⚡ Before You Go — Essentials
📜 Inner Line Permit (ILP)
All visitors to Arunachal Pradesh require an Inner Line Permit. Apply online at arunachalilp.com or at district offices in Guwahati. Foreign nationals also need a Protected Area Permit (PAP) — apply at least 2 weeks before travel. Bumla Pass additionally requires a separate PAP for foreigners; book via a registered local tour operator. Get permits sorted BEFORE flying to Guwahati.
🏔️ Altitude & Acclimatisation
Tawang town sits at 3,048m (10,000 ft); Sela Pass is 4,176m; Bumla is 4,633m. Take the Bomdila → Dirang → Tawang route slowly — 2 nights in Bomdila and 1 in Dirang helps. Drink 3+ litres of water daily, avoid alcohol for the first 3 days, and carry Diamox (consult your doctor). March nights drop to -5°C near passes — pack accordingly.
🌊 About Your "Beach Days"
Tawang is deep in the Himalayas — there are no beaches within 1,000km. But we've designed two dedicated lake days that hit the same reset-and-refresh notes: Madhuri Lake (Day 7) and Sela Lake (Day 5). Both are high-altitude turquoise lakes with snow peaks, absolute silence, and picnic-worthy shores. Think alpine Switzerland, not Goa. You'll love them.
🚗 Getting Around
The standard route: fly into Guwahati → shared sumo/taxi or private car via Bhalukpong → Bomdila → Dirang → Sela Pass → Tawang. Hiring a private taxi for the whole circuit costs ~₹18,000-25,000 ($215-300) and is strongly recommended for flexibility. Shared sumos are cheaper (~₹600/seat/day) but less comfortable on mountain roads. Local taxis in Tawang for day trips: ~₹2,000-3,500/day.
🍽️ Food Culture
Tawang's cuisine is distinctly Monpa — influenced by Tibet and Bhutan. Must-tries: zan (buckwheat porridge with butter and cheese), thukpa (noodle soup), ting momos (steamed dumplings), butter tea (po cha), gyapa khazi (spiced rice), and smoked pork curry. The Main Bazaar area has the best local eateries. Night market stalls open from 7pm near the bus stand. No tipping culture — just honest, simple mountain food.
💰 Budget Tips
For $1,000-2,000 total for two over 16 days, budget roughly: accommodation ₹800-2,000/night ($10-24), meals ₹200-400/day per person ($5-10), transport ₹1,500-3,000/day total ($18-36). Hire a shared sumo where possible. Eat at local dhabas (not hotel restaurants). Entry fees are minimal. Permits are free for Indian nationals; ~₹2,000 for foreigners.
Arrival in Guwahati — Gateway to the Northeast
Fly into Guwahati, collect your Inner Line Permits, and begin the road journey northeast toward Arunachal Pradesh. Tonight you cross the ILP checkpoint at Bhalukpong and sleep at the edge of the foothills — the Himalayan adventure begins.
Arrive Guwahati & Collect ILP
Land at Lokpriya Gopinath Bordoloi International Airport (GAU). Head into the city to collect your pre-arranged Inner Line Permits from the Arunachal Bhavan office or confirm your online permit at the checkpoint. Have printed copies + digital backups.
Road Trip Begins: Guwahati to Bhalukpong
Hit the road on NH-15. The 182km drive takes ~5 hours through Assam's lush tea gardens and Brahmaputra valley plains. At Bhalukpong, cross the ILP checkpoint into Arunachal Pradesh — the landscape shifts immediately.
Into the Hills — Tippi Orchid Centre & Bomdila Arrival
The road climbs from tropical foothills into pine-scented mountain country. Stop at the Tippi Orchid Research Centre, catch the Sessa waterfall, and arrive in Bomdila — a charming hill town with Buddhist monasteries and a lively local market.
Tippi Orchid Research Centre
En route to Bomdila, stop at the Tippi Orchid Research Centre — home to over 500 species of orchids. March is orchid season in the foothills. The centre also has a butterfly garden and is largely unknown to mainstream tourists.
