Valley of the Gods — Govind Wildlife Sanctuary

Har Ki Dun

Har Ki Dun ("Valley of the Gods") is a cradle-shaped high-altitude valley at 3,566m in the Garhwal Himalaya — inside the Govind Pashu Vihar Wildlife Sanctuary. The valley faces Swargarohini peak (6,252m), the mountain the Pandavas climbed on their final ascent to heaven (Svarga) in the Mahabharata. The 6-day return trek through ancient Jaunsar villages and glaciated valleys is one of the finest accessible treks in the Himalaya.

Complete Har Ki Dun Travel Guide

Trek Details & Route

Trek route (6 days return, base: Sankri):
Day 1: Sankri (1,920m) → Taluka (2,100m) → Gangar (2,400m) — forest trail along Tons river.
Day 2: Gangar → Osla village (2,559m) — traditional Jaunsar village with ancient Duryodhana temple.
Day 3: Osla → Har Ki Dun base camp (3,150m) → Har Ki Dun (3,566m) — the valley opening.
Day 4: Explore Har Ki Dun valley; Maninda Lake (optional, +4 km); Jaundhar Glacier view.
Day 5–6: Return same route to Sankri.

Har Ki Dun valley (3,566m): A classical U-shaped glaciated valley — open grassland, the Har Ki Dun river, and Swargarohini (6,252m), Bandarpunch (6,316m) and Gangotri III (6,577m) filling the head of the valley. The meadow camp at the valley floor at sunset is one of the finest alpine experiences in Garhwal.

Osla village (ancient Jaunsar culture): Osla is an isolated 800-year-old village at 2,559m — the people here claim descent from the Pandavas (hence the Duryodhana temple, unique in India). The stone-and-slate architecture, the Jaunsar dress and the valley isolation make Osla one of the most culturally distinctive villages in the Himalaya.

Govind Pashu Vihar Wildlife Sanctuary: The entire Har Ki Dun trek is within this sanctuary — habitat of snow leopard, Himalayan brown bear, musk deer, bharal (blue sheep). Birdwatching is exceptional — the valley has Himalayan monal pheasant (Uttarakhand's state bird), snow partridge and Himalayan griffon.

How to Reach Har Ki Dun

OriginDistanceTime
Sankri (trek start)3 days trek6 days return
Dehradun → Sankri197 km7 hrs via Purola
Delhi → Sankri503 km12 hrs
Mussoorie → Sankri159 km6 hrs

How to Reach Har Ki Dun

Drive to Sankri (197 km from Dehradun, 7 hrs) — the trek start point. Dehradun to Sankri shared jeep: ₹500–₈₀₀/person (from Nehrugram stand, Dehradun). Trek permit from the forest department at Sankri.

Budget, Trek Tips & Logistics
  • Best time: April–June (spring, rhododendron bloom on the lower sections, clear views). September–November (post-monsoon clarity, meadows green). December–March (Har Ki Dun under 3–4m snow — winter snow trekking possible with proper equipment).
  • Guide required: A local guide from Sankri or Osla is mandatory for snow season (October–March) and highly recommended at all times for the sanctuary section. Cost: ₹500–₇₀₀/day.
  • Accommodation on trail: GMVN rest houses at Gangar, Osla and Har Ki Dun valley — book via GMVN Uttarakhand website. Rates ₹400–₈₀₀/night. Forest department camping fee at Har Ki Dun: ₹50/person/night.
FAQs
How difficult is the Har Ki Dun trek?
Har Ki Dun is rated Easy to Moderate — no technical sections, well-marked trail, GMVN rest houses every 10–15 km. The maximum altitude (3,566m) can cause mild altitude effects. The main physical challenge is the 6-day distance (approximately 60 km return) and the cold nights at altitude. Suitable for fit adults and older children (12+). Not recommended for those with heart or respiratory conditions without medical clearance.

Plan Your Har Ki Dun Trek

UK Hill arranges complete Har Ki Dun trek packages — Sankri transfers, GMVN rest house bookings, guides and the 6-day valley itinerary.

Plan Har Ki Dun Trek