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Ngari Northern Route Self-Drive (Western Tibet)

Ngari Northern Route Self-Drive (Western Tibet)

★★★★★ 4.6 (141)⏱ 14 days and 1 hour · Private🗣 English guide

Overview

A fourteen-day chauffeured 4x4 expedition across western Tibet's Ngari: the Changtang wilderness, sacred Mount Kailash and the lost kingdom of Guge.

About This Tour

The Ngari Northern Route is the ultimate dream of Tibetan overlanding, a fourteen-day expedition across the roof of the world to a region most travellers never reach. It crosses the vast, uninhabited Changtang high plateau, a realm above 4,500 m roamed by wild yaks, Tibetan antelope and kiang, strung with a 'lake after lake' necklace of impossibly blue salt lakes. The journey culminates at sacred Mount Kailash, holy to Buddhists, Hindus, Jains and Bon alike, the turquoise Lake Manasarovar, the otherworldly Zanda clay forest, and the cliff-carved ruins of the Guge Kingdom, a Himalayan Atlantis lost for centuries. Because foreign visitors cannot legally self-drive in China, and because of the terrain and remoteness, this is a chauffeured/guided 4x4 self-drive: you travel in a rugged off-road vehicle with a professional English-speaking Tibetan guide and experienced driver, with oxygen and emergency support aboard, while we handle every permit and logistic. This is a serious high-altitude, long-distance route requiring a Tibet Travel Permit, an Ngari border (alien travel) permit and a military/restricted-area permit, all arranged in advance, plus a guide accompanying you throughout, as Tibet regulations require. Best from May to October. For fit, adventurous travellers seeking the most remote landscapes in Asia. Private tour, priced per person. Itinerary may adjust based on weather, road and border-area regulations. Good to know: • This is a chauffeured/guided 4x4 self-drive: foreign visitors cannot self-drive in China, and Tibet regulations require a licensed guide with you at all times • Permits: a Tibet Travel Permit, Ngari border (alien travel) permit and military/restricted-area permit are all required and must be arranged well in advance via passport and visa scans, allow 3-4 weeks • Best season: May to October; outside this, snow can close passes and temperatures plunge far below freezing • Altitude: extreme; most nights are spent at 4,500-5,000 m with passes over 5,200 m, so good fitness and prior acclimatisation in Lhasa are essential • High-altitude risk: oxygen and first aid are carried; travellers with heart, lung or blood-pressure conditions should consult a doctor first; minimum age 16 • Remote and rugged: long driving days, basic guesthouses and limited facilities in Ngari; travel insurance with evacuation cover is mandatory • Private tour, priced per person

Itinerary

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Day 1: Lhasa|Arrival & Altitude Acclimatisation

Your Tibetan guide meets you at Lhasa Gonggar airport or rail station (around 60 km, 1.5 hours) and transfers you to a hotel in Lhasa at 3,650 m. The single most important rule today is to rest, hydrate and acclimatise; avoid exertion, alcohol and heavy meals while your body adapts to the thin air. Settle in, take a gentle evening walk near the hotel and sip butter tea. Your guide briefs you on the fourteen-day expedition, checks permits and passports, and explains altitude-safety protocols and oxygen use. No driving today beyond the airport transfer. Overnight in a comfortable Lhasa hotel. Meals: Dinner included.
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Day 2: Lhasa|Potala Palace & Acclimatisation Sightseeing

A full acclimatisation day in Lhasa with no real driving, letting your body keep adapting before the high plateau. We visit the iconic Potala Palace, the thirteen-storey former winter residence of the Dalai Lamas towering over the city, and the Jokhang Temple, Tibet's holiest shrine, circled by pilgrims on the Barkhor kora. We keep the pace slow, with rest breaks, and explore the Barkhor market lanes. Walking at altitude will feel tiring, which is exactly why this buffer day matters. Your guide confirms vehicle, oxygen and provisions for the wilderness leg. Overnight in your Lhasa hotel. Meals: Breakfast included.
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Day 3: Lhasa to Shigatse|Yamdrok Lake & Karola Glacier

We set off west, around 350 km and 7-8 hours including stops. The road climbs over the Gampala Pass (4,790 m) to a stunning overlook of Yamdrok Lake, a fjord-like turquoise sacred lake. We continue past the Karola Glacier (about 5,000 m), which tumbles almost to the roadside, and through Gyantse to see its tiered Kumbum stupa. By late afternoon we reach Shigatse, Tibet's second city, home of the vast Tashilhunpo Monastery, seat of the Panchen Lamas. The driving today is paved and scenic, easing us higher. Overnight in a comfortable Shigatse hotel (3,850 m). Meals: Breakfast, Lunch included.
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Day 4: Shigatse to Saga|Onto the High Frontier

