





Tosh Waterfall
A waterfall on the trail above Tosh where seasonal cafes serve hot chai within spray distance of the falls, the valley drops away behind you, and you realise the uphill walk was worth it about two sips in
What makes it special
About 30 to 60 minutes of uphill walking from Tosh Village, the trail opens onto a waterfall that you will hear before you see. The Tosh Nala stream drops maybe 15 to 20 metres down a rock face, fed by snowmelt and high altitude streams, and the spray carries across the path even on windless days. This is the spot on the Kutla hike where everyone pauses. Not because they planned to, but because the combination of falling water, a hot chai, and Tosh shrinking below makes stopping feel obvious.
The walk up from the village is about 1.5 to 2 km through pine forest, with walnut trees lining the lower sections and the Tosh Nala running alongside. Steady uphill, nothing steep. Your legs notice it but your lungs should not complain. Tosh sits at roughly 2,400 metres, and the waterfall is somewhere around 2,500 to 2,550 metres, so the altitude gain is gentle. Proper shoes are smart. Sandals are a mistake, especially near the spray zone where every rock is wet.
What turns this from a nice view into a proper stop is the seasonal cafes. Between roughly May and October, small tea stalls set up within spray distance of the falls. Maggi, chai, chips, biscuits. Trail prices, plastic chairs, sometimes a flat rock as your table. The food is nothing special. The setting is. Eating hot noodles with cold mist hitting your face and the valley dropping away behind you is one of those small Parvati Valley moments that earns its place in your memory without trying.
Think of the waterfall as the halfway marker on the Kutla hike. Everything before this point is a manageable walk through forest. Everything after steepens into a proper climb for another 1.5 to 2 km. If you reached the waterfall comfortably, the rest is doable. If you were already struggling, the second half will test you more, and knowing that here is better than learning it later on a steeper trail.
The flow changes through the year. Snowmelt in May and early June keeps it strong and loud. By late October the cascade thins noticeably. Winter sometimes freezes it partly. During monsoon (July through September), the volume is impressive but the trail turns muddy and slippery in a way that demands real caution. Rocks near the base become greasy. Leeches appear in the forest below. A fall here, with wet rock and no mobile signal, is not something you want to deal with. Stick to dry months if you have a choice.
Honest framing. Nobody plans a Parvati Valley trip around this waterfall. It earns its place as the best thing on the walk between Tosh and Kutla, and that is genuinely enough. If you are hiking to Kutla, you pass right through. If you are spending a day in Tosh and want a short morning walk that goes somewhere worth going, the waterfall makes a satisfying 1.5 to 2 hour round trip on its own. Just do not come all the way from Kasol or Barshaini specifically for this. The walk from Tosh is the right approach.
What is Tosh Waterfall?
A mountain waterfall on the trail from Tosh Village (at roughly 2,400 m) to Kutla, about 1.5 to 2 km of uphill walking from the village. Fed by the Tosh Nala stream. Seasonal cafes set up beside the falls from May through October, serving chai and Maggi within spray distance of the water. Marks the halfway point of the Kutla hike, where the path shifts from a steady walk to steeper climbing.
How much time do I need?
On its own, 1.5 to 2 hours round trip from Tosh including time at the falls. Add 2 to 3 hours if continuing to Kutla. Most people spend 10 to 30 minutes at the waterfall itself.
Can I visit the waterfall without hiking all the way to Kutla?
Yes, and it makes a satisfying short morning hike on its own. Walk up from Tosh (30 to 60 minutes), sit with a chai at the falls, walk back down (20 to 40 minutes). No need to continue to Kutla unless you want to.
Quick facts
Everything you need to know at a glance
At a glance
On the ground
Seasonal weather
Suitable for
How to reach Tosh Waterfall
1 approach route with seasonal access
From Tosh Village (on foot)
Generally April to November. Trail can be muddy in monsoon, snow covered in winter.From the upper edge of Tosh Village, walk uphill past the Jamadagni Rishi Temple. The trail follows the Tosh Nala stream through pine forest with walnut trees in the lower section. The climb is steady but not steep for the first 1.5 to 2 km. The waterfall appears on your left, beside the trail, with seasonal tea stalls nearby. To continue to Kutla, stay on the trail past the waterfall for another 1.5 to 2 km of steeper climbing.