Sessa Waterfall Photo Stop
A short detour brings you to the Sessa Waterfall — a beautiful jungle cascade surrounded by ferns and mossy rocks. It's a refreshing break from the road and often deserted on weekdays.
Arrive Bomdila & Evening Wander
Reach Bomdila (2,415m) by afternoon. Walk around the Main Market area — a mix of Tibetan traders, local Aka tribals, and AMA (Arunachal Mahila Association) shops selling handwoven textiles. Visit the Lower Gompa before sunset.
Bomdila — Monasteries, Museums & Mountain Views
A full day to explore Bomdila at a gentle pace. This is your acclimatisation day — a critical investment before the higher passes ahead. Visit three monasteries at different altitudes, learn Arunachal's tribal history at the district museum, and browse the bustling Tibetan market.
GRL Monastery (Upper Gompa)
The Gontse Rabgyel Ling (GRL) Monastery sits above Bomdila with sweeping views of the Himalayan range. Founded in 1965, it houses butter lamp rooms, ancient thangkas and a towering Buddha statue. Arrive early to hear morning prayers.
Bomdila Museum & Crafts Emporium
The Bomdila Museum covers the tribal cultures of Arunachal Pradesh — the Aka, Miji, Sherdukpen and Monpa peoples. Small but genuinely informative. Next door, the Crafts Emporium sells authentic cane-and-bamboo crafts, woollen textiles and Monpa masks at fixed government prices.
Middle Gompa & Tibetan Market
The Middle Gompa is smaller but beautifully painted — look for the murals depicting the life of Buddha. Then explore the Tibetan market: yak butter, dried fruit, medicinal herbs, prayer flags and locally-produced apple wine (Arunachal Pradesh is famous for its apples).
Drive to Dirang — Dzong, Hot Springs & Apple Orchards
A scenic 96km drive through pine forests and river valleys brings you to Dirang — a gorgeous medieval village with a 500-year-old dzong (fort) and natural hot springs. Dirang is one of the most underrated stops on the Tawang circuit.
Drive Bomdila to Dirang
The 3-hour drive follows the Dirang Chu river valley — waterfalls cascade from roadside cliffs and kiwi vines grow wild along the verge. Look out for Rufous-necked hornbills in the trees.
Dirang Dzong
The 500-year-old Dirang Dzong (fort) sits above the village and is one of the most authentic medieval settlements in Arunachal. Walk through narrow stone-paved lanes between whitewashed houses, spot old women spinning yak wool on hand spindles, and find the dzong's ancient shrine rooms.
Dirang Hot Springs
After days of mountain driving, nothing beats soaking in Dirang's natural sulphur hot springs by the river. The springs are modest — concrete tubs built around the natural source — but the mineral water is genuinely therapeutic after acclimatisation.
🏔️ LAKE DAY 1 — Sela Pass & Sela Lake (Your High-Altitude "Beach Day")
Today is your first designated lake day — Sela Pass at 13,700 ft, with the sacred Sela Lake sitting in a bowl of snow-streaked mountains. We promised you a beach vibe at altitude: pack a picnic, sit by the turquoise water, listen to the silence, and feel the thin air. Then drop down through Jaswant Garh War Memorial and Nuranang Falls to Tawang.
Early Start: Dirang to Sela Pass
Leave Dirang by 7am — the 87km drive to Tawang via Sela Pass takes 5-6 hours with stops. The climb from Dirang to the pass is dramatic: thick rhododendron forests give way to stunted alpine shrubs, then bare rock and ice. The pass itself is often in cloud — arrive before 9am for clear views.
Sela Lake Picnic — Your Himalayan "Beach Day"
Sela Lake (4,175m) sits right at the top of the pass — a perfectly round glacial lake surrounded by snow-dusted peaks. It's utterly serene. Buy momos or snacks from the small stall at the top, find a boulder by the lakeshore, and just sit. The air is thin but the silence is absolute. This is your reset day.
