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Leh Ladakh Road Trip Guide: Leh to Manali Route, Permits, and Tips

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Leh Ladakh road trip is the journey almost every Indian rider and driver puts on their list, and for good reason: the Manali-Leh Highway climbs across four passes above 15,000 feet, crosses a high-altitude desert that looks like nowhere else in the country, and rewards you with landscapes that make every ordinary highway feel flat afterwards. But it is also one of the few road trips in India where poor planning does not just spoil the holiday — it can put your health at real risk. Altitude, fuel gaps of 345 km, and roads that only open for a few months a year mean this trip demands preparation, not improvisation.

This guide gives you the full 2026 picture: when the route actually opens, the now-simplified permit system, the stage-by-stage Leh to Manali route, where the fuel and overnight halts are, and how to acclimatise so that Acute Mountain Sickness does not end your trip on day two. The single biggest change for 2026 is on permits — the old Inner Line Permit has been scrapped for Indian travellers and replaced by an online Environmental Development Fee. Get the timing, the permits and the acclimatisation right, and the rest of a Leh Ladakh road trip is simply about enjoying the ride.

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Note: Sourcing note: Route, fuel and permit details here are compiled from Border Roads Organisation (BRO) season updates, the Ladakh UT administration permit portal and recent traveller reports current to early 2026. Himalayan roads change with weather, snowfall and landslides, so treat every date and distance as a planning guide, not a guarantee. Always confirm live road status within 48 hours of travel and re-check permit rules on the official portal before you leave.
📌 Key Takeaways
  • The Manali-Leh Highway typically opens around mid-to-late May and closes by late October or early November, set by BRO snow clearance. Indian travellers no longer need an Inner Line Permit — you now pay an online Environmental Development Fee (₹400 + ₹20/day) plus a small Red Cross fee. The route has one fuel gap of roughly 345 km between Tandi and Karu, so you must fill up fully and carry reserve fuel. Never sleep at Sarchu on the way up — its altitude (around 14,000 ft) causes severe AMS; halt at Keylong or Jispa instead. A two-day drive each way plus two rest days in Leh is the minimum sensible plan; 7–10 days total is ideal. Acclimatisation is non-negotiable: rest 48 hours in Leh before going higher, hydrate, and avoid alcohol.

When to Plan Your Leh Ladakh Road Trip in 2026

Timing controls everything on a Leh Ladakh road trip, because the high passes are simply impassable for more than half the year. The Manali-Leh Highway closed for all vehicles on 20 November 2025, and based on the pattern of recent years, BRO snow clearance points to a reopening around 15–25 May 2026 — though heavy winter snow can push that by a week or two. The road then stays open until roughly late October or early November before winter shuts it again.

The table below summarises the season month by month so you can match your dates to the experience you want. Early season gives you dramatic snow walls but rougher roads and water crossings; the peak months offer the best infrastructure; and September is the connoisseur’s choice for clear light and thinner crowds.

PeriodManali-Leh HighwayWhat to expect
Nov–AprClosedFly into Leh only; passes under snow
Mid-May–early JuneJust openedSnow walls, water crossings, rough patches; bikes sometimes restricted early
July–AugFully openBest infrastructure; some monsoon landslide risk on the Manali side
SeptemberOpenClear skies, stable weather, fewer crowds — the sweet spot
OctoberClosing windowCold but quiet; road can shut on short notice

If this is your first Leh Ladakh road trip, aim for late August or September. The roads are at their best, water crossings have calmed down, and the weather is stable. Avoid the first fortnight after opening unless you are an experienced rider comfortable with snow, slush and unpredictable conditions near Baralacha La.

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Warning: Do not rely on road-status information that is more than 48 hours old during the early season. A single fresh snowfall can re-close a pass within hours. Confirm current status with Manali taxi operators, BRO advisories, or the district administration pages for Lahaul-Spiti and Leh before you commit to a departure date.

Leh to Manali Route: Stage by Stage

The Leh to Manali route — or Manali to Leh, depending on your direction — runs roughly 430 km via the Atal Tunnel and crosses four high passes: Baralacha La (around 16,000 ft), Nakee La, Lachulung La (around 16,600 ft) and Tanglang La (around 17,500 ft). Since the Atal Tunnel opened, you no longer need to grind over Rohtang Pass; the tunnel drops you into Lahaul in about two hours from Manali, bypassing the worst of the old road. Most travellers break the Leh to Manali route over two days, which is both safer for acclimatisation and far more enjoyable than a brutal 14–16 hour single push.

Here is the route broken into its key stages, with the realistic overnight halts marked. The golden rule of the Leh to Manali route is to sleep low on the first night — which is why Keylong and Jispa, not Sarchu, are the right choice heading north.

