
Most of Dharamshala's story gets told in a hurry — a taxi, a temple, a viewpoint, a bus out. We think the good part starts once the day-trippers leave: the café that knows your order, the trail with nobody on it, the sunset you watch every evening because you actually live here now.
These two guides are for the people that pace suits — GenZ travellers, remote workers, and anyone from anywhere who wants to swap the checklist for a month in the mountains. Pick your hill and settle in.
No rush, no checklist — just a base to stay, a desk with wifi and a local on call for the month, in Bir Billing or Dharamkot. From ₹30,000. Or message us and tell us your dates.
Bir Billing is the buzzy, adventurous one — paragliding, GenZ couples, sunset drinks and the odd party, flatter and sunnier. Dharamkot is slower and softer: a forested, famously Israeli-flavoured village above McLeod Ganj with a big yoga and long-stay crowd. Bir for energy, Dharamkot for calm.
Increasingly, yes — it's one of the most in-demand slow-stay corners of India right now, and still far less crowded than Goa or Rishikesh. Wifi in the main cafés is solid, the cost of living is low, and the community of remote workers keeps growing.
A week to feel it, a month to live it. If you're working remotely, a month is the sweet spot — long enough to find a routine, cheap enough to justify the flight. Our 30-Day Workation is built exactly for that.