Travel Coffee runs group departures and private winter trips to Spiti Valley from December to March, planned and operated by our own team in Himachal. Every winter trip uses the Shimla and Kinnaur route, the only side of Spiti that stays open through the season. You can choose a regular SUV departure or a dedicated 4x4 expedition, from 6 to 10 days. These packages suit travellers who can handle serious cold and long mountain drives, and who want a local team watching the roads and weather for them. Not sure which trip fits? Tell us your dates, group size and comfort preference on WhatsApp and we will help you compare the options. Operated from Himachal. Route decisions come from people who know these roads in winter. Winter-trained drivers. Every departure runs with drivers experienced on the Kinnaur and Spiti stretch, with snow chains carried in season. Weather-aware planning. We track snowfall and road clearance through the trip and adjust the day plan when conditions demand it. Support before and during the trip. One point of contact from booking to return, plus on-ground coordination for check-ins and route updates. Stays we have verified ourselves. Winter-suitable homestays and hotels chosen for warmth and reliability, not just photos. Honest expectations. We tell you upfront what winter takes away: hot water, network, easy plans. No surprises after you book. Winter Spiti Packages at a Glance Winter Spiti packages from Travel Coffee run between 6 and 10 days, always via the Shimla and Kinnaur route, since the Manali side stays closed under snow through the season. All Spiti Valley winter tour packages on this page are operated by our own Himachal team, as group departures or private trips. A typical trip starts from Delhi, climbs gradually through Shimla or Narkanda, Sangla or Kalpa, then Nako and Tabo, and reaches Kaza. Stays are winter-suitable homestays and hotels, with breakfast and dinner included. You can travel in a regular SUV with snow chains, or choose a 4x4 expedition for deeper winter conditions. Both formats include local drivers and on-trip support. Snowfall can change the day's route, and we plan for that rather than pretend otherwise. Season: December to March, with limited early trips possible in November. Typical duration: 6 to 10 days. Main winter route: Delhi, Shimla, Kinnaur (Sangla or Kalpa), Nako, Tabo, Kaza and back. Starting points: Delhi as standard. Joining at Shimla or Chandigarh can usually be arranged on request. Major places covered: Sangla, Chitkul, Kalpa, Nako, Tabo, Dhankar, Kaza, Key, Kibber, Chicham, Langza, Hikkim and Komic. High villages are weather dependent. Vehicle choices: SUV with snow chains, or 4x4 (Jimny, Thar or Scorpio class). Stay type: Verified homestays, guesthouses and hotels with winter heating arrangements. Meal plan: Breakfast and dinner (MAP). Lunch on your own during drives. Trip difficulty: Moderate to demanding. Cold and altitude, not trekking. Chandratal status: Not accessible in winter. The lake road opens only around June. Best suited for: Travellers who want real winter, can manage basic facilities, and accept weather-led changes. Best Winter Spiti Packages for 2026 to 2027 These are our current Winter Spiti packages, ordered by how most travellers choose. Prices are per person starting prices on sharing basis, inclusive of GST, and every trip includes stays, breakfast and dinner, local drivers and on-trip support. Open any itinerary for the full day-by-day plan. Winter Spiti Circuit (9 Days) Route: Delhi, Shimla, Sangla with Chitkul, Nako, Tabo, Dhankar, Kaza (3 nights), Kalpa, back via Shimla. Vehicle: Private SUV with snow chains, 4x4 upgrade available. From: ₹26,999 per person. Three nights in Kaza give this trip breathing room: a full day for Key, Kibber and Chicham, and a separate day for the high villages when roads allow. Our balanced recommendation for most first-time winter travellers. View the complete 9-day itinerary . Core Winter Spiti Trip (6 Days) Route: Delhi, Shimla, Kalpa, Nako and Tabo en route, Kaza, return via Kalpa. Vehicle: Shared SUV on seat basis with snow chains. From: ₹15,999 per person. The shortest sensible winter plan, built for students, solo travellers and tight leave. Drive days are long and sightseeing is compressed, but you still reach Kaza, Key and the high villages when weather cooperates. A 7-day version, the Core Winter Spiti Circuit , adds a night for a gentler pace from ₹17,999. See the 6-day plan . Most Loved 4x4 Winter Spiti Expedition (9 Days) Route: Delhi, Shimla, Chitkul or Sangla, Kalpa, Tabo, Kaza, high villages, return via Kalpa. Vehicle: 4x4 (Jimny, Thar or Scorpio class) with snow chains. From: ₹28,999 per person. Our winter flagship, with emergency oxygen carried as part of expedition protocol and batches from 3 to 20 travellers. The extra traction matters most on fresh snow and the icy climbs around Kaza, which is why we point January and February travellers here first. View the expedition itinerary . Kinnaur Spiti 4x4 Winter Expedition (10 Days) Route: Delhi to Delhi fully by private 4x4: Narkanda, Sangla (2 nights with a Chitkul day), Nako, Tabo, Dhankar, Kaza (3 nights), Kalpa, Shimla. From: ₹45,999 per person. No overnight buses on this one. The Narkanda halt on day one makes the altitude gain the gentlest of all our winter plans, and boutique stays with room heating make it the most