Is Gilgit-Baltistan Safe to Visit? A Local Operator's Answer
Yes — Gilgit-Baltistan is Pakistan's safest travel region and among the safest mountain destinations anywhere: a tourism-dependent society hosting around a million visitors a year with a near-zero record of incidents involving travellers. The genuine risks are altitude, mountain roads and weather delays — logistics problems, which is exactly what a competent local operator exists to manage.
What the numbers say
GB hosted roughly 986,000 domestic and 16,500 international visitors in 2024, and the trend line since 2018 slopes firmly upward — trekking permits, airport upgrades and hotel investment all confirm it. Crime against visitors is genuinely rare; communities here have staked their economy on hospitality and police the social contract themselves.
Foreign offices' Pakistan-wide advisories rarely distinguish GB from provinces a thousand kilometres south; on-the-ground reality does. Trekkers walk the Baltoro with valuables in duffel bags carried by strangers who return them intact — a norm locals consider unremarkable.
The real risks, ranked
One: roads — shelf tracks and rockfall zones demand experienced drivers, daylight scheduling and disciplined weather calls. Two: altitude — Khunjerab and Deosai days cross 4,000 m fast; pacing, oxygen and honest itineraries matter. Three: weather delays — Skardu and Gilgit flights cancel routinely; the mistake is a schedule with no buffer, not the mountain's behaviour. None of these are safety exotica; all are itinerary design.
Solo, family and female travel
Families are GB's core market and the infrastructure shows it. Female travellers — solo included — consistently report the region among Asia's most respectful; conservative-casual dress and the standard courtesies suffice. Solo trekkers must still register and guide-up inside the national parks — a rule about rescue logistics, not suspicion.
Questions, answered
Is Skardu safe for foreign tourists?
Emphatically — Baltistan's economy is tourism, incidents involving foreigners are close to statistical zero, and expedition culture (K2's entire history) runs through Skardu's DNA. Manage roads, altitude and flight buffers; the people were never the risk.
Do foreigners need permits or NOCs for GB?
Standard tourism in Skardu, Hunza and Gilgit requires no special NOC for most nationalities — just your visa and hotel registrations. Restricted border zones and trekking parks have their own permit layers, which operators arrange as routine.