Best time to visit
Season-by-season breakdown to help you plan
Strong flow, dry trail, cafes open. The best window.
Strong waterfall flow from snowmelt. Trail is dry and clear. Cafes operating beside the falls. The best window for a visit. May and June weekends bring more trekkers through on their way to Kutla.
Heavy flow but muddy, slippery trail. Watch your footing.
Heavy waterfall flow but the trail is muddy and slippery. Rocks near the base are especially dangerous. Leeches possible in the forest. Some cafes may close in heavy monsoon.
Clear skies, thinning crowds, good flow through October.
Decent waterfall flow with clear skies. Trail dries out. Thin crowds. October is the best month. By November the flow starts thinning and the cafes begin closing.
Thin flow, possible ice, cafes closed.
Reduced flow. Waterfall may partly freeze. Trail may have snow. Cafes closed. Visit only if you are already in Tosh with proper winter gear.
Things to see & do
2 experiences at Tosh Waterfall
Grab a chai at the waterfall cafes
15 to 30 minutesBetween roughly May and October, small tea stalls appear right next to the falls. Maggi, chai, chips, biscuits. Standard trail pricing, nothing fancy. The draw is where you are sitting, not what you are eating. Cold spray drifts across from the waterfall. Tosh is visible far below. If you are heading on to Kutla, this is the last place to grab food. If the waterfall is your turnaround point, the chai alone makes the uphill walk worthwhile.
Hike from Tosh to the waterfall and back
1.5 to 2 hours round trip, or continue to KutlaStart from the upper edge of Tosh, past the Jamadagni Rishi Temple, and follow the trail along the Tosh Nala. Pine forest and walnut trees line the lower stretch. The path climbs steadily but never gets steep. After about 1.5 to 2 km (30 to 60 minutes depending on your pace), the waterfall appears on your left beside the trail. Spend some time here, then either turn around for an easy downhill return (20 to 40 minutes) or push on toward Kutla, where the trail gets noticeably steeper for the final 1.5 to 2 km.
Know before you visit Tosh Waterfall
Essential information for planning your visit
Nearby attractions
Other places worth visiting nearby
About 1.5 to 2 km downhill (30 to 60 min)The starting point for the walk to the waterfall. A hillside village at 2,400 metres with mountain views, cafes, guesthouses, and the Jamadagni Rishi Temple. About 30 to 60 minutes downhill from the waterfall.
About 1.5 to 2 km uphill (1 to 1.5 hours)A tiny grazing settlement at roughly 2,650 metres with basic homestays and wide mountain views. About 1.5 to 2 km further up the trail past the waterfall. The trail steepens after the waterfall.
About 5 km total (trail to Tosh, then road to Barshaini)The last road head in the upper Parvati Valley. About 3 km downhill from Tosh by road. Transit point for the entire upper valley.
Separate trek from BarshainiA high altitude meadow with natural hot springs. Trek starts from Barshaini, not Tosh. A separate trail from the Kutla route but many travellers combine both in one Parvati Valley trip.
Our Packages with Tosh Waterfall
Curated trips that include a visit to Tosh Waterfall
Planning a trip that includes Tosh Waterfall?
Not sure where to start? Just tell us your dates and what you're looking for, and we'll help you plan a trip that actually fits you.
Frequently Asked Questions
Related guides
- Kasol Itinerary for 3 Days in 2026: Cafés, Chalal, Manikaran & Tosh
- How to Reach Kasol in 2026 from Delhi, Chandigarh, Mumbai & Bangalore
- Kasol Itinerary for 4 Days in 2026: Tosh, Kheerganga, Manikaran and Chalal
- 25 Best Places to Visit in Kasol & Around Parvati Valley in 2026
- Kasol Travel Guide 2026: Best Time, Itinerary, Cost, Places & Local Tips


