Mt. Kailash and Western Tibet overland

Mt. Kailash and Western Tibet overland Tours are one the most seeked and challenging travel route in Tibet. Each year i am receiving thousand of emails asking about tour and travel route to the region. Here in this travel guide you will read about Mt. Kailash and Western Tibet overland.

Covering an area more than twice the size of Germany and larger than the US state of Texas, western Tibet is barren, but is a ruggedly beautiful area that few foreign travelers experience. Western Tibet comprises the 2 large prefectures of Ngari མངའ་རིས་ས་ཁུལ་ and Nagchu ནག་ཆུ་ཁུལ་ that are found in far western and northern Tibet. With an average elevation of over 4500 meters, this region is sparsely inhabited with a population density of only 0.74 people/square kilometer (1.9 people/square mile). The region is underdeveloped, but still offers a lot for those who don’t mind getting off of the beaten path.

Guge Kingdom

The Guge Kingdom

Though many of the roads through Western Tibet have improved dramatically over the past 10 years, it still takes time to travel through this remote region. Time is also required to properly acclimatize to the areas extreme high elevation. It is best to stay at least 4 nights in the Lhasa—Gyantse—Shigatse area before making a journey to higher elevation areas found in Western Tibet. Multiple travel permits are required for this area, which can take several weeks for travel agencies to arrange. Like all areas of the Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR), the only way you can visit Western Tibet is on an organized tour through a travel agency.

Along the pilgrimage route around Mt. Kailash

Though there are not dozens of things to see in Western Tibet, the things that are there make the long journey well worth it. Here is a list of the top things to see and do in Western Tibet:

1. Mt. Kailash: Kailash, known to Tibetans as Kang Rinpoche གངས་རིན་པོ་ཆེ་ is the holiest mountain to Tibetan Buddhists and is also considered to be holy to followers of Bon, Hinduism and Jainism. Each year, thousands of pilgrims from both Tibet and from India and Nepal make the journey to Kailash to walk the pilgrimage circuit around it. The pilgrimage circuit starts in the village of Darchen and is 52 kilometers long. The highest pass along the journey is the Drolma La Pass, which sits at 5640 meters. Though many Tibetans will do the entire 52 kilometers in one long day, most other people prefer to do the distance spread out over 3 days.

Here is a suggested itinerary for going to Mt. Kailash:

Spiritual Journey to Kailash

Here is a suggested itinerary if you plan to trek around Mt. Kailash:

Mt. Kailash Trek

2. Lake Manasarovar: Located just 35 kilometers from the start of the Kailash kora is the beautiful holy lake of Manasarovar. Manasarovar, known to Tibetans as Mapham Yum Tso མ་ཕམ་གཡུ་མཚོ་, sits at an elevation of 4590 meters. When the weather is clear, an excellent view of Kailash can be had when looking to the north from the small village of Chiu. There are several simple guesthouses to stay at or you can choose to find a secluded place along the lake to camp.

Ngari Manasarovar

Western Tibet’s Lake Manasarovar

3. Guge Kingdom: Located about 300 kilometers from Darchen and the start of the Kailash kora is the ancient kingdom of Guge གུ་གེ་རྒྱལ་རབ་. For many centuries, Guge served as a major trade link between Tibet and India and was a quite prosperous area. Since the 17th century, the former kingdom has been slowly falling into ruin. There are 2 main sites to visit in the Guge region. The first is the ancient citadel located in Tsaparang. This picturesque place is well worth exploring for half a day while hiking around the ruins. Tsaparang is 18 kilometers past the town of Zanda. The second main site is Tholing Monastery, which was founded in the 10th century. Tholing Monastery is located in Zanda town and is also well worth hiking around for a few hours.

Here is a suggested itinerary for visiting the Guge Kingdom:

Explore Ancient Guge Kingdom

4. Pangong Tso: The alpine lake of Pangong Tso སྤང་གོང་མཚོ་ lies along the border between Tibet and Ladakh, India. The stunning lake sits at an elevation of 4245 meters. Roughly 60% of the lake sits within Tibet. The lake is about 15 kilometers past the town of Rutok or about 140 kilometers north of the Ali (Gar), the capital town of Ngari Prefecture.