comfortable. View the 10-day itinerary . Private Winter Spiti Package Format: Your dates, your vehicle, your pace, usually 6 to 11 days from Delhi, Chandigarh or Shimla. Vehicle: Private SUV or 4x4, sized to your group. Built for families, couples and photographers who want slower mornings and buffer days. Tell us your month, group size and comfort expectations on WhatsApp , and we will build the plan with a clear quote. Which Winter Spiti Package Should You Choose? Five Winter Spiti tour packages, one honest comparison. The compromise line in each option is usually what decides it. Short trip: Core Winter Spiti, 6 days Fast pace, lowest entry price, skips Sangla and Chitkul. Compromise: little buffer, so a single snow day can squeeze sightseeing. Choose it if cost leads and you are fine trading margin for it. Balanced tour: Winter Spiti Circuit, 9 days Full circuit, three nights in Kaza, best value per day of actual Spiti time. Compromise: two overnight Volvo journeys bookend the trip. Choose it if you want the complete experience without expedition pricing. Complete circuit: Kinnaur Spiti 4x4, 10 days Gentlest altitude curve, full Kinnaur coverage, private 4x4 throughout, most comfortable stays. Compromise: the longest leave requirement and the highest budget. Choose it if comfort and coverage lead. 4x4 expedition: Most Loved 4x4, 9 days Strongest traction and the best odds of completing the high-village day in deep winter. Compromise: costs more than the SUV circuit for a similar route. Choose it for January and February travel. Private Winter Spiti package Your own vehicle, dates and pace, with buffer days if you are wise. Compromise: costs more per person than joining a group, especially for two travellers. Choose it for families and photographers. Still unsure? Tell us your dates, budget, group size and comfort expectations, and we will recommend one trip, not a sales pitch for all five. Winter Spiti Fixed Departures and Prices Fixed departures run through the 2026 to 2027 winter season across the packages above. Seats per batch are genuinely limited because very few rooms in Spiti operate in winter, and the Christmas and New Year window books earliest. For the current departure calendar, open any package page above or message us your month on WhatsApp . If a date you want is not listed, ask: we may be able to open a batch or build a private departure. GST: Listed package prices include all applicable taxes, including 5 percent GST. What you see is what you pay for the package itself. Occupancy: Prices are on sharing basis. Single occupancy carries a supplement, confirmed with your quote. Peak dates: Departures overlapping Christmas and New Year may carry a peak surcharge, stated clearly before you book. Weather changes: Heavy snowfall can delay, reroute or extend a trip. Extra nights or transport caused by closures are payable on actuals and are not padded into the package price. Snowfall is not guaranteed. We sell the winter route and the experience, not a snow forecast. Some weeks are white, some are dry and brown. Both are Spiti. What Makes Spiti So Different in Winter? Summer Spiti is a road trip. Winter Spiti is closer to visiting a place while it is genuinely living its own life. The villages go quiet. Most tourists leave by October, so in Kaza you share the lanes with residents, monks and the occasional snow-chasing traveller rather than convoys. The cold desert turns white. Snow settles on the brown ridgelines and the frozen Spiti river, and familiar viewpoints look like a different valley. Monasteries stay open and calm: Tabo, Key and Dhankar receive a handful of visitors a day. Winter life is the experience. Bukhari-warmed kitchens, families stocking supplies, long evenings of conversation. And the cold, dry air makes for sharp daylight and dense star fields at night, which is why photographers keep returning in February. It is also honest work. Winter Spiti asks for tolerance of hard cold, patience with changed plans and comfort with basic facilities. That difficulty is part of why the trip stays with people, and we would rather you know it now than discover it in Kaza. Is a Winter Spiti Trip Right for You? You may enjoy this trip if You are genuinely okay with cold, including nights well below zero indoors until the heating warms the room. Long drive days do not bother you. Most days involve 5 to 9 hours on mountain roads. You can manage bucket baths, or sometimes no bath, when pipelines freeze. You treat a plan as a starting point and can enjoy the day that replaces a snowed-out one. You are fine being partly unreachable, since network is patchy beyond Kalpa. You want fewer people, real winter light and time inside local homes more than comfort. Think carefully before booking if Cold genuinely affects your health or mood, or you have struggled at altitude before. You need reliable internet for work. Winter Spiti cannot promise a single dependable work call. Your leave is rigid. A closure can extend the trip by a day. You expect hotel-grade comfort. Winter stays are warm-hearted but basic. You are booking mainly for guaranteed snowfall photos. Snow is likely in peak winter, never guaranteed. You have heart, lung or blood pressure conditions, or you are pregnant. Altitude and extreme cold add real strain. If any health concern applies to you or someone in your group, please speak to a