The Muktinath temple tour is a 6-day Muktinath yatra and sightseeing journey from Kathmandu through Nepal's Mustang district to the sacred Muktinath dham at 3,800 metres. This Muktinath darshan package takes you to Muktinath Temple Nepal, one of the holiest Vishnu temples in the world, for a guided Muktinath pilgrimage tour that covers the complete ritual circuit. You travel by private jeep along the Kali Gandaki gorge, the deepest gorge in the world, with views of Dhaulagiri (8,167m) and the Annapurna range rising on either side. The route passes through Pokhara, Beni, Tatopani's natural hot springs, the apple orchards of Marpha, the trading town of Jomsom, and the medieval village of Kagbeni before climbing to the temple complex at Ranipauwa. Muktinath is sacred to both Hindus and Buddhists. Hindus know it as one of the 108 Divya Desams, the holiest Vishnu temples. Buddhists call it Chumig Gyatsa, the Hundred Springs, and associate it with Guru Rinpoche (Padmasambhava). The tour includes all meals, accommodation, ACAP permit, licensed guide, and a private vehicle for the full duration.
Muktinath Temple sits on a high plateau above the village of Ranipauwa in the Mustang district of Nepal. The main pagoda-style temple houses a golden idol of Vishnu, known here as Mukti Narayana, the Lord of Liberation. Below the main shrine stand the 108 water spouts (Mukti Dhara), arranged in a long row of stone bull-head faucets. Pilgrims bathe under each spout in sequence, a purification ritual that Vaishnava texts describe as one of the most powerful acts of spiritual cleansing available at any tirtha in South Asia. Next to the spouts sit two sacred kunda ponds, Brahma Kunda and Vishnu Kunda, used for ritual immersion before the Mukti Dhara circuit. Below the temple complex, the Jwala Mai shrine holds an eternal flame fed by natural gas seeping through the earth. Fire burns alongside flowing water inside the same chamber, a phenomenon Hindu tradition reads as the unity of the five elements under Vishnu's protection. Buddhist tradition associates the flame with the protective deity Dorje Phagmo.
The drive from Pokhara to Muktinath follows the Kali Gandaki Highway through a landscape that changes every hour. South of Beni, the road passes through subtropical forest, terraced rice paddies, and the Magar villages of the Myagdi corridor. At Tatopani (1,190m), natural hot springs bubble out of the riverbank at 40 to 45 degrees Celsius. North of Ghasa, the valley narrows into the Kali Gandaki gorge, flanked by Dhaulagiri on the west and the Annapurna massif on the east. Rupse Waterfall drops 50 metres from a cliff face directly beside the road. Beyond Lete and Dana, the terrain shifts to the dry, wind-scored landscape of lower Mustang. Marpha (2,670m) is a Thakali village known for its apple orchards and locally distilled apple brandy. Jomsom (2,720m) is the administrative capital of Mustang, with an airport, a bazaar, and the last reliable ATM before Muktinath. Kagbeni (2,810m), a 15th-century fortified village at the gateway to Upper Mustang, sits at the confluence of the Kali Gandaki and Jhong Khola rivers, with a red-walled monastery and prayer-flag-strung streets that feel closer to Tibet than to Kathmandu.
Muktinath translates as Lord of Liberation. The Gandaki Mahatmya and the Skanda Purana name this site among the most potent tirthas for achieving moksha, the permanent release from the cycle of birth, death, and rebirth. Hindu pilgrims believe that bathing under the 108 Mukti Dhara and receiving darshan of the deity breaks karmic bondage regardless of the pilgrim's prior spiritual state. The number 108 appears throughout Vedic and Buddhist cosmology: 108 names of Vishnu, 108 beads on a japa mala, 108 defilements recognized in Buddhist psychology. Completing the full bath is a symbolic cleansing of all 108 past lives. For Buddhists from the Tibetan tradition, Muktinath is Chumig Gyatsa, linked to the great tantric practitioner Padmasambhava (Guru Rinpoche), who is said to have meditated here. The Namgyal Gompa, a small Buddhist monastery adjacent to the main temple, maintains its own liturgical schedule independent of the Hindu priests. Both traditions share the physical space without conflict.
