Crafting Your Perfect Himalayan Road Trip

Honestly? You don’t plan it perfectly. You just make sure you don’t miss the mountains.

I’ve said it before on here and I’ll say it again — road trips are my thing. Not just as a way to travel, but as a way to collect. Every road trip adds something to a shelf in my head that I’m building slowly, deliberately, for the day I’m old and grey and my grandkids ask me, “So what did you actually do with your life?” And oh, will I have stories.

But if there’s one trip that sits above all the others in my mind — the one I keep planning and replanning like a good playlist — it’s the Himalayas. There’s something about those mountains that doesn’t let you go once they’ve got you. The air is different up there. The silence is louder. And the roads? The roads will humble you in the most beautiful way possible.

A road trip isn’t about the destination you reach. It’s about the version of yourself you meet somewhere along the way.

So here’s how I think about planning the perfect one — lessons from the road, and from dreaming about those Himalayan highways.

Road Trips
Start with a feeling, not a map

Before you open Maps or search for hotels, ask yourself — what do I want to feel on this trip? Freed? Quiet? Alive? The Himalayas, for me, answer all three. That feeling is your compass. Let it decide the route before anything else does.

FROM THE ROAD

The Manali–Leh highway isn’t just a route — it’s a conversation between you and the earth. You don’t rush it. You stop at Rohtang, breathe at Baralacha La, sit with the silence at Pangong. The map will show you the distance. The mountain will show you the pace.

Plan enough to be free 

The sweet spot is somewhere between “fully booked itinerary” and “no idea where we’re sleeping.” Book your first and last night. Leave the middle open. Some of the best moments on any road trip happen when a local at a dhaba says “you should see the village up that road” and you actually have the time to go.

Pack less than you think you need

Every road tripper learns this the hard way. The Himalayas especially — you’re not going for comfort, you’re going for the experience. A warm layer, a good camera (or just your phone), a journal if that’s your thing, and enough snacks to survive a high-altitude traffic jam behind a herd of yaks. That’s genuinely all you need.

HONEST ADVICE

The moments that become stories when you’re older are never the ones that went perfectly. They’re the flat tyre at sunset near Keylong. The unexpected snowfall in June. The stranger who shared their thermos of chai when the café was closed. Plan for the journey — and let the trip happen.

Travel with the right people — or alone

Not everyone can sit in comfortable silence for three hours as mountains roll by the window. Road trips reveal people quickly. Choose your co-passengers like you’d choose who you’d want with you when things go sideways — because sometimes they do, and that’s half the point.

The perfect road trip isn’t the one where everything goes to plan. It’s the one you still talk about ten years later — the one that gave you a story worth telling. I’m building that shelf of stories, one road at a time. The Himalayas are calling, and honestly, that trip is going to need its own chapter.

So wherever your road leads — plan just enough, leave room for the unexpected, and go. Future-you, surrounded by grandkids asking for stories, will be very glad you did.


Have you ever driven through the Himalayas — or is it still on your list? Tell me which route and I’ll share what I know.

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