qualified doctor before booking, and tell us during booking so we can plan around it. We are travel operators, not medical professionals. When Should You Visit Spiti in Winter? Each winter month has its own character. Temperatures below are typical ranges from weather records and our seasons on this route, not promises, and nights routinely feel colder because of wind and altitude. Spiti in November The valley empties out and early snow dusts the higher ridges, though the valley floor often stays brown. Days sit roughly between 2 and 10 degrees in the sun, and Kaza nights drop to around minus 5 to minus 12. Disruption risk is the lowest of the season. Suits travellers who want winter quiet without deep-winter logistics; the trade-off is that you may see little or no snow. A regular SUV circuit works well. Spiti in December Winter settles in properly. Snowfall becomes likely through the month, days sit around minus 2 to 6 degrees, and Kaza nights commonly reach minus 10 to minus 20. Pipelines start freezing and useful light ends by about 5.30 pm. The Christmas and New Year window is the most social stretch of the season and books earliest. Suits groups and first-timers who want festive winter energy; both the SUV circuit and the 4x4 expedition run well. Spiti in January The deepest month, and the hardest on the body. Sunny days hover around minus 5 to 5 degrees, and Kaza nights commonly reach minus 15 to minus 25, with cold spells pushing lower. Snowfall is most likely now, which also means the highest chance of temporary closures and skipped high villages. Suits experienced cold travellers and photographers chasing frozen landscapes. We recommend the 4x4 expedition in January. Spiti in February Similar depth to January, with snow already banked along the roads and days slowly lengthening. Days around minus 4 to 6 degrees, nights commonly minus 12 to minus 22. Late February can be the sweet spot: full white landscapes with marginally friendlier logistics, overlapping the best-known window for snow leopard sighting attempts around Kibber, though sightings are never assured. 4x4 recommended; SUV circuits run with flexibility. Spiti in March The thaw month. Early March usually still looks like full winter, then snow recedes through the weeks. Days climb to roughly 0 to 10 degrees, nights around minus 5 to minus 15, and melting snow can leave slush and black ice in shaded corners. Disruption risk falls steadily and daylight stretches. Suits first-time winter travellers and families who want white views with easier travel; regular SUV circuits are comfortable now. In short: first winter trip, late February or March on the Winter Spiti Circuit. Deepest conditions, January on the 4x4 expedition. Easier travel, November or late March. Photographers, late January to late February for snow, any month for skies. How Do You Reach Spiti During Winter? Every winter trip to Spiti uses one road: the old Hindustan Tibet route, NH 5, from the Shimla side through Kinnaur. The sequence is Delhi or Chandigarh, Shimla or Narkanda, Rampur, a halt at Sangla or Kalpa, then Nako, Tabo and finally Kaza. This side is used in winter for three reasons. It stays open through the season, maintained even after snowfall, with only temporary closures for clearance. Altitude rises gradually over two to three days, from about 2,200 metres at Shimla to 3,650 at Kaza, which is how acclimatisation should work. And there are proper overnight stops with functioning winter stays along the whole route. It is still a serious winter road. Expect drive days of 5 to 9 hours, single-lane stretches, black ice after sunset, possible fresh snowfall, occasional shooting stones near Khab, and short holds while machines clear the road. Local administration can restrict movement after heavy snow, and our drivers follow those calls without argument. We confirm road status with our drivers and local contacts before and during every departure. Can You Reach Kaza from Manali in Winter? No. The Manali to Kaza road over Kunzum Pass closes with the first heavy snow, usually by late October or early November, and reopens only around late May or June after clearance by the Border Roads Organisation. The Atal Tunnel keeps Manali connected to Lahaul, but the stretch beyond Gramphu stays buried. No genuine winter package, from any operator, enters Spiti from Manali. If a plan claims to, question it. For live conditions on that side, see our Manali to Kaza road status guide . Can You Visit Chandratal in Winter? No. Chandratal sits off the Kunzum side of the valley, and its approach road closes with the pass. The lake is normally inaccessible from around October to June, the campsites shut, and the area snowbound and remote. Winter itineraries do not include Chandratal, ours included. If the lake is essential for you, plan a summer trip from our main Spiti Valley tour packages instead. Winter Spiti Itineraries for Different Trip Durations 6-Day Winter Spiti Itinerary Delhi to Shimla overnight, then Shimla to Kalpa. Day three pushes through Nako and Tabo to Kaza. Day four covers Key, Kibber and Chicham, day five attempts the high villages before turning back to Kalpa, and day six returns via Shimla to an overnight Volvo. Expect 6 to 9 hours of driving on the main days. Main compromise: no buffer, so a snow day directly costs sightseeing. View the complete itinerary . 