The Kali Gandaki riverbed near Muktinath and Kagbeni contains shaligram stones, ammonite fossils dating to the Jurassic period (approximately 140 million years ago). Hindu devotees regard shaligrams as aniconic forms of Vishnu himself. Each stone is identified by its spiral markings, which correspond to specific manifestations of the deity. Priests at Muktinath use particular shaligrams in daily puja rituals. The fossils cannot be bought or sold for profit under orthodox custom; they are received as gifts or collected personally from the sacred riverbed near Kagbeni. If you are interested in seeing shaligrams in their natural geological context, your guide will walk you along the river section between Kagbeni and Ekle Bhatti, where the black stones are most commonly found among the smooth grey river cobbles.
The Muktinath tour by jeep from Kathmandu runs 6 days and covers approximately 1,100 km of road travel (round trip). Day 1 transfers from Kathmandu to Pokhara (206 km, 6 to 7 hours by tourist vehicle via Prithvi Highway). Days 2 through 5 use a private 4WD jeep for the mountain road, which is paved through Beni but unpaved and rough beyond Tatopani. The final 21 km from Jomsom to Muktinath climbs 1,080 metres in elevation over recently blacktopped road. The ACAP permit (Annapurna Conservation Area Project, NPR 3,000 for foreign nationals, NPR 100 for SAARC nationals) is included in the tour price and handled by your guide before departure. All meals (breakfast, lunch, and dinner) are included every day of the tour. Accommodation is in 3-star hotels in Kathmandu and Pokhara, and in clean mountain guesthouses with hot water at Tatopani, Jomsom, and Muktinath village. For a full breakdown of Nepal trekking permits, see our trekking permits guide.
There is no formal entrance fee to Muktinath Temple itself. The ACAP conservation permit covers access to the entire Mustang corridor. Donations at the temple are voluntary: pilgrims typically offer NPR 100 to 500 to the priest inside the main shrine in exchange for tika and prasad. Materials for abhishek puja (milk, curd, flowers, incense) can be purchased from vendors outside the temple gate for NPR 200 to 500. There are no ATMs beyond Jomsom, so withdraw all needed cash in Pokhara before departure. Carry a minimum of NPR 15,000 to 25,000 (approximately $113 to $188 USD) per person for tips, personal purchases, and optional extras. Nepali rupees are the only accepted currency on the mountain road. Digital payments and card transactions are not available beyond Pokhara. Manakamana cable car tickets (if the extended 7-day itinerary option is chosen) cost NPR 390 per foreign adult one way.
If you are combining your Muktinath pilgrimage with trekking in the Annapurna region, our Annapurna Circuit trek passes through Muktinath after crossing Thorong La Pass at 5,416m, the highest point on the circuit. The Annapurna Base Camp trek starts from Pokhara and can be booked back to back with this tour. For travellers who want a Pokhara day before or after, the Ghorepani Poon Hill trek offers a 4 to 5 day hill walk with sunrise views of Dhaulagiri and Annapurna from 3,210 metres. Our Kathmandu 7 UNESCO Heritage Sites tour pairs naturally with this package on your arrival or departure day in Kathmandu.
The strongest photography locations on this tour start with the Kali Gandaki gorge, where the road cuts through the deepest gorge on earth between two 8,000-metre peaks. At Muktinath, the row of 108 stone water spouts with the Himalayan panorama behind them is the defining image. Golden hour at the temple complex, with the Annapurna and Dhaulagiri ranges catching the last light, produces the photographs that stay with people. Kagbeni's red-walled monastery and Tibetan-style flat-roofed houses against the stark Mustang landscape are strong Instagram material. The Rupse waterfall beside the road between Ghasa and Dana is a reliable frame. Marpha's whitewashed stone alleys lined with drying apples have a visual character distinct from anything else on the route. Photography of the main deity inside Muktinath's inner sanctum is prohibited. Photography around the 108 spouts, the kunda ponds, the Jwala Mai shrine, and the Namgyal Gompa courtyard is permitted.