StageApprox. distanceAltitude / notes
Manali → Keylong/Jispa (via Atal Tunnel)~115 kmKeylong ~3,100 m, Jispa ~3,200 m — best night-one halt
Jispa → Baralacha La → Sarchu~90 kmSarchu ~4,300 m — do NOT sleep here on the way up
Sarchu → Gata Loops → Pang~80 kmThe famous 21 hairpin Gata Loops; Nakee La and Lachulung La
Pang → Tanglang La → Leh~120 kmTanglang La ~17,500 ft; smooth tarmac descent into Leh

One critical point on the Leh to Manali route applies only when heading towards Ladakh: Indian nationals need no special permit for the highway itself, and you do not need any permit at all when travelling from the Leh side down to Manali. If you choose the old Rohtang Pass road instead of the Atal Tunnel, you will need a separate Rohtang permit booked online — but the tunnel makes that unnecessary for almost everyone.

Fuel on the Manali Leh Highway

Fuel is the logistics issue that catches out the most travellers on the Manali Leh Highway. After Manali, the last reliable petrol pump is at Tandi, about 110 km in (Keylong has had a pump since 2021 as a backup). The next pump is at Karu, roughly 30 km before Leh — a gap of around 345 km with no official fuel. You must fill your tank completely at Tandi and carry reserve fuel, especially on a motorcycle.

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Tip: Carry your reserve fuel in sturdy PET cold-drink bottles rather than metal jerry cans — experienced riders report that jerry cans develop leaks on the rough, vibrating sections of the Manali Leh Highway. Filter any fuel you buy informally at Sarchu or Pang through a cloth, as quality there is unreliable.

Beyond fuel, facilities on the Manali Leh Highway are sparse: hotels at Keylong and Jispa, tented camps at Sarchu and Pang, ATMs only at Keylong, and limited medical help at Sissu, Keylong and army camps in emergencies. Mobile network is mostly dead between Jispa and Upshi, so download offline maps and tell someone your plan before you lose signal. If you are choosing a machine for this terrain, our guide to the best bikes for Himalayan touring is worth a read before you book a rental.

Ladakh Permit 2026: What Has Changed

The Ladakh permit 2026 situation is simpler than the old guides suggest, because the system was overhauled. For Indian citizens, the Inner Line Permit (ILP) has been abolished — you no longer apply for an ILP at all. In its place is a mandatory online Environmental Development Fee (EDF): currently ₹400 per person as a one-time environment fee, plus ₹20 per person per day, plus a small ₹10 per day Red Cross contribution. You register and pay online before arrival and carry the printed receipt, which is what gets checked at the restricted-area checkpoints.

This Ladakh permit 2026 fee applies even if you only stay around Leh town. Foreign nationals still follow a separate Protected Area Permit process. You do not need any permit to visit Leh town itself or nearby sights like Thiksey and Hemis monasteries, Lamayuru or Magnetic Hill — the fee-based clearance is for the restricted border zones such as Nubra Valley, Pangong Tso, Tso Moriri and Hanle.

Item (Indian travellers, 2026)Detail
Inner Line Permit (ILP)Abolished — no longer required
Environment fee (one-time)₹400 per person
Wildlife / daily fee₹20 per person per day
Red Cross fee₹10 per person per day
Where to applyOfficial Ladakh administration portal, online before arrival
Zones needing the fee receiptNubra, Pangong, Tso Moriri, Hanle, Khardung La and other border areas

A practical note many travellers miss: some readings of the rules tie restricted-zone access to a mandatory acclimatisation period in Leh before you head higher. Whether or not it is strictly enforced as paperwork, the underlying advice — settle in Leh first, then go to the high lakes — is exactly what your body needs anyway. Print at least two copies of your fee receipt, as checkpoints keep one.

Apply for your Environmental Development Fee online a few days before you fly or drive in, then carry several printed copies plus a digital copy on your phone. Having the paperwork sorted in advance means you can leave for Nubra or Pangong the morning after your acclimatisation rest, without losing half a day chasing permits in Leh.

AMS Prevention on a Ladakh Trip

Acute Mountain Sickness is the single biggest health risk on any Leh Ladakh road trip, and AMS prevention deserves more attention than the route map. Leh sits at about 3,500 m, and the high lakes and passes go well beyond that. As altitude rises, the air thins and each breath delivers less oxygen; if you climb faster than your body can adapt, AMS sets in. It does not care how fit you are — even athletes get hit. The only real protection is acclimatisation: giving your body time to adjust.