7-Day Winter Spiti Itinerary The 6-day plan with one extra night, which changes the feel more than it sounds. The added day splits the Kaza sightseeing across two calmer days, or absorbs a slow road without cutting anything. View the complete itinerary . 9-Day Winter Spiti Itinerary Delhi to Shimla overnight, Shimla to Sangla, a full Chitkul and Baspa Valley day, then Nako. Day five moves through Tabo and Dhankar to Kaza for three nights: one day for Key, Kibber and Chicham, one for Langza, Hikkim and Komic when roads permit. Return via Kalpa, then Shimla and the overnight Volvo. Drive days run 5 to 9 hours with genuine rest between them. Main compromise: two overnight bus journeys. View the complete itinerary . 10-Day Kinnaur and Spiti Winter Itinerary The full circuit by private 4x4, no overnight buses. Day one drives Delhi to Narkanda for the first acclimatisation halt, then Sangla for two nights with a Chitkul day, Nako, and the Tabo and Dhankar run into Kaza for three nights, followed by Kalpa and a Shimla night before the drive back. Daily driving stays in the 4 to 9 hour band with the gentlest altitude curve we offer. Main compromise: the longest leave requirement and the highest price. View the complete itinerary . What Is Winter in Spiti Actually Like? Read this section slowly. It is the most useful thing on this page. The cold is the headline. Daytime sun feels pleasant, then the temperature falls off a cliff at dusk. Nights in Kaza routinely sit between minus 15 and minus 25 in peak winter, and wind chill makes exposed skin ache within minutes. Water pipelines freeze. Most stays supply water in buckets, heated on request. Bathing becomes an every-second-or-third-day event, and most travellers stop minding by day three. Heating is local, not central. Rooms warm up with bukharis or electric heaters where power allows, and some properties charge separately for heater usage, which we flag before your trip. The room is warm while the source burns, cold by morning, and heavy quilts do the overnight work. Electricity comes and goes. Snowfall regularly interrupts supply for hours, occasionally longer. Charge devices whenever power is on and carry a power bank. Network is thin. BSNL and Jio work best in Kaza and generally not in smaller villages, while Airtel is weaker on this route. Treat the trip as offline and let people at home know. Food is home-cooked and warm: dal, rice, sabzi, rotis, thukpa, momos when you are lucky. Many Kaza cafes shut for winter, so lunch on drive days is simple dhaba fare or packed food. Cash matters. ATMs beyond Reckong Peo are unreliable and UPI dies with the network. Carry more cash than feels necessary, in small notes. Days are short, with useful light from roughly 8 am to 5.30 pm in midwinter, so sightseeing compresses and evenings are long. And plans move: after fresh snowfall, mornings can start with waiting for the road to clear or the all-clear from the administration. Sometimes a village drops off the day. Sometimes an unplanned stop becomes the best memory of the trip. None of this is hardship for drama. It is simply how a high-altitude cold desert works in January, and travelling through it with warm clothes, a flexible mind and a good local team is the whole point. How We Plan a More Prepared Winter Spiti Trip No honest operator calls winter Spiti risk-free. What we can do is stack preparation in your favour. Gradual routing. Every itinerary climbs over two to three days via Kinnaur before Kaza, the single most important acclimatisation measure on the trip. First days stay light: hydration, no alcohol on arrival days, early nights, and a clear briefing on recognising when a headache is more than a headache. Drivers and vehicles chosen for winter. Local drivers experienced on this exact route in snow, vehicles fitted with snow chains in season and checked before departure. Weather and road checks. Forecasts, clearance updates and daily route decisions are part of the operating routine, not an emergency response, and every itinerary has fallback halts so a closure never means the roadside. First aid and oxygen. Vehicles carry a basic first aid kit, and emergency oxygen is available on our winter departures as part of expedition protocol. Oxygen is a stabilising measure while we act, not a treatment, and never a substitute for descent or professional medical care. When symptoms appear. Persistent headache, breathlessness at rest, vomiting or confusion at altitude are treated seriously: rest, assessment, and if symptoms continue, descent to lower altitude and the nearest medical facility. Kaza has a civil hospital, and definitive care means driving down, one more reason our route always keeps a way down open. Extra-night situations. If heavy snowfall holds the group, we arrange the added night and keep everyone informed, with costs on actuals kept as low as we honestly can. Two requests from our side. Disclose any medical condition, medication or past altitude trouble when booking, confidentially. And if you have heart, lung or blood pressure concerns, are pregnant, or are travelling with young children or elders, please take a doctor's opinion before you book. Do You Really Need a 4x4 for Winter Spiti? Short answer: not always. This choice decides a fair chunk of your budget, so here is the honest version. Regular SUV or Tempo Traveller Two-wheel drive with snow chains fitted