A 3-day Muktinath tour from Pokhara (fly to Jomsom, jeep to Muktinath, return next day) is technically possible but leaves zero time for acclimatization, Kagbeni, Marpha, or Tatopani. A 5-day tour from Pokhara covers the core route with an overnight at Jomsom for altitude adjustment before the temple visit. The standard 6-day tour from Kathmandu adds the Kathmandu-to-Pokhara transfer and a buffer day for weather or road delays. A 7-day extended version adds Manakamana Temple (via cable car), Pokhara sightseeing (Phewa Lake, Sarangkot sunrise, Devi Falls, Gupteshwor Cave, World Peace Pagoda), and Pashupatinath Temple darshan in Kathmandu. For transport, the jeep is the most immersive option: you see the gorge, stop at villages, and experience the terrain change from subtropical to high-altitude desert over 8 hours. A flight from Pokhara to Jomsom Airport (25 minutes, approximately $115 to $130 USD one way, Tara Air or Yeti Airlines) cuts road time but removes the gorge drive and is frequently cancelled by afternoon winds. A helicopter from Pokhara (45 to 60 minutes, approximately $350 to $500 per person for a shared 5-seat charter) is the fastest option and a curated experience with Annapurna panorama views, but it bypasses Tatopani, Marpha, and Kagbeni entirely.
The best time to visit Muktinath is October and November. Post-monsoon skies are the clearest of the year, and the Dhaulagiri and Annapurna views from the temple plateau are sharpest. Temperatures at 3,800m range from 5 to 12 degrees Celsius during the day and drop below zero at night. Kartik Purnima (the full moon in October or November) is the most important pilgrimage date for Hindu devotees, when thousands arrive for darshan. March through May is the second peak window: warmer temperatures, rhododendron blooms in the lower foothills, and stable road conditions. Muktinath in winter (December through February) is cold but possible. Snow can block sections above Jomsom, and Jomsom Airport flights operate less frequently. The temple remains open year-round. Monsoon months (June through August) bring rain to the lower sections, though Mustang sits in a rain shadow and receives significantly less rainfall than other parts of Nepal. Muktinath Purnima (full moon of Shrawan, July or August) draws the largest annual pilgrimage crowd. Janai Purnima and the Buddhist Saga Dawa festival also bring heavy traffic. The Tiji festival, a Tibetan Buddhist ceremony held annually in Mustang (typically May), centres on Lo Manthang but draws visitors through the Muktinath corridor. The Yartung horse festival in Muktinath village (August) is a local event with horse racing and traditional music.
This Muktinath tour package is built for Hindu and Buddhist pilgrims who want to complete the darshan at one of the most sacred Vishnu temples in the world. It fits Indian travellers visiting Nepal for a religious tour: no visa is required for Indian citizens (a valid passport or voter ID is sufficient), Hindi-speaking guides are available on request, and vegetarian meals (including Jain options) are standard at every stop on the route. It fits senior citizens and elderly pilgrims who want to reach Muktinath by vehicle without trekking: the jeep handles all altitude gain, and the temple steps can be taken slowly with guide assistance. It fits families with children who want a cultural tour with the Tatopani hot springs, Marpha apple orchards, and Kagbeni's medieval streets as additional experiences. It fits solo travellers who can join a shared departure to reduce costs, and couples looking for a honeymoon tour that combines spiritual significance with Himalayan scenery. It fits first-time visitors to Nepal who want a multi-destination package covering Kathmandu, Pokhara, and Mustang in a single trip. And it fits photographers and spiritual retreat travellers who want to experience Muktinath without the physical demands of the Annapurna Circuit trek. Mountain Hawk Trek is a Kathmandu-based operator registered with the Nepal Tourism Board. Prem Pandit and the Mountain Hawk team have been running tours through Mustang since the company was founded. The altitude safety protocol, acclimatization schedule, and emergency procedures are published on this page because we believe you should know what to expect before you book, not after you arrive.
Muktinath is one of the 108 Divya Desams, the holiest Vishnu temples recognized in Vaishnavite tradition, and the only one located above 3,000 metres. You stand at 3,800m on a plateau in Mustang with the Annapurna and Dhaulagiri ranges filling the sky behind the pagoda-roofed shrine. The 108 water spouts pour glacial meltwater through stone bull-head faucets. Pilgrims who complete the full circuit believe the act washes away accumulated sins from 108 past lives. Below the spouts, the Jwala Mai shrine holds a flame that has burned continuously for centuries, fed by natural gas, alongside flowing water in the same small chamber. This is the place Hindu scriptures call Mukti Kshetra, the field of liberation. Buddhist practitioners from the Tibetan tradition know the same site as Chumig Gyatsa and come here to honour Guru Rinpoche.
