Sakshi
Writer
Updated On - May 25, 2026
15 min
Published On - May 25, 2026
Tourist Mistakes in Spiti Valley — And How Not to Make Them
Many travelers make avoidable mistakes while visiting Spiti Valley, from ignoring altitude sickness to poor road-trip planning. Knowing the region’s weather, road conditions, and local customs can make your journey safer and more enjoyable. Follow these simple tips to experience the beauty of Spiti Valley without unnecessary trouble.
I'll be honest with you — I didn't fully understand what I was getting into the first time I headed to Spiti. I'd done Manali. I'd done Ladakh. How different could it be? The answer, it turns out, is very. Spiti Valley sits at an average of 3,800 metres in Himachal Pradesh's cold desert, squeezed between the Great Himalayan Range and the Tibetan Plateau. Roads open for maybe five, six months a year if you're lucky. The rest of the time, it's buried under snow that would make a Scandinavian shrug.
There's a lot here — monasteries that have been standing for a thousand years, villages at altitudes that make Everest base camp look casual, and a landscape so stripped back and raw that the mountains literally change colour every half hour as the light shifts. Buddhist heritage, serious trekking, scenery with zero Indian equivalent. It's all there. So is altitude sickness, so are washed-out roads, so are nights so cold you'll lie awake wondering who told you a light fleece would be fine.
The Lahaul and Spiti district has about 31,500 permanent residents across nearly 14,000 square kilometres. One of the least densely populated districts in the country. Then summer hits and tourists flood in — and the valley's infrastructure, which was never built for this volume, quietly buckles. The same mistakes get made, in roughly the same sequence, every single year. Here's what they are.
Rushing the Altitude
This one gets people every time, and it gets them fast. The typical move: fly into Chandigarh, two days of driving via the Manali route, arrive in Kaza wondering why your head feels like someone's slowly tightening a clamp around it. Kaza is at 3,800 metres. Kibber, just up the road, is at 4,270 metres — above Annapurna Base Camp in Nepal. Komic village, with maybe ten to fifteen families and a 14th-century monastery, sits at 4,587 metres. People look at those numbers and nod, and then proceed to ignore them entirely.
Acute Mountain Sickness doesn't care about your fitness level. It doesn't care that you ran a half marathon last month or spent a week in Leh three years ago. Studies in Spiti Valley found AMS rates of 28.7% among permanent residents living between 3,000 and 4,200 metres — people who live there. For visitors coming up fast from lower altitudes, the numbers are worse. Symptoms show up six to twelve hours in: headache, nausea, breathlessness, that heavy-limbed fatigue that makes you want to lie completely still. If it gets worse instead of better after rest, you descend. That's the only answer.
If you're coming in via the Shimla–Reckong Peo–Nako route, you've got a natural acclimatisation ladder built into the drive. Use it. Spend a night in Nako at 3,625 metres before pushing to Kaza. If you're coming via Manali and Kunzum, stop at Chandratal or Batal — don't just roll straight through because you're keen. Three to four litres of water a day. No alcohol for the first 48 hours. The table below puts the risk in plain numbers.
Underestimating the Roads
Spiti's roads are the stuff of legend — and not the flattering kind. The Manali route crosses Rohtang at 3,978 metres and Kunzum at 4,590 metres, and the stretch between Gramphoo and Kaza is essentially a live negotiation between the road and the mountain. Loose gravel. River crossings. Sections that vanish after rain. Places where the road and the riverbed are the same thing and you just have to commit. A 60-kilometre section can swallow three to four hours on a bad day. The Shimla route via Kinnaur and Nako is more forgiving — stays open most of the year — but at 412 kilometres to Kaza, it's not something you rip through either.
The mistake I see constantly is people treating this like a normal road trip. "We'll cover 200 kilometres before lunch and be in Kaza by afternoon." You won't. And more importantly, you shouldn't try. Hire a local driver if you're not confident — they know when to push, when to wait, and what 'the road's closed' actually means out here versus what it means in a city. Plenty of experienced Spiti travellers take the Shimla route in and the Manali route out, or the reverse, so they're not covering the same punishing ground twice.
Not Knowing the Permit Situation
Parts of Spiti sit inside a restricted border zone — it shares proximity with the Indo-Tibetan Line of Actual Control, which means the government keeps a close eye on who's moving where. Foreign nationals need an Inner Line Permit to get beyond certain checkpoints. We're talking Kibber, Komic, Hikkim, Langza — the places most people actually want to see. The ILP is available from the SDM office in Kaza, Reckong Peo or Manali, but you need to sort it before you're standing at a checkpost without one. That's a bad moment to discover the paperwork gap.
Indian nationals don't need an ILP, but they do need valid government-issued photo ID at multiple points — Aadhaar, driving licence or passport. Carry physical copies. Mobile connectivity in Spiti is patchy at best: BSNL has the widest reach, Jio and Airtel work in Kaza but get unreliable the moment you leave town. Don't count on being able to pull up a PDF when you need it.
