breathlessness on the uphill walks.

What is the difference between Fairy Meadows and Beyal Camp?

Fairy Meadows is the main open meadow with most of the cottages and the easiest mountain views, about an hour's walk below Beyal. Beyal Camp sits higher at around 3,500 metres, closer to the glacier, with basic cabins, a small restaurant and no electricity. Most people sleep at Fairy Meadows and visit Beyal as a half-day walk.

When is the best time to visit Fairy Meadows?

May or June through September or October, with June to August the peak for warm days and wildflowers. The meadow and the jeep track close through winter under snow. Expect cold nights even in midsummer, so pack warm layers whatever month you choose.

Is Fairy Meadows worth it?

Few accessible places put you this close to an 8,000-metre peak without any technical climbing. You get the Raikot face filling the sky, gentle walks to Beyal and the base-camp viewpoint, and some of the clearest night skies in the country. The catch is a long road and an exposed jeep ride, which most people decide is a fair trade.

From

$800

per person

* Prices may vary. Contact us for accurate, customized pricing.

Duration5-6 Days
DifficultyEasy-Moderate
Group Size2-20 Travelers
Best SeasonMay-Oct
Max Altitude~3,300m
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