The drive from Pokhara to Muktinath passes through the Kali Gandaki gorge, measured as the deepest gorge on earth when calculated from the summits of Dhaulagiri (8,167m) on the west and Annapurna I (8,091m) on the east to the river floor at approximately 2,520m. The road follows the river northward through terrain that shifts from green subtropical forest to dry, wind-cut Mustang desert in a single day. You pass the 50-metre Rupse waterfall dropping from a cliff beside the road, drive through the Thakali villages of Lete and Tukuche, and stop at Marpha to walk whitewashed stone alleys lined with apple orchards and a Buddhist monastery.
Kagbeni is a 15th-century fortified village at 2,810 metres, sitting at the confluence of the Kali Gandaki and Jhong Khola rivers. The flat-roofed mud and stone houses, red-walled monastery, and narrow winding streets are architecturally closer to the Tibetan plateau than to the Kathmandu Valley. The village marks the gateway to Upper Mustang, the restricted area beyond which requires a separate $500 USD permit. On this tour, Kagbeni is where you spend time exploring one of the most visually distinct and historically preserved settlements in Nepal.
Tatopani sits at 1,190 metres on the banks of the Kali Gandaki and translates literally as "hot water." Natural geothermal springs produce water at 40 to 45 degrees Celsius, channelled into stone-lined bathing pools beside the river. After the altitude and cold of Muktinath at 3,800m, soaking in Tatopani on the return is both physically restorative and one of the moments people remember most clearly from this tour. The lower elevation also provides relief from any lingering altitude effects.
The Muktinath corridor runs through Thakali country, and the cuisine is distinct from anything you eat in Kathmandu or Pokhara. Thakali dal bhat is prepared with local ghee, jimbu (a Himalayan herb related to chives), and seasonal greens. Marpha is famous across Nepal for its apple products: fresh apples in season (September through November), dried apple rings, apple jam, and a locally distilled apple brandy that is technically illegal to export but available at every guesthouse in the village. Jomsom's restaurants serve buckwheat pancakes and yak steak alongside the standard rice and lentil set.
Every breakfast, lunch, and dinner for the full 6 days is included in the tour price. The ACAP conservation permit is included. The private jeep, licensed English-speaking guide, and all accommodation are included. There is no moment on this tour where you need to negotiate, arrange, or pay for a service that was supposed to be covered. We publish a transparent pricing table with per-person rates by group size because we believe you should compare packages on equal terms, not discover that meals, permits, and return transport were excluded after you booked.
Muktinath sits at 3,800m (12,467 feet), above the threshold where acute mountain sickness can develop. The itinerary builds in an overnight at Jomsom (2,720m) before ascending the final 1,080 metres to the temple. Your guide carries a pulse oximeter and a first-aid kit with Diamox (acetazolamide). The descent to Tatopani (1,190m) after the temple visit provides rapid altitude relief. Jomsom has a domestic airport (JMO) for emergency flights to Pokhara, and helicopter evacuation can be arranged through your travel insurance provider. We publish this because no other Muktinath tour operator in Nepal does, and we think you should know how your operator handles altitude before you pay.
Muktinath pairs naturally with Pashupatinath Temple in Kathmandu (the holiest Shiva temple in Nepal) and Manakamana Temple in Gorkha district (accessible by cable car, dedicated to the wish-fulfilling goddess). Together, these three form the core of Nepal's Hindu pilgrimage circuit. Our extended 7-day itinerary includes all three. For travellers interested in a wider Nepal temple tour, our itinerary can also incorporate Lumbini (birthplace of the Buddha, 280 km southwest of Kathmandu) and Janakpur Dham (birthplace of Sita, 400 km southeast of Kathmandu) as add-on days.
Hotel pickup in Kathmandu at 7:00 AM. Drive 206 km west along the Prithvi Highway to Pokhara (6 to 7 hours). The road follows the Trishuli River through terraced hills, Magar and Gurung settlements, and the town of Muglin before climbing into the Pokhara Valley. Arrive in Pokhara Lakeside by early afternoon. Free time to explore Phewa Lake, visit Bindhyabasini Temple, or rest before the mountain road ahead. Overnight at a 3-star hotel on Pokhara Lakeside. For travellers on the 7-day extended itinerary, the Kathmandu departure includes Pashupatinath Temple darshan in the morning and a stop at Manakamana Temple (cable car, 15 minutes) en route. All meals included.