Packing for the Wrong Season — or the Wrong Part of It
Spiti in July and Spiti in October are essentially different places. The valley's accessible between June and October in most years, but winter temperatures in Tabo drop to minus 45°C overnight. Even in peak summer, UV radiation at 3,800 metres runs about 25% higher than at sea level — and the thin, dry, reflective landscape amplifies it further. Nights drop below 5°C even in July. Sunburn, dehydration and altitude headaches are the holy trinity of first-timer complaints, and every single one is avoidable.
Thermal layers regardless of month. SPF 50+ sunscreen — not optional, don't debate this. UV-protection sunglasses. Boots with ankle support if you're planning to walk anywhere that isn't a flat road. If you're camping at Chandratal overnight, bring a sleeping bag rated to minus five or colder, in August. And if you're coming in September or October — which are, genuinely, the best months — pack for cold. Real cold, not 'I'll grab an extra hoodie' cold.
Reducing Spiti to a Checklist of Monasteries
The standard tourist route hits Key Monastery, Dhankar Monastery, Tabo Monastery — tick, tick, tick, done, next. Which misses the point so thoroughly it's almost impressive. The monasteries are extraordinary, but each has a history that takes actual time to absorb. Tabo was founded in 996 CE by Rinchen Zangpo. It's the oldest continuously operating monastery in India. The Archaeological Survey of India doesn't allow photography inside the main assembly hall — which means the only way to experience the thousand-year-old frescoes is to go in and look at them. The Dalai Lama has visited multiple times and has expressed a wish to retire here. That's not a rest stop on a highlights reel.
The villages are where Spiti's actual character lives. Langza, with its giant Buddha and a valley floor scattered with 50-million-year-old marine fossils from the Tethys Sea — you can pick them up off the ground. Hikkim and its post office at 4,400 metres, open since 1983, where postmaster Rinchen Chhering still walks the mail to Kaza on foot. Komic at 4,587 metres, with an 800-year-old monastery that almost nobody visits. Demul, which has a quietness that's hard to explain until you've been there. Sit down in one of these places. Have a meal at a homestay. The people are warm and curious and they are not here to be your backdrop.
Leaving No Room for the Weather and the Road
Spiti's weather isn't a background condition — it's a character in the story. Clear sky to full storm in under an hour. Roads wash out. Kunzum Pass closes without warning when snow decides to show up early. The traveller with a rigid seven-day itinerary and a flight home on Day 8 is the traveller you'll find stranded at Kunzum Top in sideways rain, trying to reach an airline on a BSNL connection with one bar.
Build at least two buffer days into any Spiti itinerary. Ideally three. I know that sounds like pessimism, but it isn't — it's what every single experienced Himalayan traveller will tell you, and it's the one piece of advice that first-timers ignore and then very specifically regret. The best Spiti stories I've heard always start with plans falling apart. The people telling those stories are always glad they had nowhere they had to be.
The Plastic Problem
This one is less about your trip going badly and more about what your trip does to a place that has essentially no capacity to absorb it. Spiti's permanent population is around 12,445 people. There is no municipal waste processing facility in the valley. And every tourist season, visitors leave behind plastic — primarily water bottles — that piles up on riverbeds, roadsides and glacial streams with nowhere to go. Spiti Ecosphere, the main environmental organisation working in the valley, estimates that over 300,000 plastic bottles are discarded here in a single season. That's roughly 24 bottles per permanent resident, deposited in a cold desert ecosystem where essentially nothing breaks down.
The fix is simple. Carry a reusable bottle and use the Spiti Ecosphere refill station network — it's active across the valley and on Google Maps. Carry your non-biodegradable waste out, all the way to a city with actual waste management. Ask your accommodation whether they have a refill and disposal policy before you book. Spiti Ecosphere's website at spitiecosphere.com is the place to start if you want to understand what responsible travel here actually looks like.
Treating It Like a Destination to Be Conquered
This is the one that's hardest to put into a table. Spiti is not a place you conquer. There's no summit to claim, no box to tick that proves you did it right. The food is simple — dal, rice, thukpa, momos, butter tea that tastes exactly as unfamiliar as you'd expect. Connectivity is intermittent. The roads are genuinely hard. The altitude doesn't care about your timeline.
And yet there's something about this valley that gets into you in a way that's difficult to explain to someone who hasn't been. The light at golden hour hitting the Pin Valley cliffs. The silence at Chandratal before dawn. The Tabo frescoes in lamplight, painted a thousand years ago, still there. The feeling you get at Kibber — 4,270 metres, at the edge of where people have decided to make their lives — that it's more beautiful than you had any right to expect, and that you almost missed it because you were in a hurry.
Go slowly. Go prepared. Carry your waste out. And go already knowing that Spiti will give you exactly as much as you're willing to receive.
Quick Reference: Everything You Need Before You Book
The valley has been here for several million years. It will outlast every itinerary. The only question is whether you went slowly enough to actually see it.