The core AMS prevention protocol is straightforward. Spend a minimum of 48 hours in Leh before going higher, with near-complete rest on day one and only light activity on day two. Follow the “climb high, sleep low” principle, drink four to five litres of water a day, avoid alcohol entirely for the first few days, and do not push to a higher sleeping altitude when you already have symptoms. Mild headache, nausea and breathlessness are common; worsening symptoms mean you descend, not continue.

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Warning: If symptoms become severe — a relentless headache that painkillers do not touch, confusion, breathlessness at rest, or a persistent cough — descend immediately and seek medical help. High-altitude pulmonary or cerebral oedema is a medical emergency, and the only reliable treatment is losing altitude fast. Do not “wait and see” at altitude overnight.

Building AMS prevention into your route

Good AMS prevention is mostly about route design. This is exactly why you sleep at Keylong or Jispa rather than Sarchu on the drive up from Manali — Sarchu is higher than Leh itself, and a night there before your body has adapted is a recipe for a miserable, dangerous evening. If you fly into Leh instead of driving up, the rule is even stricter: do nothing strenuous for the first 48 hours, because you have skipped all the gradual altitude gain a road trip provides.

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Tip: Talk to your doctor before the trip about whether a preventive medication such as acetazolamide is appropriate for you, and carry a basic high-altitude kit. Start light cardio two to three weeks before departure — it will not prevent AMS, but better lung capacity makes the adjustment more comfortable. Travellers with heart or lung conditions, and pregnant women, should get medical clearance first.

Because medical facilities en route are minimal, sensible travellers also sort out cover before leaving home. It is worth checking whether domestic travel insurance is worth it for a high-altitude trip, since standard policies sometimes exclude adventure activities above certain altitudes.

How to Get to Ladakh and Choose Your Mode

There are three broad ways to do a Leh Ladakh road trip, and your choice shapes both cost and acclimatisation. Driving or riding up the Manali Leh Highway gives you the gradual altitude gain that helps your body adapt, plus the full road-trip experience. Flying into Leh from Delhi, Mumbai or Srinagar is the only option from November to April and saves days, but it dumps you straight at 3,500 m — so the 48-hour rest becomes absolutely mandatory. The third option is the Srinagar-Leh Highway, which usually opens earlier (around late March to April) and offers a gentler altitude profile, with Kashmir thrown in.

Cost varies widely by mode. Based on recent traveller reports, a budget HRTC bus run can cost roughly ₹1,500–2,500 per person including food and basic stays; a shared taxi about ₹2,000–2,500 per person; self-drive around ₹5,000–8,000 per person in fuel, food and accommodation; and a private taxi for the vehicle ₹18,000–22,000, before Leh sightseeing is added. The table compares the trade-offs.

ModeAcclimatisationRough costBest for
Self-drive / ride (Manali-Leh)Good — gradual gain₹5,000–8,000 per personRiders, full experience
HRTC / shared taxiGood — same route₹1,500–2,500 per personBudget travellers
Fly into LehPoor — sudden altitudeFlight + 48h restShort on time, winter
Srinagar-Leh HighwayGentle gradientVariesEasier ascent, Kashmir add-on

If you are travelling onward by train to reach Manali or Chandigarh first, booking early matters in peak summer; our IRCTC Tatkal booking guide covers the timing if regular seats are gone.

A Practical 8-Day Leh Ladakh Road Trip Itinerary

Here is a tested, acclimatisation-first itinerary for a Leh Ladakh road trip starting from Manali. It builds in the safe overnight halts, the mandatory Leh rest, and the headline sights — Nubra Valley and Pangong Tso — without rushing your body up the altitude curve. Adjust the lake days to suit your permit zones and energy.

DayPlanNight halt (altitude)
Day 1Manali → Keylong/Jispa via Atal Tunnel; fuel up at TandiJispa (~3,200 m)
Day 2Jispa → Baralacha La → Sarchu → Pang → Tanglang La → LehLeh (~3,500 m)
Day 3Rest and acclimatise in Leh; local monasteries, market, sort EDF receiptLeh
Day 4Leh → Khardung La → Nubra Valley (Hunder dunes)Hunder/Diskit
Day 5Nubra → Shyok route → Pangong TsoPangong (Spangmik)
Day 6Pangong → Chang La → back to LehLeh
Day 7Buffer/rest day or Tso Moriri excursion; prepare for descentLeh
Day 8Leh → Manali (long day; no permit needed in this direction)Manali

Notice how the itinerary keeps you at Leh’s altitude for two nights before sending you to Khardung La and the high lakes. That buffer is the difference between enjoying Pangong and spending the night there with a splitting headache. If you have more days, a leg through Spiti makes a spectacular extension — see our separate Spiti Valley road trip guide for that loop.

