
Kalash Festivals of Chitral
Three Festivals · May, August, December · Chitral





Duration
7-10 Days
Difficulty
Easy-Moderate
Group Size
2-12 Travelers
Best Season
May / Aug / Dec
About This Tour
Three times a year, the Kalash valleys of Chitral stop ordinary work and give themselves over to festival. In May the spring rite of Chilam Joshi blesses the herds before they climb to the high pastures. In August, Uchal gives thanks for the wheat and barley cut from the terraced fields. And in the freezing weeks around the December solstice, Choimus, the holiest of them all, welcomes the god Balimain on his yearly visit and closes the books on the old year. Each one is a working religious ceremony, not a show staged for visitors.
The hosts are the Kalash, a community of about 4,000 people in the valleys of Bumburet, Rumbur and Birir who keep South Asia's last living polytheistic religion. Their year runs on a solar calendar read from the ridgelines by village elders, a practice called Suri Jagek that UNESCO listed in 2018 as urgently endangered heritage. The festivals are where that calendar becomes visible: drums, linked-arm circle dances, women in black piran robes and cowrie-shell kupas headdresses, wine poured from family barrels, and rites that outsiders are sometimes welcome to watch and sometimes asked to leave alone.
We run guided departures for all three festivals, each built on the same backbone: fly or drive from Islamabad to Chitral, then up the jeep track into the valleys, with nights in Kalash-run guesthouses and a guide who has sat through these ceremonies for years. The sections below tell you what each festival is, when it falls in 2026, and which one fits the trip you want.
The Three Kalash Festivals and Their 2026 Dates
The Kalash ritual year has three fixed points. Dates below are for 2026; the pattern repeats every year with a day or two of movement at the elders' discretion.
Chilam Joshi, the Spring Festival (13–16 May)
The loudest and most visited of the three. Four days of flower decoration, milk libations and massed dancing to welcome spring, with an open courtship tradition that ends in announced matches. It draws the biggest crowds of the year, especially in Bumburet. We run a dedicated departure for it; the full ritual sequence, dates and itinerary are on our Chilam Joshi Festival tour page.
Uchal, the Harvest Festival (20–22 August)
A thanksgiving for the wheat, barley and the summer's milk and cheese, held when the harvest is in. Ritual breads stuffed with walnuts and goat cheese, processions to the high pastures, and night dancing under far fewer visitors' eyes than May. If you want festival ritual without festival crowds, Uchal is the quiet choice, and August weather in the valleys is at its best.
Choimus, the Winter Solstice Festival (7–22 December)
The most sacred event of the Kalash year, two weeks long, dedicated to Balimain, who is believed to visit the valleys from the mythical homeland of Tsyam for the duration of the feast. The first week is for the community alone: purifications, initiations and the declaration of the new year. Outsiders may attend the second, public week, with its torch processions, goat sacrifices and dancing in the snow. Nights drop well below freezing and the passes can close, which is exactly why the valleys feel like another century in December.
Which Festival Should You Choose?
First time, and you want the full spectacle: Chilam Joshi, with the warning that several thousand other people had the same idea. Photographers who would rather share the dancing ground with hosts than with crowds: Uchal. The deep end, for travellers comfortable with real cold and a slower pace: Choimus, the one the Kalash themselves hold most important. Group size stays at twelve or fewer on every departure, and all three run from Chitral with the same valley logistics.
Day-by-Day Itinerary
1Islamabad to Chitral
Islamabad to Chitral
2Chitral to Bumburet Valley
Chitral to Bumburet Valley
3Festival Opening
Festival Opening
4Festival Rituals and Feasting
Festival Rituals and Feasting
5Rumbur Valley
Rumbur Valley
6Birir Valley
Birir Valley
7Chitral Exploration
Chitral Exploration
8Return to Islamabad
Return to Islamabad
Getting There
Chitral sits behind the Lowari Pass, and getting there is half the story. The PIA flight from Islamabad takes about 50 minutes when the weather over the Hindu Kush cooperates; when it does not, the road takes over: a long but paved day through Swat, Dir and the 10.4 km Lowari Tunnel. For the December festival we plan the road from the start, since winter flights are the least reliable of all. From Chitral town a jeep covers the 36 km to Bumburet in about two hours. Foreigners need no NOC at present, just passport registration at the checkpoints and a small entry fee at the valley gate, and we track the rules so the paperwork never becomes your problem.
Visiting Responsibly
A festival audience of thousands lands on a community of four thousand, and the Kalash feel it. Our rules are short. Photograph people only with their permission, and take a refusal gracefully. Stay out of rites your guide tells you are closed, including the whole first week of Choimus, which belongs to the community alone. Sleep and eat in Kalash-owned houses so the festival economy pays its hosts. And buy the valley wine rather than bringing your own; it is better anyway.
Why Book With Us
We have taken small groups to every Kalash festival season since 2015. Our guides confirm ceremony timings with the villages themselves, our guesthouse partners in Bumburet and Rumbur hold rooms for us in festival week when beds are the scarcest thing in Chitral, and our drivers know the valley tracks in snow as well as in dust. Licensed operator, groups of twelve or fewer, road backup on every departure.
What's Included
Not Included
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the three festivals of the Kalash people?
What are the three festivals of the Kalash people?
When do the Kalash festivals fall in 2026?
When do the Kalash festivals fall in 2026?
Which Kalash festival is the biggest?
Which Kalash festival is the biggest?
Can tourists attend the Choimus winter festival?
Can tourists attend the Choimus winter festival?
Do I need a permit to attend?
Do I need a permit to attend?
How do I get to the Kalash valleys?
How do I get to the Kalash valleys?
What should I pack for the December festival?
What should I pack for the December festival?
Is this the same tour as the Chilam Joshi tour?
Is this the same tour as the Chilam Joshi tour?
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