Jaswant Garh War Memorial
Just below the pass, Jaswant Garh honours Rifleman Jaswant Singh Rawat who held off Chinese forces for 72 hours alone in 1962. The memorial is maintained with a dignified simplicity. Ask your driver for the full story — it's extraordinary.
Nuranang (Bong Bong) Falls
One of the most spectacular waterfalls in northeast India — a 100-metre plunge into a gorge, surrounded by dense jungle. The falls became famous after the Bollywood film Koyla (1997) was filmed here. The jungle walk to the viewpoint takes 20 minutes.
Tawang Monastery — Asia's 2nd Largest Buddhist Complex
Dedicate a full day to the Tawang Monastery (Galden Namgey Lhatse) — a 17th-century hilltop fortress-monastery that is the spiritual heart of the entire region. Morning prayers, ancient thankas, a 28-foot golden Buddha, and views over the valley that will stop your breath.
Dawn Prayers at Tawang Monastery
Arrive before 6am to witness the monks' morning puja. The drone of horns, clash of cymbals and deep chanting reverberates through the cold stone halls. 450 monks live within the monastery walls — this is a living, breathing religious community, not a museum.
Monastery Museum & Golden Buddha
The monastery library holds over 400 ancient hand-written manuscripts and tankas (painted silk scrolls). The main shrine houses a 28-foot golden Buddha — the centrepiece of the entire complex. The museum in the prayer hall displays 16th century thankas, weaponry and costumes.
Monastery Ramparts Walk & Valley Views
Walk the outer ramparts of the monastery for panoramic views of the Tawang valley and the surrounding Himalayan peaks. On clear days you can see Tibet. The whitewashed walls glow golden in afternoon light — some of the best photographs you'll take on the trip.
Tawang Main Bazaar & Night Market
After the monastery, wander the Main Bazaar as it comes alive in the evening. Street food stalls set up from 6pm — hot momos with chamin sauce, grilled corn, deep-fried puri with potato curry. A few stalls near the bus stand sell local Monpa rice wine (apong). This is your closest equivalent to a night market in Tawang.
🏔️ LAKE DAY 2 — Madhuri Lake & Bumla Pass (Your Himalayan "Beach Day")
Your second lake day — Madhuri Lake (Sangetsar Tso) at 4,200m is the most photographed lake in Arunachal Pradesh. Turquoise water, snow-streaked peaks reflected perfectly, a ring of dead-standing pine trees killed by the 1950 earthquake. Then push on to Bumla Pass at the Indo-China border. This is a full-day excursion that requires an early start.
Early Drive to Madhuri Lake (Sangetsar Tso)
Depart Tawang by 6am on the road toward Bumla Pass. After ~40km of dramatic mountain driving, you reach Madhuri Lake — named after Bollywood actress Madhuri Dixit who danced here in the film Koyla. The setting is surreal: perfectly still turquoise water ringed by ghost trees (killed by earthquake uplift) with Himalayan peaks rising behind.
PT Tso Lake
A short drive beyond Madhuri brings you to PT Tso (Pankong Tso) — smaller, quieter, and even more reflective. Few tourists make it this far. Sit by the lakeshore and eat your packed lunch in total silence.
Bumla Pass — Stand at the Indo-China Border
Bumla Pass (4,633m / 15,200 ft) is the actual Indo-China border in Arunachal Pradesh — Indian and Chinese soldiers stand on either side of a white line. You can see Chinese territory from where you stand. The site is both thrilling and deeply sobering.
Chumi Gyatse Waterfalls
On the way back to Tawang, stop at Chumi Gyatse — 108 sacred waterfalls cascading in tiers down a cliff face. In Tibetan Buddhism, 108 is a deeply auspicious number. In March, the falls are partly frozen, creating ice curtains alongside the cascades.