when needed. Handles the winter route fine in normal conditions, since the road is maintained, and keeps circuit prices accessible. Strongest fit for November, December and March. Limitation: after fresh snowfall or on hard ice, chains help but progress slows, and the driver may wait longer for clearance. Dedicated 4x4 Vehicle Four-wheel drive plus chains, in small convoys of 3 to 4 travellers per vehicle. Meaningfully better on fresh snow, icy climbs and slush, and the strongest setup for the high-village loop and post-snowfall mornings in January and February. Costs more per seat, and part of the joy is the driving itself. The most important sentence in this section: a 4x4 can improve traction and vehicle control, but it cannot make a closed or unsafe road accessible. When the administration halts traffic, everyone waits, Jimny included. Anyone selling a 4x4 as a guarantee of access is selling wrong. If the expedition format is your answer, our Most Loved 4x4 Winter Spiti Expedition is built exactly for this, and the 10-day Kinnaur Spiti 4x4 Winter Expedition extends it with full Kinnaur coverage. Where Will You Stay During a Winter Spiti Tour? Very few properties in Spiti stay open in winter, and the ones that do are chosen for warmth and reliability rather than star ratings. Here is the honest picture, stop by stop. Shimla or Narkanda Regular hotels, the most conventional night of the trip. Rooms are properly heated or carry heaters, hot water is generally available, and electricity is dependable. This is your last night of normal. Sangla or Kalpa Small hotels and guesthouses that operate through winter. Heaters or bukharis warm the rooms in the evening, hot water usually comes on request, sometimes in buckets after hard freezes, and power can flicker during snowfall. These two stops often serve the best food of the route. Nako or Tabo Basic guesthouses and homestays in genuinely cold villages. Bukhari or heater based warmth, bucket hot water, more frequent power interruptions, simple home-cooked meals. The most rustic night of the trip, and often the most memorable kitchen conversations. Kaza Winter-operational homestays and guesthouses, since most hotels shut for the season. Rooms carry heaters or bukharis, some properties charge separately for heater usage, hot water is bucket-based once pipelines freeze, and power interruptions after snowfall are normal. Breakfast and dinner at the stay, with a handful of cafes open in the market by day. We do not promise continuous hot water, central heating or uninterrupted electricity anywhere on this route in winter, because nobody can honestly promise that. What we do promise is properties we have verified, warm bedding with extra blankets, and hosts who know how to keep guests comfortable at minus 20. What Food Can You Expect? Breakfast and dinner are included through the trip, cooked at the stays: parathas, eggs, poha or porridge in the morning, and dal, rice, seasonal sabzi, rotis, thukpa and momos at night. Vegetarian food is available everywhere and is often the winter default, while non-vegetarian options are limited and irregular. Lunch is on your own during drive days, at roadside dhabas or open cafes, so we plan sensible stops and suggest carrying snacks. Special dietary requests can be passed to hosts in advance, and we will tell you honestly what a village kitchen can and cannot do. It is honest mountain food made in home kitchens: warm, fresh and plentiful. It is not restaurant dining, and nobody misses that by night two. How Much Does a Winter Spiti Package Cost? Current group departures start at ₹15,999 per person for the 6-day trip, ₹17,999 for 7 days, ₹26,999 for the 9-day SUV circuit, ₹28,999 for the 9-day 4x4 expedition and ₹45,999 for the 10-day Kinnaur and Spiti 4x4 trip. Private trips are quoted to your group size, vehicle and dates. All listed prices include GST. What moves the number: duration, group versus private travel, SUV versus 4x4, number of travellers and room occupancy, stay category, peak festive dates, and any customisation such as buffer days. What is usually included Accommodation as per itinerary in winter-verified stays. Breakfast and dinner daily. Volvo transfers from Delhi where listed. SUV or 4x4 travel in the mountains with an experienced winter driver and snow chains. Fuel, tolls, parking and driver allowances. Permit and green fee assistance. Basic first aid, with emergency oxygen as per trip protocol. On-trip coordination and support. Taxes including GST. What is usually not included Flights or trains to and from Delhi. Lunches, snacks, beverages and personal expenses. Monastery entry fees, camera fees and donations. Heater usage where a property charges for it. Travel insurance, which we recommend for winter trips. Anything not listed in the package inclusions. Weather-related additional costs Extra nights, meals or alternate transport forced by road closures, snowfall or administration restrictions are payable on actuals. They are not built into the package price because they may never occur, and pre-charging everyone for them would be unfair. Full terms sit in our cancellation policy and payment policy . Who Can Join a Winter Spiti Tour? Solo travellers: a natural fit. Winter groups are largely built of solo travellers and pairs, and they bond fast over shared bukharis. Book on sharing basis to keep costs sane. Solo