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Best Manali to Shangarh Tour Packages Curated By Experts

All Manali to Shangarh Packages

Shangarh Tour Packages from Manali Shangarh is about 100 km from Manali. Three hours by road. If you are already in Manali and you are finding the Mall Road too crowded, the traffic too thick, and the tourist buzz too loud, Shangarh is the trip that gives you the opposite. You drive south from Manali through Kullu and Bhuntar, turn off the highway at Aut, and follow a narrowing road through deodar forest until it opens out into a wide green meadow with an old wooden temple sitting at its edge. No cafes. No market. No traffic. Just the meadow, the forest, and the kind of silence that Manali lost years ago. It is one of the easiest side trips you can take from Manali, and one of the most rewarding. A day trip is possible but tight. One night in a homestay at Shangarh changes the experience entirely. Two nights lets you properly slow down. Should You Add Shangarh to Your Manali Trip? If you have one extra day and one extra night, yes. Manali is a town that has grown around tourism. It has hotels, restaurants, shops, adventure activities and an entire economy built for visitors. That is what makes it convenient, and it is also what makes it noisy. Shangarh is the reverse. It is a small village in the Sainj Valley that has almost no tourist infrastructure. The attraction is a green meadow surrounded by deodar forest, a centuries old wooden temple, and the fact that there is genuinely nothing to do except be there. For couples on a honeymoon in Manali, Shangarh is one of the best additions possible. Two nights in a good homestay with morning walks on the meadow, home cooked food, no phone signal, and no one else around. It is the quiet, romantic part of the trip that Manali itself cannot provide. Featured Shangarh Package Types from Manali Day Trip: Manali to Shangarh and Back For travellers who cannot spare an overnight. You leave Manali early, reach Shangarh by late morning, spend time at the meadow and the temple, and drive back by evening. The round trip is about 200 km and 6 to 7 hours of driving. You get a few hours at the meadow. It is a taster, not a stay. 2 Days, 1 Night: Manali to Shangarh Quick Extension The smartest short format. You drive to Shangarh after breakfast, arrive by early afternoon, have the rest of the day and the evening at the meadow and the homestay, and return to Manali the next day. One night changes everything. You get an evening, a night sky, a morning. 3 Days, 2 Nights: Comfortable Shangarh Stay from Manali Two full days in the village. Time for the meadow, the waterfall, the Pundrik Rishi Lake trek, and slow mornings. The version we recommend for couples, honeymooners, and anyone who wants the village to feel like a place rather than a stop. 4 to 5 Days: Shangarh with Tirthan Valley from Manali Drive from Manali to Shangarh. Spend two nights. Cross to Tirthan Valley (Jibhi or Gushaini) on the other side of the same Aut turnoff. Spend two nights. Continue toward Delhi or return to Manali. Two valleys in one extension. Day Trip vs Overnight: The Honest Comparison A day trip gives you about 3 to 4 hours at the meadow. You leave Manali at 7 or 8 AM, arrive by late morning, walk the meadow and the temple, have lunch, and drive back. It works but the day is mostly road. One night gives you an afternoon, an evening, a night sky, and a morning. You see the meadow in two different lights. You eat a home cooked dinner. You sleep in the quiet. You wake up to birdsong and mist on the grass. This is the version where Shangarh feels real. Two nights gives you a full day to explore beyond the meadow. The waterfall, the forest trails, the neighbouring villages, and the luxury of a day with nothing scheduled. The honest recommendation: if you can spare the night, spare it. Shangarh is not a place you drive through. It is a place you stay in. Route: Manali to Shangarh Manali to Kullu about 40 km, roughly an hour, following the Beas river south. Kullu to Bhuntar about 10 km. Bhuntar to Aut about 20 km further south past Larji. Aut to Sainj about 20 km following the Sainj river. Sainj to Shangarh via Ropa about 10 km, narrow, steep and gravelled through thick deodar forest. Total about 100 km, 3 to 3.5 hours. Most of the drive is the familiar Manali highway in reverse. The last half hour is the only stretch that feels like a mountain road. Can You Combine Shangarh with Tirthan Valley? Yes. At Aut, the road splits. Left into Sainj Valley for Shangarh. Right into Tirthan Valley for Jibhi and Gushaini. Two nights in Shangarh. Two nights in Tirthan. The best way to use extra days after Manali. Shangarh for the silence. Tirthan for the river. Why Travel Coffee for Your Manali to Shangarh Trip We can add Shangarh to your existing Manali plan. If you are already booking a Manali trip with us, adding Shangarh takes a single conversation. We adjust the vehicle, the stays and the itinerary. We know the road. Better homestays. Private trips, your own vehicle and pace. Combination logic for Shangarh with Tirthan. Honest guidance on day trip versus overnight. What to Know Before Visiting Shangarh from Manali The Practical Details Time zone: Indian Standard Time (IST), UTC+5:30. Currency: Indian Rupee (INR). No ATMs in Shangarh. Carry cash from Manali. Languages: Hindi widely spoken. Kullvi locally. Mobile network: limited to no signal. BSNL intermittent. Download offline maps. Fuel: Fill in Manali or Kullu. Pump at Larji. Nothing inside the valley. Permits: No permit for Shangarh. GHNP permit for deeper treks. Food: Home cooked vegetarian meals at homestays. No restaurants in Shangarh. Altitude: Shangarh at about 2,100 metres. Lower than Manali. No concern. How Long? Day trip for a taste. One night for a real visit. Two nights for a proper stay. Three to five days if adding Tirthan Valley.