Common Leh Ladakh Road Trip Mistakes to Avoid

Most trips that go wrong fail on the same predictable points. Avoid these and your Leh Ladakh road trip stays safe and on schedule:

1. Pushing Manali to Leh in one day. A 14–16 hour single drive skips acclimatisation and is the classic cause of severe AMS. Always split it with a night at Keylong or Jispa.

2. Sleeping at Sarchu on the way up. It is higher than Leh and unacclimatised travellers routinely have terrible nights there. Halt lower.

3. Underestimating the fuel gap. The 345 km Tandi-to-Karu stretch has no official pump. Fill up fully and carry reserve fuel in PET bottles.

4. Ignoring the new permit rules. The ILP is gone for Indians, but the online EDF is mandatory. Carry printed receipts for the restricted zones.

5. Skipping the Leh rest day. Especially if you fly in, the first 48 hours need real rest, not sightseeing at altitude.

6. Drinking alcohol early in the trip. Alcohol worsens dehydration and AMS. Save it for after you have adapted, and hydrate constantly.

7. Travelling in the first fortnight after opening. Unless you are an experienced rider, the early-season snow, slush and water crossings are unforgiving.

8. Relying on mobile network. Coverage is dead across long stretches, and only postpaid SIMs work for outside-region tourists. Download offline maps.

9. Not checking live road status. A pass can close overnight. Verify within 48 hours of departure.

10. Carrying no cash. ATMs en route are essentially limited to Keylong; tented camps and dhabas are cash-only. Carry enough for the whole stretch.

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Note: Disclaimer: This Leh Ladakh road trip guide is for general planning only. Road opening dates, permit rules, fees and fuel availability change with weather, policy and season, and the figures here are 2026 planning ranges rather than guarantees. Always confirm live road status, permit requirements and costs through official BRO advisories and the Ladakh administration portal before you travel, and consult a doctor about high-altitude health. Facts & Guides is not responsible for changes or decisions made based on this article.
Frequently Asked Questions
When does the Manali-Leh Highway open in 2026?

Based on BRO snow-clearance patterns, the Manali-Leh Highway is expected to open for tourists around 15–25 May 2026, though heavy winter snow can delay it by a week or two. It typically stays open until late October or early November. Always confirm live status before travelling, as dates shift with weather.

Do Indian tourists need a permit for a Leh Ladakh road trip in 2026?

The old Inner Line Permit has been abolished for Indian citizens. You now pay an online Environmental Development Fee — ₹400 per person plus ₹20 per day, with a small Red Cross fee — and carry the printed receipt for restricted zones like Nubra, Pangong and Tso Moriri. No permit is needed for Leh town itself or the highway.

How many days do I need for a Leh Ladakh road trip?

Seven to ten days is ideal. A safe minimum is two days to drive up from Manali, two rest and acclimatisation days in Leh, and time for Nubra and Pangong before driving back. Rushing the altitude curve to save days is the most common cause of trip-ending AMS.

Where is the last petrol pump on the Manali Leh Highway?

The last reliable pump is at Tandi, about 110 km from Manali (Keylong has a backup pump). The next official pump is at Karu, roughly 30 km before Leh — a gap of around 345 km. Fill up completely at Tandi and carry reserve fuel in PET bottles, especially on a motorcycle.

How do I prevent AMS in Ladakh?

Acclimatise: spend at least 48 hours in Leh before going higher, rest fully on arrival, follow "climb high, sleep low", drink four to five litres of water daily, and avoid alcohol early. Do not ascend further with symptoms, and descend immediately if they become severe. Speak to your doctor about preventive medication beforehand.

Is the Leh to Manali route safe for a sedan or only for bikes and SUVs?

Sedans can do the Leh to Manali route, but only in good condition and with cautious driving. Rough patches, loose gravel and water crossings between Zingzing Bar and Pang are hardest in early season, so a well-maintained car driven carefully in July–September is the safer combination. SUVs and bikes handle the terrain more comfortably.

Should I drive up or fly into Leh?

Driving up the Manali Leh Highway gives gradual altitude gain that aids acclimatisation and is the fuller experience. Flying saves time and is the only option in winter, but you arrive straight at 3,500 m, so the 48-hour rest becomes essential. Many travellers drive one way and fly the other.

Does mobile network work on a Leh Ladakh road trip?

Coverage is patchy to non-existent across long stretches of the highway, especially between Jispa and Upshi. Only postpaid SIMs from outside the region work in Ladakh; prepaid tourist SIMs generally do not. Download offline maps and share your plan before you lose signal.

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