Depart Pokhara at 6:30 AM in a private 4WD jeep. Drive north through Beni Bazaar (76 km, 2 hours) and into the Kali Gandaki gorge. Stop at Galeshwor Mahadev Temple at the confluence of the Kali Gandaki and Rahughat rivers. Continue to Tatopani (1,190m), where a brief stop at the natural hot springs lets you soak your feet before the road climbs higher. North of Ghasa, the valley narrows dramatically. Rupse Waterfall drops 50 metres from a cliff face directly beside the road. Pass through Dana village and Lete village as the landscape shifts from subtropical forest to the dry terrain of lower Mustang. Stop for lunch in Marpha (2,670m), a Thakali village known for apple orchards and apple brandy. Walk the whitewashed stone alleys and visit the Buddhist monastery. Continue 20 km north to Jomsom (2,720m), the administrative capital of Mustang district. Arrive by late afternoon. Jomsom sits at an elevation that allows your body to begin acclimatizing before the ascent to Muktinath the following day. Total drive: approximately 180 km, 8 to 9 hours with stops. Overnight at guesthouse in Jomsom. All meals included.
Morning departure from Jomsom. Drive 21 km north to Muktinath (3,800m) on recently blacktopped road (approximately 1 hour, gaining 1,080m in elevation). Arrive at Ranipauwa, the small village below the temple complex. Walk up to Muktinath Temple for the sacred darshan. The pilgrimage circuit begins at the two kunda ponds (Brahma Kunda and Vishnu Kunda), proceeds to the 108 water spouts (Mukti Dhara) where you bathe under each bull-head faucet in sequence from left to right, enters the main pagoda shrine for darshan of the golden Vishnu idol (Mukti Narayana), and concludes at the Jwala Mai shrine where the eternal flame burns alongside water. Visit the adjacent Namgyal Gompa (Buddhist monastery). Your guide explains the puja procedure, the significance of each ritual station, and the Hindu and Buddhist dual tradition at the site. After completing the darshan, drive 12 km south to Kagbeni (2,810m). Explore the 15th-century fortified village, its red-walled monastery, Tibetan-style houses, and prayer-flag-strung streets at the gateway to Upper Mustang. Walk along the Kali Gandaki riverbed to look for shaligram fossils. Overnight at guesthouse in Kagbeni or Jomsom. All meals included.
Morning in Kagbeni. Optional early return to Muktinath for a second visit at sunrise (additional drive arranged with your guide, no extra charge). After breakfast, drive south through Jomsom and Marpha, retracing the Kali Gandaki gorge route. Stop at Tukuche village (2,590m), a former salt-trading post with traditional Thakali architecture. Pass through Lete, Dana, and Ghasa as the landscape transitions back from dry Mustang desert to forested valleys. Arrive at Tatopani (1,190m) by late afternoon. Soak in the natural hot springs (40 to 45 degrees Celsius) beside the Kali Gandaki River. The hot springs are the highlight of the return journey and the perfect recovery after the cold and altitude of Muktinath at 3,800m. Overnight at guesthouse in Tatopani. All meals included.
Morning hot spring soak (optional, free access) before departure. Drive south through the Kali Gandaki gorge to Beni Bazaar, then east to Pokhara (approximately 100 km, 5 to 6 hours). Arrive in Pokhara Lakeside by early afternoon. Free time for Pokhara sightseeing: Phewa Lake boating, Sarangkot sunrise viewpoint, Devi Falls, Gupteshwor Mahadev Cave, World Peace Pagoda, Barahi Temple, and the Pumdikot Shiva Statue are all within reach by taxi or the tour vehicle. For the extended 7-day itinerary, a full day of Pokhara sightseeing is scheduled before the return to Kathmandu. Overnight at 3-star hotel in Pokhara Lakeside. All meals included.
After breakfast, drive 206 km east on the Prithvi Highway from Pokhara to Kathmandu (6 to 7 hours). Optional stop at Bandipur, a preserved Newari hilltop settlement, for a 30-minute walkthrough (the detour adds approximately 45 minutes). Arrive in Kathmandu by late afternoon. Transfer to your hotel or directly to Tribhuvan International Airport for departure flights. For travellers departing the next morning, overnight hotel accommodation in Kathmandu can be arranged. Tour concludes at hotel or airport. Breakfast and lunch included.
The most common route from Pokhara to Muktinath is by 4WD jeep via the Kali Gandaki Highway, covering approximately 180 km in 6 to 8 hours through Beni, Tatopani, and Jomsom. A faster option is flying from Pokhara to Jomsom Airport on Tara Air or Yeti Airlines (25-minute flight), then taking a jeep 21 km north to Muktinath in about 1 hour. A third option is a direct helicopter flight from Pokhara, reaching Muktinath in 45 to 60 minutes. Most travelers combine the flight up and jeep return to balance cost and comfort.