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Best Places to Visit on a Shangarh Trip from Manali

Ropa Forest Complex

Ropa Forest Complex

The Ropa Forest Complex is a government forest rest house and GHNP range office on the bank of the Sainj River, about 8 km from Sainj town and 3 km before Neuli. It has 5 basic double rooms and 2 dormitories (10 beds each), bookable through the GHNP website. The road to Shangarh branches off here. It is the cheapest riverside accommodation in the Sainj Valley, the permit office for GHNP treks on the Sainj side, and the practical junction between the valley's main villages and the park's interior.

Neuli Village

Neuli Village

Neuli is a small village at the end of the motorable road in the Sainj Valley, Kullu district, at roughly 1,500 metres. It is the last bus stop from Aut, the official trailhead for GHNP treks on the Sainj side, and the transit point for reaching Shangarh, Shanshar, Upper Neahi, and Dehuri. Not a destination village in itself, but a practical crossroads that every Sainj Valley traveller passes through. Birders should slow down here. The walk along the Sainj River is one of the better birding stretches in the valley.

Upper Neahi Village

Upper Neahi Village

Upper Neahi is a small Himachali village in the upper Sainj Valley, Kullu district, sitting at roughly 1,800 to 2,000 metres within the Great Himalayan National Park buffer zone. The sacred Pundrik Rishi Lake is about 200 metres from the village. The draw is slow village life, deodar forest in every direction, short treks to meadows like Sarikanda and Dalogi, and a pace that most travellers do not find anywhere else in the valley. A few homestays, no shops, no ATM, and almost no mobile signal. Two nights is the sweet spot.

Manyashi Village

Manyashi Village

Manyashi is a tiny village on a ridge above Dehuri in the Sainj Valley, known for two wooden tower temples dedicated to Pundrik Rishi and the local deity Janjar. A 15 to 20 minute walk from Dehuri through terraced apple orchards and crop fields brings you to one of the most photogenic spots in the valley. No accommodation, no shops, no entry fee. Plan it as a short side walk from a Dehuri base, ideally combined with Pundrik Rishi Lake on the same half day.

Dehuri Village (Deohari)

Dehuri Village (Deohari)

Dehuri (also locally called Deyohari or Deohri) is a quiet, rustic village in the Sainj Valley, Kullu district, sitting at roughly 2,050 metres within the GHNP buffer zone. Unlike most hillside villages in the valley, Dehuri spreads across a broad, flat stretch of terraced fields. It is the local base for the sacred Pundrik Rishi Lake (locally known as Dalogi Sar), reached by a short 30 to 45 minute walk through dense deodar and pine forest. A village Durga Mata temple, a few homestays, and the annual Dehuri Mela fair in May. Two nights is the sweet spot.

Raila Twin Towers (Dhaliara Kothi)

Raila Twin Towers (Dhaliara Kothi)

The Raila Twin Towers, locally called Dhaliara Kothi, are a pair of tall stone and wood tower temples built in the traditional Kath Kuni style in Raila village, Sainj Valley, Kullu district. They sit on a small hillock with clear views across the valley and the terraced fields below. Only priests are allowed inside, so visitors view from outside. About 30 to 45 minutes at the towers, easily combined with the Rupi Raila Waterfall and, if staying overnight, the Bhatkanda Meadows hike. No entry fee, no permits. Reached via Aut on the Delhi-Manali highway, then up from Sainj town.

Raila Village

Raila Village

Raila is a quiet village in the Sainj Valley, Kullu district, known for the Dhaliara Kothi twin towers built in Kath-Kuni stone and timber, the Rupi Raila Waterfall, and the Bhatkanda Meadows with a sunset viewpoint on the Odidhar ridge. Two days is the sweet spot. The village sits within the GHNP buffer zone, and the surrounding deodar and broadleaf forest is in good shape. Quieter than Shangarh, with homestays, terraced orchards, and the pace the whole valley had a few years ago.

Rupi Raila Waterfall

Rupi Raila Waterfall

Rupi Raila Waterfall is a roadside waterfall near Raila village in the Sainj Valley, reached by a 10 minute uphill walk from a signboard on the Sainj to Shangarh road. Best visited as a 30 to 45 minute stop combined with the Raila twin towers on a half day trip from Shangarh or Sainj town. No entry fee, no permit. The water drops over moss covered rocks into a cool pool, and the surrounding GHNP buffer zone forest is well preserved.

Pundrik Rishi Lake

Pundrik Rishi Lake

Pundrik Rishi Lake is not a clear water lake. It is a sacred wetland, roughly 400 metres long, in the upper Sainj Valley of Kullu district, sitting within the GHNP eco zone at around 2,100 metres. Its surface is entirely blanketed by a thick floating carpet of grass and reeds. The standard, most friendly approach for independent travellers is a 30 to 45 minute trek from the Deohari village trailhead through deodar and spruce forest. The lake is sacred to Sage Pundrik Rishi, and strict devta laws govern conduct at the site.