A long westbound driving day of roughly 450 km and 8-9 hours along the southern frontier highway, crossing several passes and rolling onto the high steppe as villages thin and the Himalaya glimmer to the south. We pass Lhatse and the turnoff to the Everest region, then traverse the broad, windswept upper Brahmaputra (Yarlung Tsangpo) valley. The landscape grows starkly beautiful and empty; we carry food and water as services are sparse. By evening we reach the small frontier town of Saga, a checkpoint hub where permits are inspected. Facilities here are basic. Overnight in a simple Saga guesthouse/hotel (around 4,640 m). Meals: Breakfast, Lunch included.
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Day 5: Saga to Lake Manasarovar|Toward the Sacred Mountain

We continue west around 500 km, roughly 8 hours, deep into Ngari prefecture across vast plains grazed by nomads' yaks and the occasional kiang. The day's reward comes at its end: the first sight of holy Lake Manasarovar (Mapam Yumtso), one of the highest freshwater lakes on earth, its deep blue ringed by snow peaks, with sacred Mount Kailash and Gurla Mandhata rising beyond. Pilgrims come from across Asia to bathe and circle these shores. We watch the alpenglow fade over the water. Overnight in a basic guesthouse at Manasarovar or nearby Darchen (around 4,590 m). Meals: Breakfast, Lunch included.
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Day 6: Manasarovar & Darchen|At the Foot of Kailash

A lighter day with short driving around the lake and to Darchen, the base town of Mount Kailash, to rest and absorb the altitude before deeper exploration. We circle parts of Lake Manasarovar by vehicle, visiting Chiu Monastery perched on a hill above the water, and gaze at the perfect pyramid of Kailash (6,638 m), the most sacred mountain in Asia and the legendary source of four great rivers. Pilgrims circumambulate it on a 52 km kora; travellers who are fit and acclimatised may add the trek as an option (extra days). Today we simply soak in the spiritual atmosphere. Overnight in a basic Darchen guesthouse (4,575 m). Meals: Breakfast included.
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Day 7: Darchen to Zanda|The Clay Forest of Tholing

We drive southwest about 250 km, roughly 5-6 hours, crossing high passes into the Zanda (Tsada) basin, where the road descends into the astonishing Zanda Earth Forest, a vast badland of wind- and water-carved clay pinnacles and canyons glowing gold and ochre, the eroded bed of an ancient lake. The scale is staggering, like driving onto another planet. We reach Zanda town and visit the venerable Tholing Monastery, founded over a thousand years ago and once the spiritual heart of the Guge Kingdom. Sunset over the earth forest is unforgettable. Overnight in a basic Zanda guesthouse (around 3,700 m). Meals: Breakfast, Lunch included.
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Day 8: Zanda|The Lost Kingdom of Guge

A full day exploring the Guge Kingdom ruins, with only short local driving (around 20-40 km round trip). Carved into and climbing a sheer clay ridge above the Sutlej River, Guge was a Buddhist civilisation that flourished from the 10th century and vanished mysteriously in the 17th, leaving hundreds of cave dwellings, tunnels, palaces, stupas and chapels with exquisitely preserved murals. We climb through the tiered citadel to the summit royal halls for sweeping views over the earth forest, our guide unfolding the legends of this Himalayan 'lost world'. Optionally we visit the nearby Dongga-Piyang cave murals. This is one of the great archaeological wonders of Asia. Overnight in Zanda. Meals: Breakfast, Lunch included.
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Day 9: Zanda to Gegyai|Into the Changtang Wilderness

We turn north and begin the great Northern Route proper, leaving the Sutlej basin and climbing back onto the Changtang plateau, around 350 km and 7 hours over high, lonely terrain. The road quality varies from paved stretches to rough, washboarded sections where the 4x4 earns its keep. We pass scattered nomad camps and watch for wildlife on the immense grasslands. Phone signal and services vanish; this is true high-plateau wilderness. By evening we reach Gegyai (Ge'gyai), a small administrative town offering basic lodging and a hot meal. Overnight in a simple Gegyai guesthouse (around 4,400 m). Meals: Breakfast, Lunch included.
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Day 10: Gegyai to Gerze|Lake After Lake