Travel time depends on transport. By private jeep alone, the journey takes 6 to 8 hours covering roughly 180 km. If you fly to Jomsom (25 minutes, approximately $115 to $130 one way) and then take a jeep to Muktinath (1 hour), total travel time is about 2 to 3 hours including airport transfers. By helicopter, you reach Muktinath in 45 to 60 minutes directly from Pokhara.
Foreign nationals require the Annapurna Conservation Area Project (ACAP) permit to enter the Muktinath region. This costs NPR 3,000 (approximately $22) per person. If you are trekking rather than traveling by vehicle, a TIMS card is also required, costing NPR 2,000 ($15). Permits are issued at Nepal Tourism Board offices in Kathmandu, at the ACAP office in Pokhara, and at checkpoints in Beni. On this tour, your guide handles all permit procurement.
Muktinath sits at 3,800m, so warm clothing is essential year-round. Pack a down jacket rated to at least minus 5 degrees Celsius, thermal base layers, a waterproof outer shell, gloves, and a wool hat. Bring sturdy walking shoes with ankle support for uneven temple grounds and stone steps. Sunscreen (SPF 50+), UV-blocking sunglasses, and a refillable water bottle are necessary. Include altitude sickness medication such as Diamox (125 to 250mg tablets). Carry NPR 5,000 to 10,000 in cash as ATMs are unreliable beyond Jomsom.
Most foreign nationals need a Nepal tourist visa, available on arrival at Tribhuvan International Airport in Kathmandu. A 15-day visa costs $30, a 30-day visa costs $50, and a 90-day visa costs $125. Citizens of India do not require a visa. Citizens of China can enter without a visa for up to 30 days.
Pokhara is the better starting point for the mountain road. It sits roughly 200 km closer to Muktinath, reducing overland travel by 4 to 6 hours each way. Our standard 6-day tour starts from Kathmandu and includes the Kathmandu-to-Pokhara transfer on Day 1.
Three main options exist. A private 4WD jeep from Pokhara covers 180 km in 6 to 8 hours. A flight from Pokhara to Jomsom (25 minutes, $115 to $130 one way) combined with a 1-hour jeep ride to Muktinath is faster. Helicopter tours from Pokhara reach Muktinath in 45 to 60 minutes and cost approximately $350 to $500 per person for a shared charter.
The Kali Gandaki Highway from Pokhara to Muktinath is paved through Beni (76 km) but mostly unpaved and rough beyond that point. Between Tatopani and Ghasa, the road is prone to landslides during monsoon. The final stretch from Jomsom to Muktinath gains 1,080m in elevation over 21 km and is recently blacktopped.
Book 4 to 6 weeks in advance for peak seasons of March to May and September to November. For helicopter tours during Muktinath Purnima (the full moon festival in August), book 8 to 10 weeks ahead. Off-season travel from December to February requires shorter lead times.
A minimum 3-day itinerary (fly to Jomsom, jeep to Muktinath, return) is possible but tight. A 4 to 5 day tour allows acclimatization time. Our standard 6-day tour from Kathmandu covers the full route with a night at Jomsom for altitude adjustment. A 7-day extended version adds Manakamana, Pashupatinath, and Pokhara sightseeing.
Group tours cost $410 to $550 per person and follow fixed departure dates. Private tours cost $495 to $750 per person but depart on your chosen date and allow complete itinerary flexibility. For pilgrimage purposes where ritual bathing timing matters, private tours offer better control.
Yes. A shared helicopter charter from Pokhara carries 5 to 6 passengers and costs approximately $350 to $500 per person, with 45 to 60 minutes flying time each way. A private helicopter from Kathmandu costs $1,500 to $2,500 for the full aircraft. Morning departures before 9:00 AM have the highest reliability.
Muktinath Temple sits at 3,800m (12,467 feet). Mild acute mountain sickness symptoms are common in unacclimatized travelers. Spend at least one night in Jomsom at 2,720m before ascending. Drink 3 to 4 liters of water per day and avoid alcohol on the first night at altitude.