Barshangarh Waterfall

Barshangarh Waterfall

Barshangarh Waterfall is a forest waterfall about 3 km from Shangarh village in the Sainj Valley of Kullu district, Himachal Pradesh. The walk passes through conifer forest, apple orchards, and the hamlets of Goshati and Darari before ending at a waterfall dropping over dark rocks into a pool surrounded by thick green cover. No entry fee, no permit, 2 to 3 hours round trip on foot. The most popular half day outing from Shangarh.

Shangchul Mahadev Temple

Shangchul Mahadev Temple

Shangchul Mahadev Temple is a three tiered shrine of deodar wood and dressed stone, built in the Kath Kuni style of the wooden hill temples of upper Kullu, standing at the edge of the Shangarh Meadow in Sainj Valley at around 2,100 metres. The deity is a local form of Shiva, known across this part of the hills for granting refuge to those rejected by their families or communities, a traditional council backed practice the village has carried for generations. The meadow itself is treated as the deity's open courtyard and protected as sacred ground.

Shangarh Meadows

Shangarh Meadows

Shangarh is a small village in the Sainj Valley of Kullu district, sitting at approximately 2,100 metres (around 6,900 feet) on the GHNP ecozone boundary. The main draw is the Shangarh Meadow, a wide, flat, stone free grassland considered sacred by the locals, with the three tiered Shangchul Mahadev Temple at one corner and pine and deodar forest closing in on all sides. Most travellers come for two or three still nights of the meadow, short forest walks, and a quieter alternative to the Tirthan Valley homestay belt next door.

Shainsher Village

Shainsher Village

Shainsher (also spelled Shanshar or Shenshar) sits at the head of a steep sub valley off the main Sainj Valley road past Neuli, about 14 km from Sainj town. Two landmarks stand close together inside the village. The Manu Rishi Temple, a five storey pagoda built around an ancient sacred deodar tree, widely considered the only five tiered pagoda recorded in Himachal Pradesh. And the Taliara Fort, with stone remains traditionally dated to the 7th century. Reaching it means a steep road of about ten hairpin bends and very limited bus service.

Nahi Village

Nahi Village

Nahi Village, also known as Jhili Neahi or Lower Neahi, is a small settlement on a forest road between the Ropa Forest Complex and Upper Neahi village in the Sainj Valley. It serves as the alternate approach to Pundrik Rishi Lake from the Ropa side and has a homestay known for handmade shawl weaving on traditional looms. Not a standalone destination, but the quietest possible base in this corner of the GHNP buffer zone, with deodar forest on all sides and wide valley views.

Best Things to Do on a Manali to Shangarh Trip

Walk the Meadow

Walk the Meadow

In the morning. In the evening. With no plan. After Manali's noise, this silence is the entire experience.

Visit the Shangchul Mahadev Temple

Visit the Shangchul Mahadev Temple

Quiet, ancient, grounding. The opposite of Manali's tourist temple energy.

Trek to Pundrik Rishi Lake

Trek to Pundrik Rishi Lake

Moderate trek through thick deodar and rhododendron forest into the GHNP buffer. Rewarding.

Hike to Barshangarh Waterfall

Hike to Barshangarh Waterfall

Short and easy forest walk.

Eat at the Homestay

Eat at the Homestay

Rajma chawal, dal, roti, local vegetables. Mountain simple. The food tastes better when the view from the homestay is deodar forest.

Watch the Night Sky

Watch the Night Sky

No light pollution. No phone signal pulling your attention. Just stars. After Manali's neon and traffic, this is the reset.

Combine with Tirthan Valley

Combine with Tirthan Valley

Cross to the other side of Aut for river stays and Jibhi. The natural second leg.

What to know before visiting Manali to Shangarh

Local weather

Spring
21°
Spring
Monsoon
22°12°
Monsoon
Autumn
19°
Autumn
Winter
12°-2°
Winter

General info

Time zone
GMT +05:30
5 hours 30 minutes ahead
Currency
Indian rupee
1USD = 83.00 INR
Official languages
Hindi, Kullvi, English
Best time to visit
MAR – JUN
Pleasant days, bright meadows. Same as Manali minus the crowds.
SEP – NOV
Clear skies, golden light. Best for photography and slow travel.
DEC – FEB
Snow possible. Cold and harder to reach. For prepared travellers.
Recommended trip duration
3 Days
Packages available on Travel Coffee
5

Why People Love Manali to Shangarh

Testimonials

Andre & Angel
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Andre & Angel
German Echecopar
Preeti Sharma
Alain Rebello
Surbhi Sharma
Harsh Kyal

"Travel Coffee truly went above and beyond. Even though we booked from Indonesia without meeting them, we always felt secure — their team was available..."

Andre & Angel

Frequently Asked Questions

About 100 km, roughly 3 to 3.5 hours by road through Kullu and Bhuntar to Aut, then into the Sainj Valley.