
Triund is open most of the year but the ridge does not feel the same from one month to the next. Gear that was fine in May is useless in December. Routes that are obvious in October get lost under snow in February. This is the guide we wish someone had handed us the first time we made the climb.
The forest stretch from Gallu Devi to Magic View is clean by early March, but the last kilometre before the ridge still holds patches of ice in the shaded switchbacks. The cafes open on rotation through the month. If you go in the first week, assume Bhangotu may be shut and carry extra water. By the last week of March, wildflowers start under the oak belt and the climb feels like a proper spring trek.
This is the two-month window most regulars swear by. Days are warm, nights on the ridge hold between 8 and 12 degrees, and the cafes are fully stocked. The Kangra Valley below is not yet pre-monsoon hazy, so the view from the ridge stretches all the way to the Pir Panjal on a clear afternoon. Weekends get busy. If you can, book a Tuesday-Wednesday overnight. You will have the sunrise almost to yourself.
People go in the monsoon and love it. Others go once and never again. The forest smells magnificent. The oak bark turns almost black with moisture and the rhododendron is long past its bloom but the undergrowth is alive. The honest problem is visibility. The ridge can stay inside a cloud for forty-eight hours straight. Leeches appear on the lower trail in July. If this does not bother you, monsoon Triund is a quiet, meditative trek. If you came for the view, postpone.
The post-monsoon air is the reason photographers show up in October. Everything has been washed clean. The Dhauladhar peaks look as if they are closer than they actually are. You need a warmer layer at night than in May, but the payoff is sunrise after sunrise of the kind you usually see on postcards.
Fewer people, shorter days, a slightly thinner food menu at the cafes. The ridge light is soft all day in November because the sun stays lower. Good month for people who want Triund without the weekend crowd.
A different trek. The cafes close around mid-December. The ridge gets anywhere from ten centimetres to two feet of snow depending on the year. You need proper four-season gear, ideally a guide who knows the winter line, and the right expectations. You will be cold at night. You will probably not sleep well. But you will see the ridge the way most visitors never see it.
The forest department issues a capped number of ridge-camping permits on peak weekends. Some operators ignore this. If a price seems very low, ask where you will actually camp. The authorised sites are set back from the ridge edge and have a forest-appointed spot for fires. Anyone pitching tents on the crest itself is operating without paperwork, and it makes the trail worse for everyone who comes after.
← All blog postsApril–June and October–November are the most reliable: clear Dhauladhar views, open cafés and comfortable camping temperatures. December–February brings snow on the top section; July–August is monsoon and slippery.
About 4–5 hours up from Gallu Devi temple (9 km, 1,000 m of climb) and 2.5–3 hours down. Most people go up after breakfast, camp on the ridge and return next morning.
From ₹1,200 per person (groups of two or more) including guide, camping on the ridge, meals on trek and permits.