women travellers: many of our winter guests are women travelling alone, and the fixed departure format exists precisely so nobody is actually travelling alone: verified stays, known drivers, a coordinator on call and a group around you. Couples: quietly romantic in a frostbitten sort of way. Group circuits work well, and private trips add slower mornings. Agree on the cold tolerance question before booking, not in Kaza. Groups of friends: the classic format. Four to six fills an SUV; larger groups can take a private batch. Build one buffer day if anyone has a rigid return date. Families: possible with the right pacing. We suggest the 10-day plan or a private trip, the Narkanda-first altitude curve, and rooms confirmed with heating. Children: we do not recommend deep-winter Spiti for young children. Extreme cold, altitude and distant medical care are a hard combination for small bodies. Older kids who travel well can consider a March private trip, after a paediatrician's opinion. Senior travellers: case by case, honestly. Fit, altitude-experienced seniors have done this route well, usually on private trips with buffer days in the gentler months. Start with a doctor's assessment, and share complete health details with us. First-time Himalayan travellers: yes, with the right expectations. The Kinnaur-side climb is gradual, which helps. Choose the 9 or 10 day plan over the 6-day sprint, and prepare for cold rather than hoping about it. Photographers: winter is your season. Clear skies, low sun angles, empty frames and, in late winter, snow leopard territory around Kibber. Batteries die fast in the cold, so carry spares against your body. Self-drivers: we would rather lose the booking than pretend. Winter self-driving here demands ice experience, a capable vehicle, chains you can fit yourself and comfort with being stuck. If that is not clearly you, take a driver who does this every week. What Should You Pack for Winter Spiti? Pack for minus 20 nights, not for the pleasant afternoon photos. Layering beats one heroic jacket. Clothing layers: two or three thermal base sets, fleece or woollen mid layers, one insulated down or synthetic jacket, and a windproof, water-resistant outer shell. Warm track pants for evenings. Footwear: water-resistant, high-ankle winter shoes with grippy soles for ice, four to five pairs of warm socks plus a thick pair for sleeping, and slippers for indoors. Cold protection: insulated gloves (a thin liner pair plus a warm outer pair), a woollen cap covering the ears, a neck gaiter, and a balaclava for wind. Skin and eyes: UV-protective sunglasses for snow glare, high SPF sunscreen, thick moisturiser and lip balm. Cold, dry air punishes skin faster than sun does. Health: your regular prescribed medicines in sufficient quantity, plus basics like paracetamol and ORS. Consult your doctor about altitude preparation before the trip; we do not recommend specific prescription medicines, and neither should a travel website. Electronics: a 10,000 mAh or larger power bank, cables, a torch or headlamp, and spare camera batteries kept warm in an inner pocket. Documents and cash: valid government photo ID for checkpost registration (foreign nationals: passport, visa and Inner Line Permit documents), and more cash than you think, in small denominations. Day essentials: a small day bag, an insulated water bottle so it does not freeze, dry snacks and energy bars for delays, and a written card with emergency contacts, blood group and your trip coordinator's number kept in your jacket, not just your phone. Why Plan Your Winter Spiti Trip with Travel Coffee? We would rather show evidence than adjectives. We are from here. Travel Coffee is operated from Himachal Pradesh, with our operations team in the state and ground presence on the routes we sell. Winter route calls are made by people who drive these roads, not a call centre reading a screen. Support is a person, not a ticket. One coordinator handles your trip from enquiry to return, and guests regularly name our team members in reviews, which we take as the real KPI. We watch the weather so you do not have to. Forecast tracking, road status checks and daily route decisions are part of the operating routine on every winter departure. Stays are verified by us. Winter properties are chosen after our own checks for heating, bedding, food and reliability. Pricing is transparent. Package prices include GST, the exclusions list above is the honest one, and weather extras are on actuals, never padded. Travellers say it better. Our winter Spiti trips hold a 4.7 rating across traveller reviews aggregated from Google, TripAdvisor and direct feedback. Read them unfiltered on our reviews page . We travel responsibly. Local stays, local drivers, local kitchens. The money from these trips winters in the valley, which is the least a travel company owes the place it sells. A Few Things Winter Spiti Asks from Every Traveller Winter is when Spiti is most itself, and most fragile. A few requests from us and, more importantly, from the people hosting you. You are staying in homes, not hotels. Treat kitchens, prayer rooms and family spaces with the respect you would want in your own house, and follow the host's lead on customs. In monasteries, remove shoes where indicated, ask before photographing, walk clockwise and keep voices down. Water is melted, carried and heated