Dalai Lama's Birthplace & The Giant Buddha
Explore the sacred sites linked to the 6th Dalai Lama, born in this valley in 1683. Visit Urgelling Monastery — his birthplace — and the small house in Bekhar village where he grew up, before standing before Tawang's iconic 28-metre Giant Buddha statue overlooking the entire valley.
Urgelling Monastery — Birthplace of the 6th Dalai Lama
Urgelling is one of Arunachal Pradesh's most sacred sites — the small monastery where Tsangyang Gyatso, the 6th Dalai Lama, was born in 1683. It's much quieter than Tawang Monastery and has a different, more intimate energy. The original structure is ancient; look for the birth-room shrine.
Bekhar Village — The 6th Dalai Lama's Home
A short walk from Urgelling, Bekhar village preserves the traditional stone-and-wood home where the young Tsangyang Gyatso grew up. The village itself is beautifully preserved — ask an elder to show you around (they'll be delighted). This is as off-the-beaten-track as it gets in Tawang.
Giant Buddha Statue (Tawang)
The 28-metre bronze Buddha statue above Tawang sits on a hilltop and can be seen from across the valley. Climb the steps for panoramic views that take in the entire Tawang town, the monastery, and the surrounding peaks. March afternoon light turns everything golden.
Zemithang — The Remote Monpa Frontier
Today is the adventure highlight — a 93km drive deep into the Zemithang valley to reach one of the most remote Monpa settlements in India. The valley sits near the Bhutan border with views into Bhutanese territory. Gorsem Gompa is the main monastery here, and the village life is entirely untouched by tourism.
Drive to Zemithang (Full Day Excursion)
The 93km drive from Tawang to Zemithang takes 3-4 hours on rough mountain roads. The valley opens up dramatically as you descend — terraced fields, yak herds, and traditional Monpa settlements cling to the hillsides. The landscape shifts from alpine to a warmer sub-alpine valley floor.
Gorsem Gompa
Gorsem Gompa (Khinmey Nyingma Monastery) sits dramatically at the edge of the valley overlooking the Nyamjang Chu river. Built on a cliff, it dates from the 15th century and is associated with Guru Rinpoche. The murals inside are extraordinary — vivid tantric imagery in original pigment.
Zemithang Village & Monpa Community
Walk through Zemithang village — one of the most isolated communities on the Tawang circuit. Monpa families weave wool, tend their fields and herd yaks using centuries-old methods. Very few outside visitors make it this far. Accept any invitation for tea — the hospitality is extraordinary.
Hidden Tawang — Chain Bridge, Offbeat Villages & Local Life
A relaxed day exploring Tawang's most underrated corners: the 600-year-old Chakzam chain bridge, the offbeat Monpa village of Mukto, and an afternoon wandering the Old Market. No tour groups, no crowded viewpoints — just local life.
Chakzam Bridge — 600-Year-Old Chain Bridge
The Chakzam (Chagzam) Bridge is one of the most extraordinary structures in northeast India — an iron chain bridge built in the 15th century, still standing. It spans the Tawang Chu gorge with dramatic drops on either side. Very few tourists know about it.
Mukto Village
The small village of Mukto is the closest thing to "old Tawang" left — traditional Monpa houses with carved wooden balconies, spinning women, and community prayer flags stretched between rooftops. Historically significant as a trading hub between India and Tibet.
Old Market Tawang & Shopping
The Old Market (separate from the main bazaar) has the best selection of genuine Monpa crafts: hand-spun yak wool carpets, masks used in Tawang festival dances, traditional chopsticks, prayer beads and incense. Prices are negotiable but fair.
Hiking Day — Gorichen Trek & Alpine Meadows
Today is pure adventure: a mountain hike into the alpine zone above Tawang. The Gorichen region (towards the base of Arunachal's highest peak at 6,538m) offers spectacular day hikes through rhododendron forests, past glacial streams and into open meadows with 360-degree Himalayan views.