Tour prices from Pokhara range from approximately $410 per person for a 3-day group jeep tour to $975 for a private tour. Our all-inclusive 6-day tour from Kathmandu costs $495 to $750 per person, covering every meal, accommodation, private jeep, guide, and ACAP permit.
The 108 spouts, known as Mukti Dhara, represent the 108 sacred names of Vishnu in Hindu tradition. Pilgrims bathe under each spout in sequence, believing the act washes away accumulated sins from 108 past lives and breaks the cycle of rebirth. The number 108 holds deep significance across both Hinduism and Buddhism.
Jwala Mai is an eternal flame burning within a small shrine at the Muktinath complex, fed by a natural gas seep from the ground. The flame burns alongside flowing water, creating a rare natural phenomenon. Hindus interpret this as a manifestation of Vishnu's divine energy. The flame has burned continuously for centuries.
Shaligrams are ammonite fossils found in the Kali Gandaki riverbed, and Hindus regard them as aniconic forms of Vishnu. Each shaligram is identified by its spiral markings. Priests at Muktinath use specific shaligrams in daily puja rituals. They cannot be bought or sold for profit under orthodox Hindu custom.
Hindu pilgrims worship Vishnu (Mukti Narayana) and perform ritual bathing under the 108 spouts. Buddhist pilgrims venerate the site as Chumig Gyatsa and associate it with the dakini Dorje Phagmo. Buddhist monks conduct separate pujas in the gompa adjacent to the main temple. Both traditions share the physical space without conflict.
A pilgrim begins by bathing in the two sacred kunda ponds, then proceeds to the 108 spouts from left to right while reciting Vishnu mantras. After completing the Mukti Dhara circuit, the pilgrim enters the main temple for darshan and offers flowers and tulsi leaves. The priest applies tika as prasad. The visit concludes with circumambulation of the temple complex.
Visitors must remove footwear before entering the main temple complex. Pilgrims are expected to dress modestly with shoulders and legs covered. Shorts and sleeveless clothing are considered disrespectful. Pilgrims planning to bathe under the 108 spouts should carry a change of clothing, as the mountain water is extremely cold year-round.
Muktinath Purnima (full moon of Shrawan, July or August) is the most important. Janai Purnima also draws large crowds. Buddhist Saga Dawa brings Tibetan pilgrims. Kartik Purnima (October or November) is the peak Hindu pilgrimage period. The Tiji festival (typically May) and Yartung horse festival (August) are additional cultural events.
Photography of the main deity inside the inner sanctum is prohibited. Photography in the outer courtyard, around the 108 spouts, the kunda ponds, and the Jwala Mai shrine is permitted. Photographing Buddhist monks or gompa interiors should be done only after seeking permission.
Transport alone runs NPR 5,000 to 8,000 ($38 to $60) per seat in a shared jeep, or NPR 32,000 to 70,000 ($240 to $526) for a private vehicle. ACAP permit adds NPR 3,000 ($22.50). Hotels cost NPR 2,500 to 7,000 ($19 to $53) per night. Meals cost NPR 1,500 to 3,500 ($11 to $26) per day. A self-arranged 4-day trip runs NPR 30,000 to 60,000 ($225 to $450) per person.
The ACAP fee of NPR 3,000 ($22.50) is often not included in base package prices. Hot showers at guesthouses cost NPR 200 to 300 per use. Charging devices costs NPR 100 to 200 per session. Bottled water beyond Jomsom runs NPR 150 to 300 per liter. Budget an additional NPR 5,000 to 8,000 ($38 to $60) per person for miscellaneous expenses. On our tour, ACAP and all meals are included.
Meals at teahouses cost NPR 500 to 1,500 ($3.75 to $11.25) per dish. Dal bhat is the most affordable at NPR 500 to 700. Breakfast runs NPR 300 to 600. Plan on spending NPR 1,500 to 3,500 ($11 to $26) per day on food. On our tour, all meals are included in the price.
In Kathmandu and Pokhara, the tour uses 3-star hotels with en suite bathrooms, hot water, and WiFi. Along the route, expect clean mountain guesthouses at NPR 2,500 to 4,000 per night with simple twin beds. We pre-book accommodation at all stops during peak seasons.
There are no ATMs beyond Jomsom. Carry NPR 15,000 to 25,000 ($113 to $188) per person for tips, personal purchases, and incidentals. Nepali rupees are the only accepted currency on the mountain road. Keep smaller denomination bills (NPR 100 and NPR 500) for tips.