by hand in winter. Use it like the effort it represents. Bring back what you bring in: wrappers, bottles and packaging return with you, because Spiti has nowhere to put our plastic. Never pressure a driver. If your driver says a stretch waits until tomorrow, that judgement is protecting you, and the same respect goes for road closures. Give wildlife room, and if you are lucky enough to see blue sheep, foxes or a snow leopard, distance and silence are the only correct responses. Flying a drone? Check current rules first. This is a border district and restrictions apply in many areas, so ask us or local authorities before launching anything. Choose local, always: homestay dinners, village-run cafes, local guides. Winter income is scarce here, and your trip can be part of the solution. And keep evenings low, because sound carries across a frozen valley and villages sleep early. None of this is difficult. It is mostly the manners of a good guest, applied at 3,600 metres. Ready to Plan Your Winter Spiti Trip? By now you know what winter Spiti gives and what it asks. If that trade sounds right, pick a fixed departure for the simplest path: set dates, a group around you and everything arranged. Or ask for a private trip if you want your own vehicle, your own pace and buffer days built in. Still weighing regular SUV against 4x4, or December against February? That is a five-minute conversation with our team, and we would genuinely rather talk you into the right trip than the expensive one. We are a local company from Himachal. Winter Spiti is not a product line for us, it is our home ground in its hardest, most honest season. We Brew Core Memories, Not Coffee. Share your travel month, starting city, number of travellers and preferred trip style on WhatsApp , and the team will help you shortlist the most suitable option.
Generally included and normally accessible all winter. Expect apple orchards under snow and the Kinnaur Kailash range in clear light. Main limitation: icy village lanes and occasional short closures on the approach after snowfall. Planned stop on most itineraries.
Generally included on the 9 and 10 day trips and normally accessible. A deep river valley that holds snow beautifully. Main limitation: the Karcham to Sangla road can hold ice in shaded sections. Planned stop where listed.
Planned when road conditions permit. The last village on the old India Tibet road often becomes the snowiest point of the whole trip. Main limitation: the final stretch from Sangla closes temporarily after heavy snowfall. Weather-dependent.
Generally included and normally accessible, either as a halt or a stop. The village lake freezes solid in peak winter. Main limitation: hard cold and very basic facilities. Planned stop.
Generally included and normally accessible. The thousand-year-old monastery is the cultural anchor of the route, and winter visits are wonderfully quiet. Main limitation: extremely cold nights if staying over. Planned stop.
Planned when road conditions permit. The cliff-side monastery and fort are usually reachable, with the short climb icier than it looks. Main limitation: the spur road after fresh snow. Largely dependable, still weather-dependent.
Generally included, normally accessible, and your winter base, with two to three nights here on our trips. Main limitation: frozen pipelines, patchy network and limited open cafes. Planned hub of every itinerary.
Generally included and normally accessible from Kaza, one of the most reliable winter sights. Main limitation: short holds while the road is cleared after snowfall. Planned.
Planned when road conditions permit and usually achievable. In late winter this area is the focus of snow leopard tracking attempts. Main limitation: fresh snow on the climb from Key. Weather-dependent after storms, sightings never assured.
Planned when road conditions permit. Asia's highest suspension bridge, usually combined with Kibber. Main limitation: the same climb, plus strong wind chill at the bridge. Weather-dependent.
Weather-dependent. The Buddha statue above a white valley is a winter highlight when the road opens. Main limitation: the high-village loop above Kaza is among the first to close and last to clear. Attempted on the dedicated sightseeing day.
Weather-dependent, same loop as Langza. Sending a postcard from the world's highest post office depends on both the road and the counter being open that day. Main limitation: road status plus post office hours. Attempted, not assured.
Weather-dependent and the most conditional of the three high villages, sitting around 4,600 metres. Main limitation: snow depth on the top section of the loop. Highly conditional in deep winter.
Normally not included in winter itineraries. The valley receives heavy snow and access beyond the early villages is highly conditional. Main limitation: road closure and avalanche-prone terrain. Considered only on private trips when conditions clearly allow.
Normally inaccessible during core winter. The approach closes with Kunzum Pass around October and reopens only around June. Main limitation: the road simply does not exist under snow. Not included in any winter package.
The NH 5 corridor from Shimla to Kaza is an experience in itself in winter: snow cuttings, frozen waterfalls, the Sutlej gorge and the Ka loops. Long days in the vehicle become part of the trip rather than the price of it.