Ngari Zanda

The beautiful landscape near Zanda in far Western Tibet

Ladakh Pangong Lake

Pangong Lake lies along the border between Ladakh, India and Ngari, Tibet

5. The Changthang: The Changthang  བྱང་ཐང་ is Tibet’s barren far western and northern plateau that is mostly uninhabited except for nomads, a few small nomad trading towns and wildlife. This vast region extends nearly 1800 kilometers from east to west and includes parts of Ladakh, the western and northern regions of the Tibet Autonomous Region and the far western regions of Qinghai province. From Ali, the capital of Ngari Prefecture, you can cross the Changthang back to Lhasa. This journey takes about 5 or 6 days to complete from Ali. I recommend the following route: Ali—Gegye—Gertse—Nyima—Nam Tso Lake—Lhasa. Another option is to go from Gertse to Tsochen and then on to Saga before going to Lhasa or the Nepal border. Be prepared for cold weather as this region is all above 4500 meters and snow and freezing temperatures occur even in the summer.

Here is a suggested itinerary for crossing the Changthang:

Crossing the Changthang

Changthang

Wild horses on Tibet’s rugged Northern Plateau

6. Going to Xinjiang: The 2500 kilometer overland journey from Lhasa to Kargilik in Xinjiang is an epic journey reserved for those who really like adventures off the beaten path. Starting from the Tibetan capital city, this route takes you to Yamdrok Lake, Gyantse, Shigatse, Tingri, Manasarovar, Kailash, the Guge Kingdom and then through the uninhabited desert regions of southwest Xinjiang before coming to the oasis city of Kargilik.

Here is a suggested itinerary for going from Lhasa to Xinjiang:

Adventure Lhasa-Xinjiang

Ngari Guge Kingdom

The ancient Guge Kingdom

Western Tibet rewards those who make the long journey to get there. Seeing the Tibetan pilgrims going around Mt. Kailash is a site you will never forget. Gazing at the top of Kailash while along the bright blue shores of Lake Manasarovar is breathtaking. For more information on this region or any other region of Tibet, feel free to send me an email via contact page.

Losang

14 thoughts on “Mt. Kailash and Western Tibet overland

  1. Dechen

    I wish to travel to Kailash – as a Buddhist pilgrim & take my time to do the circumambulation – & then into Guge – Tholing & further north –
    travelling either into Ladakh or from Ladakh into Tibet. All the tour organisers I can find only go via Lhasa with many days spent being driven in vehicles.
    Is this compulsory?
    Is it possible to enter Tibet from the west or North ( from Mongolia) without going via Lhasa?

  2. Michael Tang

    Dechen,

    I am travelling to Mt Kailash in May on an organized group tour with 2 other people. We are looking for 1 more to join us to keep the per person price down.

    Let me know if you are interested.

  3. Alexandra

    Hello!

    My name is Alexandra, can you please advise about permits to Kailash.

    It is a lot of speculations now on a market, some travel agency claim that permits to Kailash is availabe now while other travel agency claim that Kailash is still closed for foreing tourist.

    I’m would be so much appreciate an answer from you regarding situation with Kailash.

    Many thanks in advance.

    1. Losang བློ་བཟང་ Post author

      Alexandra….Tibet is closed to ALL foreign travelers from early/mid February to late March. During this annual closure it is IMPOSSIBLE to go to any area of Tibet, including Kailash. Any travel agency or website claiming they can get permits during the annual closure is wrong. When permits for Tibet begin to be processed again in late March, then it will be possible to go to the Kailash region.

      Losang

  4. Rameshwar Dass

    Thanks so much. Will you kindly guide if Kodari borderr road to Tibet Mt. Kailash shall be available. Around what time.
    Thanks. .

  5. Cath

    How long does it take to get from Shigatse to the Guge Kindom. Where is it best to stay in the Guge Kingdom region? Appreciate your advice.

  6. Tatiana

    I m planning to travel to Tibet this summer,interested in kailash kora tour,could you help me to organise not so expensive tour

  7. Nishant Bhushan

    Hello,

    Want to travel for Mount Kailash kora tour. I am a single and a budget traveler from India. I am not sure if I can join a group! It will be best though.

    Kindly help.

    Nishant

  8. SUMANT NAYAK

    Hello, Hope you are doing well.

    I want to join Mount Kailash tour and I am a single and a budget traveler from India.

    Please let me know the best time to travel their, won’t mind to join a group even.

    Thanks in advance.

    Sumant

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