A demanding wilderness day of roughly 400 km and 8-9 hours across the heart of the Changtang, the second-largest area of uninhabited land on earth after the polar regions. The route strings together a series of high salt and freshwater lakes, their colours shifting from cobalt to milky jade against snow ranges. We have excellent chances of spotting Tibetan wild asses (kiang), antelope (chiru), gazelle and, with luck, the great wild yak. Driving is slow over rough plateau tracks at sustained altitudes above 4,600 m, so we pace ourselves and use oxygen as needed. Overnight in a basic Gerze (Tsochen-direction) guesthouse (around 4,420 m). Meals: Breakfast, Lunch included.
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Day 11: Gerze to Tsochen|Plateau Lakes & Nomads

We continue east across the high lake district, about 380 km and 8 hours, the scenery an endless rhythm of turquoise water, salt flats and distant white peaks under enormous skies. We pass herds of yak and flocks of bar-headed geese and brahminy ducks at the lake margins, and may stop to share butter tea with a nomad family in their black yak-hair tent, a rare window into a vanishing way of life. The relentless altitude and rough roads make this a tiring but profoundly remote and rewarding stretch. Overnight in a basic Tsochen (Coqen) guesthouse (around 4,650 m). Meals: Breakfast, Lunch included.
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Day 12: Tsochen to Lake Namtso|The Heavenly Lake

A long, scenic 450 km, roughly 8-9 hour drive brings us southeast off the deep wilderness toward Lake Namtso, the 'Heavenly Lake', one of the highest large salt lakes in the world at 4,718 m. We cross the Largen La pass (around 5,150 m) for a breathtaking first panorama of Namtso's electric-blue expanse backed by the snowy Nyenchen Tanglha range. At the Tashi Dor peninsula we walk among prayer-flag-draped rocks and pilgrim cairns at the water's edge. Conditions at the lakeside camp are basic and cold but the sunset and night sky are extraordinary. Overnight in a basic Namtso lakeside guesthouse (4,718 m). Meals: Breakfast, Lunch included.
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Day 13: Namtso to Lhasa|Return from the Roof of the World

After a sunrise over Namtso, we drive back toward Lhasa, around 250 km and 5-6 hours, recrossing the Largen La and descending steadily off the plateau through Damxung's grasslands and hot-spring valleys, where you may pause to soak tired muscles. As elevation drops, the air thickens noticeably and breathing eases, a welcome relief after days above 4,500 m. We arrive in Lhasa in the afternoon for a hot shower, a proper rest and a celebratory Tibetan dinner as your guide recaps the extraordinary journey across western Tibet. Overnight in a comfortable Lhasa hotel (3,650 m). Meals: Breakfast, Dinner included.
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Day 14: Lhasa|Departure

After breakfast, depending on your flight or train time, you may take a final gentle stroll on the Barkhor or pick up Tibetan crafts and turquoise as keepsakes. Your guide then transfers you to Lhasa Gonggar airport or the rail station (around 60 km, 1.5 hours) and assists with check-in and final permit formalities. For travellers wishing to continue, we can arrange the spectacular Lhasa-to-mainland scenic train, an Everest Base Camp extension or the Kailash kora trek. This concludes your fourteen-day Ngari Northern Route expedition across the wildest corner of Tibet. Meals: Breakfast included.

What's Included

✓ Included

English-speaking Tibetan guide accompanying throughout Experienced driver and rugged 4x4 with fuel, tolls and parking Tibet Travel Permit, Ngari border permit and military/restricted-area permit arrangement Hotels and basic guesthouses as per itinerary Listed entrance tickets and park fees (Kailash, Guge, etc.) Daily breakfast plus meals as specified (B/L/D) Oxygen supply and first-aid kit in vehicle Airport/rail transfers in Lhasa

✕ Not included

International and domestic flights or trains China visa Travel insurance (mandatory, with high-altitude and evacuation cover) Meals not specified Tips and gratuities Personal trekking and cold-weather gear Single supplement Mount Kailash kora trek (optional add-on)

Cancellation Policy

Free cancellation is available on most tours up to 24 hours before the start time. The exact cancellation terms for this tour are shown during booking.

Traveler Reviews

4.6★★★★★Based on 141 reviews
Aoife Z.🇳🇱 Netherlands★★★★★2024-12

A calm, well-paced day. China without the tour-group chaos was exactly what we wanted.

Oscar C.🇩🇪 Germany★★★★★2026-01

We saw all the highlights of China without the crowds. Worth every penny.

Andreas E.🇵🇹 Portugal★★★★★2025-01

A trip we will never forget. China with a passionate local guide is the way to go.

Nina G.🇸🇪 Sweden★★★★☆2026-02

Everything about our China experience was first-class — punctual, knowledgeable and warm.