Winter returns the monasteries to themselves. A handful of visitors a day, prayer halls in use, butter tea offered in quiet kitchens. Tabo's thousand-year-old complex under snow is the cultural high point of the season.
Langza, Hikkim and Komic sit above 4,200 metres and turn fully white in peak winter. The loop is weather-dependent and among the first roads to close after snowfall, which is exactly why completing it feels like an achievement.
The world's highest post office keeps working through winter, road and counter permitting. Writing a card to yourself from a snowbound village at 4,400 metres is a small ritual most travellers refuse to skip.
Winter evenings happen in the kitchen: families around the stove, thukpa on the boil, stories moving slowly. This is the part of the trip people talk about longest, and it only exists in this season.
Look for Snow Leopards Around Kibber
Late winter around Kibber and the Chicham gorge is the best-known window for snow leopard sighting attempts, as the cats follow blue sheep to lower slopes. Go with patience and a local spotter, and treat any sighting as luck, never a promise.
Cold, dry air gives winter Spiti its sharp light and dense star fields. Frozen river bends, prayer flags against snow, and long exposures from a homestay terrace reward anyone who keeps spare batteries warm in an inner pocket.
Stretches of the Spiti river freeze over in peak winter, and short walks along the banks near Kaza show the valley at its stillest. Stay off the ice itself and follow your driver's judgement on where it is safe to stop.
Deepest snow and true White Spiti conditions. Coldest nights and the highest weather uncertainty. Best experienced on a 4x4 expedition.
Late February to March
White landscapes with longer days and steadier roads. Our recommendation for first-time winter travellers.
November
Quiet villages and milder cold, with little or no snow on the valley floor. The easiest logistics of the season.
Recommended trip duration
9 Days
Packages available on Travel Coffee
4
Why People Love Winter Spiti
FANBOOK
Testimonials
"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 Winter Spiti Packages
Yes. Spiti stays inhabited and reachable all winter through the Shimla and Kinnaur side, which is maintained through the season. Kaza, Tabo and the main villages function through the cold months, with reduced facilities. Short closures happen after heavy snowfall while machines clear the road, which is why winter itineraries stay flexible.
Reviews
Real experiences shared by Travel Coffee travellers.
4.7
60 traveller reviews
Based on Google, TripAdvisor and direct Travel Coffee reviews.
Guest Moments ✨
Real photos and videos shared by travellers from recent trips.
I recently completed the Spiti Valley full circuit with Travel Coffee along with two friends, and overall, it was a mixed experience of incredible highs and frustrating logistical lows. On the positive side, we successfully covered almost …
Had an absolutely incredible trip exploring Manali, Solang, Sethan, Khokhsar, Sissu, and Darcha, all the way up to Shinkula Pass and Shinkula Top, thanks to Travel Coffee! A huge shoutout to Preeti Jasyal, who helped us a lot throughout the process. She is an amazing person and went above and beyond to help us create the perfect booking. The entire service was seamless and highly effective, and the hotels she selected for us were absolutely amazing with great comfort and views. Driving through those massive mountain terrains can be daunting, but their flawless coordination made the entire journey stress-free. If you're planning a trip to Leh, Ladakh, Spiti, or any of these mountain regions, Travel Coffee is the way to go!
I, being a senior citizen travelled solo with Travel Coffee for Spiti Valley and Chandratal Lake for 8N/9D. It was an amazing trip, well organised with decent hotels. Vanshika from Travel Coffee supported me, took great care of me till the very end. I enjoyed a lot and am looking forward to join any upcoming trips in future
Our Delhi to Kaza round-trip with Travel Coffee was incredible! Huge thanks to Manju ma'am (Manju Mehta) for her flawless management and organization throughout. Special gratitude to our driver, Negi bhai (Prakash Negi), whose expert driving skills kept us completely safe on the challenging Spiti roads. Highly recommend them for a seamless, unforgettable adventure!
We had an amazing experience on our Spiti Valley trip organised by Travel Coffee. Everything was well organized, from the itinerary and accommodations to transportation. The entire journey was smooth and hassle-free, allowing us to truly enjoy the breathtaking beauty of Spiti. A special thanks to Preeti Jaysal and the team for their constant support before and during the trip. They were always available to help and ensured that everything went as planned. Our driver was experienced, friendly, and made us feel safe on the challenging mountain roads. We made unforgettable memories, visited stunning places, and had an incredible overall experience. I would definitely recommend them to anyone planning a Spiti trip. Thank you for making our journey so special!
We did a spiti bike trip with travel coffee this early June. We had a very new experience this time as we travelled with travel coffee for the first time. We booked 7 bikes, a Bolero Camper to travel as backup vehicle …