Trek to Alpine Meadows above Tawang
Start from the road above Tawang Monastery and hike up through rhododendron and silver fir forests. March is the start of rhododendron season — expect flashes of red and pink blooms against the snow. The trail climbs to open alpine meadows at ~4,000m with unobstructed views of the Himalayan peaks.
Picnic in the Meadows & Return
Reach the high meadows by mid-morning, eat your packed lunch above the treeline with 360-degree mountain views, then descend at a relaxed pace. The afternoon return through the rhododendron forest is magical — shafts of light, bird calls and the scent of mountain herbs.
Shonga-tser Lake & Buddhist Village Walk
A gentler day exploring Shonga-tser Lake (another beautiful high-altitude lake near Tawang), followed by a walking tour of a small local monastery village that's completely off most itineraries. End with a Monpa cooking experience at a local home.
Shonga-tser (Madhuri) Lake Morning Walk
Visit Shonga-tser Lake (separate from Madhuri/Sangetsar Lake) in the morning light — this smaller lake near Tawang town rarely appears in guidebooks. Circle the lake on foot, watching for migratory birds and taking in the reflection of the mountains.
Local Monastery Village Walk
Ask your hotel or local guide to take you to one of the small namgey (monastery villages) outside Tawang town — communities of 20-30 families clustered around a small gompa. These are rarely visited and the welcome is genuine. Look for butter sculptures, hand-printing rooms and the village chorten.
Monpa Home Cooking Experience
Through your guesthouse, arrange to join a local Monpa family for dinner preparation and a shared meal. Learn to make zan (buckwheat dumpling dipped in butter and cheese), thukpa broth and momos from scratch. This is the kind of experience that stays with you for years.
Farewell Tawang — Drive Back to Dirang
Your last morning in Tawang. One final sunrise at the monastery, a wander through the market for last-minute purchases, then begin the long drive back south toward Dirang. The journey retraces the spectacular mountain road but every viewpoint looks different in reverse.
Sunrise at Tawang Monastery (Last Morning)
Wake before dawn for a final hour at Tawang Monastery. The monastery glows gold in early morning light, the valley below is filled with mist, and the peaks to the north are lit pink. Sit on the wall. Don't rush this.
Last Market Walk & Purchases
Final sweep of the Old Market and Main Bazaar for any remaining souvenirs. Stock up on Monpa butter tea powder, dried yak cheese (chhurpi), local apricot jam and prayer flags to take home.
Drive Tawang to Dirang (Reverse Route)
The 85km drive back to Dirang takes 4-5 hours. You'll cross Sela Pass again — this time from north to south. Stop for chai and instant noodles at the Sela Pass army canteen (one of the highest tea stalls in India). Arrive in Dirang before dark.
Shergaon Village & Return to Bomdila
A hidden gem day: Shergaon is a tiny Sherdukpen tribal village that won the United Nations' Best Sustainable Tourism Village award — and almost nobody has heard of it. Cool climate, ancient village monastery, fruit orchards and genuine tribal hospitality. Then move on to Bomdila for the night.
Dirang Hot Springs (Second Visit)
One last soak in the Dirang hot springs before the day's drive. After 12 nights at altitude, your muscles will thank you.
Shergaon Village — UN Award-Winning Sustainable Tourism
The Sherdukpen village of Shergaon is unlike anything else on this circuit. Neat wooden houses with carved facades, a community orchard, ancient Lhagyala Gompa, and a community museum. The villagers run the tourism themselves, meaning your money goes directly to the community.
Arrive Bomdila for Final Night
Drive from Shergaon to Bomdila (40km, 1.5 hours). Bomdila feels almost like a city after Tawang and Zemithang. Walk the market one last time, eat at the best restaurant you found on the way up, and reflect on an extraordinary journey.
Descent — Through Assam Tea Country to Tezpur
The final day of driving: drop from the mountains through Arunachal's forested foothills and out onto the Assam plains. The landscape shift is dramatic — from alpine Himalayan to tropical Brahmaputra valley in a single afternoon. End the night in Tezpur, Assam's most charming river town.