Travel insurance with high-altitude coverage covering a minimum of USD 100,000 in emergency medical expenses is strongly recommended. The policy must explicitly include helicopter medical evacuation. Verify the policy covers altitudes up to at least 4,000m. Carry a printed copy throughout the trip.
Muktinath sits at 3,800m, above the threshold where Acute Mountain Sickness can develop. Because this is a vehicle tour, the ascent is faster than walking. Most visitors experience mild symptoms that resolve with rest and hydration. Spending one night at Jomsom (2,720m) before Muktinath reduces risk significantly.
Many elderly travelers complete the tour without difficulty. The temple steps can be steep and slippery. The altitude of 3,800m puts more cardiovascular strain on older adults. Elderly travelers should consult their physician, consider Diamox, and stay overnight in Jomsom before ascending. Portable oxygen canisters are available locally.
Children can visit Muktinath, but parents should watch for altitude sickness signs: persistent headache, loss of appetite, unusual fatigue, and vomiting. Children under five should generally not go above 3,000m without medical guidance. If a child develops any AMS symptoms, descend immediately.
The fastest option is a jeep descent to Jomsom (2,720m), taking 20 to 40 minutes. Jomsom has a domestic airport with regular flights to Pokhara. Helicopter evacuation can be arranged through your travel insurance provider, costing USD 2,000 to 4,000. Descent is always the primary treatment for severe AMS.
The jeep takes 6 to 8 hours through the Kali Gandaki gorge with stops at Tatopani, Marpha, and Kagbeni. The flight takes 35 minutes but is frequently cancelled by crosswinds. The jeep costs significantly less and is weather-independent. Many travelers fly one direction and jeep the other.
A 3-day package covers only the temple visit. A 7-day package adds Kagbeni, Jomsom, Marpha, Pashupatinath, Manakamana, Pokhara sightseeing, and acclimatization time. Our standard 6-day package is the practical middle ground with the full gorge drive and temple darshan.
Autumn (September through November) is generally preferred for clear post-monsoon skies and sharp mountain views. Kartik Purnima in October or November draws large numbers of Hindu pilgrims. Spring (March through May) is warmer with wildflowers. Both seasons are classified as peak.
Pokhara is the natural pairing. Travelers with 10+ days commonly add Chitwan National Park. The Ghorepani Poon Hill trek can be combined in a 10 to 12 day itinerary. Upper Mustang beyond Kagbeni requires a separate $500 permit and adds 4 to 5 days. Kathmandu sightseeing is commonly added at the start or end.
Muktinath is a pilgrimage that most people think requires a multi-week trek. It does not. The Jomsom-Muktinath road is now blacktopped for the final 21 km, and a private jeep covers the full Pokhara-to-Muktinath route in two driving days with stops at Tatopani, Marpha, Jomsom, and Kagbeni along the way. You reach the same temple that Annapurna Circuit trekkers reach after 12 days of walking, and you do it in a fraction of the time. The altitude is the same either way, so the acclimatization protocol matters, but the physical demand is completely different. This is a vehicle-based tour, not a trek. You do not need hiking boots, a porter, or any prior trekking experience.
Everything is included in the price. Every meal, every night of accommodation, the jeep, the guide, and the ACAP permit. Competitors in this market exclude most meals (one operator provides 1 lunch and 1 dinner across 7 days), charge ACAP fees separately, and publish prices that look lower until you add the extras. We publish a per-person pricing table on this page because we believe the comparison should be on equal terms. The price you see is the price you pay.
The route itself is half the experience. The Kali Gandaki gorge between Dhaulagiri and Annapurna, the Rupse waterfall, the hot springs at Tatopani, the Thakali food, the apple orchards in Marpha, and the medieval streets of Kagbeni are not filler between Pokhara and Muktinath. They are the reason the jeep route is worth choosing over a flight to Jomsom. You lose all of this if you fly. We recommend the overland route for every traveller who has the time for it.
Mountain Hawk Trek is a Kathmandu-based operator, not a marketplace. Prem Pandit and the team run this tour themselves. The guide who meets you at your hotel is our guide, not a freelancer assigned by an aggregator. We have contacts in Jomsom, Kagbeni, and Muktinath village. When Jomsom flights cancel (and they cancel often due to afternoon crosswinds in the Kali Gandaki), we have contingency plans that require local relationships, not a call centre. Our tour reviews on TripAdvisor reflect that direct relationship.