Upper Mustang is Nepal’s best-kept secret — a semi-arid desert landscape of eroded red cliffs, cave dwellings, and ancient walled cities that feels more like Tibet than Nepal. Closed to foreigners until 1992, this former kingdom still requires a special restricted-area permit, preserving its mystery and authenticity.
The journey to Lo Manthang, the medieval walled capital, is a trek through time. Wind-carved canyons reveal sky caves that housed Buddhist monks a thousand years ago. Whitewashed monasteries cling to cliff faces. Chortens and mani walls line every trail. The Tibetan culture here is preserved in a way that even Tibet itself cannot match, untouched by modernization.
Lo Manthang, at 3,810m, is a remarkable medieval city still enclosed by its original walls. Inside, four major monasteries hold ancient murals, manuscripts, and Tibetan treasures. The former king’s palace overlooks streets where horse caravans still pass and Tiji festival celebrations erupt in a riot of color and masked dance each May.
For Indian travelers fascinated by Tibetan Buddhism, monastery art, and landscapes that look like another planet, Upper Mustang is the ultimate Nepal experience — remote, exclusive, and profoundly beautiful.