Drive Bomdila to Bhalukpong
The descent from Bomdila is its own spectacle — the road drops 2,000 metres through progressively lusher forest, from pine to bamboo to full tropical jungle. Exit Arunachal Pradesh at Bhalukpong checkpoint (keep your ILP for stamping out).
Tezpur — Brahmaputra Views & Ancient Temples
Tezpur is a pleasant Assam town on the Brahmaputra river — wide, slow and enormous. Visit the ruins of Da-Parbatia temple (6th century, extraordinary stone carvings), walk the Mahabhairab Temple ghats, and sit on the riverbank watching the world's largest riverine island flow by.
Final Day — Guwahati & Departure
The last morning. Drive back to Guwahati through the tea estates of Assam, stop at a working tea estate for a proper garden tour, then end with a farewell dinner on the Brahmaputra riverfront before your departing flight.
Drive Through Assam Tea Estates
The 183km drive from Tezpur to Guwahati passes through the heart of Assam's tea country. Ask your driver to stop at a working estate — many allow brief visits to the plucking fields and the processing house. The smell of fresh tea leaves is intoxicating.
Umananda Island Temple, Guwahati
The world's smallest inhabited river island sits in the middle of the Brahmaputra in Guwahati. A short ferry ride deposits you at the ancient Umananda Shiva temple, surrounded by Assam's characteristic river light. The ferry trip alone is worth it.
💰 Budget Breakdown
| Category | Budget | Midrange | Luxury |
|---|---|---|---|
| Accommodation (per night, 2 sharing) | ₹800-1,500 ($10-18) | ₹1,500-3,000 ($18-36) | ₹3,000-6,000 ($36-72) |
| Meals (per couple/day) | ₹400-800 ($5-10) | ₹800-1,500 ($10-18) | ₹1,500-3,000 ($18-36) |
| Private Car (per day) | ₹2,500 (shared sumo) | ₹3,000-4,000 (private) | ₹5,000+ (4WD) |
| Inner Line Permit | Free (Indian nationals) | ₹2,000 ($24) for foreigners | Same |
| Bumla Pass PAP | ₹500-1,000 (via operator) | Same | Same |
| 16-Day Total (couple) | $600-900 | $900-1,600 | $1,600-2,500 |
✈️ Getting There
- Fly to Guwahati (GAU) — hub for all northeast India
- Nearest airport to Tawang: Tezpur (VETZ) — reduces driving by ~2 hours
- No direct flights to Tawang; all arrivals by road
- Alternative: Assam Rail to Rangapara North, then drive
📜 Permits
- Inner Line Permit (ILP): apply at arunachalilp.com (free for Indians; ₹100 for foreigners)
- Foreign nationals: also need Protected Area Permit (PAP) from Ministry of Home Affairs
- Bumla Pass extra PAP: arrange via registered Arunachal tour operator in advance
- Keep multiple printed copies + digital photos of all permits
🏨 Where to Stay in Tawang
- Hotel Tawang Heights — best midrange option, central
- Hotel Mon Regency — good value, helpful staff
- Pemaling Lodge — basic but run by local family
- Circuit House (government) — advance booking required, basic but comfortable
- Budget guesthouses in Main Bazaar from ₹500/night ($6)
🌡️ March Weather
- Tawang town: 5-18°C days, -2 to -5°C nights
- Sela Pass: -5 to 8°C, may have snow on road
- Bumla Pass: -10 to 2°C, always bring full winter gear
- Lower valleys (Bomdila, Dirang): 10-22°C — much warmer
- March has occasional snowfall at passes — roads usually passable but check conditions
📱 Connectivity
- BSNL is the only network with coverage across most of Arunachal Pradesh — buy a BSNL SIM
- No signal at passes, Zemithang or remote valleys — inform family before you go off-grid
- WhatsApp works in Tawang town, Bomdila and Dirang on BSNL
- Carry an offline map (Maps.me or OsmAnd with Arunachal downloaded)