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Fairy Meadows

🏔️ Tourist Places Diamer, Fairy Meadows
4.8 (4 reviews)

Fairy Meadows (Urdu: پری چراگاہ) is a lush alpine meadow situated at 3,306 metres above sea level in the Diamer District of Gilgit-Baltistan. It offers the most direct and iconic view of Nanga Parbat (8,126m) — the 9th highest mountain in the world and one of the deadliest. The meadow is reached by a thrilling jeep track to Tato village followed by a 3–4 hour trek through pine forests. The clear night skies reveal the Milky Way in full glory, and the sunrise view of Nanga Parbat is considered one of the most spectacular in the world.

Guided Tours Available Camping Allowed Photography Allowed +8
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Lahore Fort (Shahi Qila)

🏔️ Tourist Places Lahore, Walled City
4.8 (4 reviews)

Lahore Fort, known as Shahi Qila (Royal Fort), is a UNESCO World Heritage Site covering 20 hectares in the heart of Lahore's Walled City. Built and rebuilt by Mughal emperors over 1,000 years, the fort's 21 notable monuments include the Sheesh Mahal (Palace of Mirrors), Naulakha Pavilion, Diwan-i-Aam, Diwan-i-Khas, Moti Masjid, and the famous Alamgiri Gate. The Sheesh Mahal, covered with thousands of tiny mirror pieces, is considered one of the finest examples of Mughal art. Listed as UNESCO World Heritage in 1981 alongside the Shalimar Gardens.

Guided Tours Available Photography Allowed Food & Restaurants Nearby +6
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Deosai National Park

🏔️ Tourist Places Skardu, Deosai Plains
4.7 (3 reviews)

Deosai National Park is one of the world's highest plateaus at an average elevation of 4,114 metres, covering 3,000 sq km across Gilgit-Baltistan. Known as the "Land of Giants," it is home to the Himalayan Brown Bear, Snow Leopard, Tibetan Wolf, and hundreds of wildflower species. Sheosar Lake, shimmering at 4,142 metres, sits at the heart of the park. In summer, the plateau transforms into a carpet of wildflowers and the sky is so clear that you can see stars in the daytime. It is also a critical habitat for brown bears (less than 50 remain in Pakistan).

Guided Tours Available Camping Allowed Photography Allowed +9
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Kalash Valleys, Chitral

🏔️ Tourist Places Chitral, Bumburet Valley
4.7 (3 reviews)

The Kalash Valleys (Bumburet, Rambur and Birir) in Chitral, KPK are home to the Kalash people — one of the world's smallest and most ancient indigenous communities with a unique non-Muslim identity, polytheistic religion, distinct costume (women in colourful black robes with beaded headdresses), and living culture dating back thousands of years. With a population of only 3,000–4,000, the Kalash maintain their own festivals, architecture, and traditions. The valleys are lush, green, and located at the foot of the Hindu Kush at 1,900–2,200 metres.

Guided Tours Available Photography Allowed Accommodation Nearby +8
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Badshahi Mosque, Lahore

🏔️ Tourist Places Lahore, Walled City
4.7 (3 reviews)

The Badshahi Mosque (Emperor's Mosque) was built by the last great Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb Alamgir in 1673 and is one of the largest and most beautiful mosques in the world. With a capacity of 55,000 worshippers in its courtyard and 10,000 inside the main prayer hall, it was the largest mosque in the world for 313 years until 1986. Made of red sandstone and white marble, it stands facing Lahore Fort with Iqbal Park between them. The mosque's four 53-metre minarets and three massive marble domes are visible from across the city. It houses sacred relics of the Prophet Muhammad ﷺ.

Guided Tours Available Photography Allowed Food & Restaurants Nearby +5
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Faisal Mosque, Islamabad

🏔️ Tourist Places Islamabad, F-8
4.7 (3 reviews)

The Faisal Mosque is the national mosque of Pakistan and the fourth largest mosque in the world. Built between 1976 and 1986 at the foot of the Margalla Hills in Islamabad, it was designed by Turkish architect Vedat Dalokay and named after King Faisal bin Abdulaziz of Saudi Arabia who funded its construction. Its unique funnel-shaped structure without a traditional dome, designed to look like a desert Bedouin's tent, is revolutionary in Islamic architecture. The prayer hall can hold 10,000 worshippers and the entire complex accommodates 300,000. It glows magnificently at night.

Guided Tours Available Photography Allowed Food & Restaurants Nearby +5
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Rohtas Fort

🏔️ Tourist Places Jhelum, Rohtas
4.5 (2 reviews)

Rohtas Fort (Qila Rohtas) is a UNESCO World Heritage Site built in 1541 by Sher Shah Suri, the Afghan emperor who briefly ousted the Mughal Emperor Humayun. Located near Jhelum, Punjab, the fort sits on a rocky promontory overlooking the Kahan River and covers 70 hectares with 4 km of walls and 68 towers. It was never conquered by military force. The fort was built to suppress the Potohar Gakhar tribes loyal to the Mughals. Its Shishi Gate is one of the finest examples of Indo-Islamic architecture. UNESCO listed it in 1997.

Guided Tours Available Photography Allowed Food & Restaurants Nearby +5
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Taxila Archaeological Ruins

🏔️ Tourist Places Rawalpindi, Taxila
4.5 (2 reviews)

Taxila (ancient Takshashila) is a UNESCO World Heritage Site in Rawalpindi District, Punjab, and one of the most important archaeological sites in Asia. It was the capital of the ancient kingdom of Gandhara and a major centre of Buddhist learning and Silk Road trade from 600 BCE to 500 CE. The ruins include multiple ancient cities, Buddhist monasteries (dharmarajikas, Jaulian, Sirkap), stupas, and the Taxila Museum containing thousands of Gandharan artefacts in exquisite Greco-Buddhist style. Alexander the Great visited in 326 BCE and found a thriving city.

Guided Tours Available Photography Allowed Food & Restaurants Nearby +5
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Mohenjo-daro

🏔️ Tourist Places Larkana, Mohenjo-daro
4.5 (2 reviews)

Mohenjo-daro (Mound of the Dead Men) is one of the world's earliest great cities and a UNESCO World Heritage Site, built around 2500 BCE by the Indus Valley Civilisation. Located near Larkana in Sindh, it was one of the largest settlements of the ancient Indus Valley Civilisation with an estimated 40,000–50,000 inhabitants at its peak. The city demonstrates remarkably advanced urban planning with a grid street layout, underground drainage system, multi-storey houses, a Great Bath, and a granary — all built 4,500 years ago. It was abandoned around 1700 BCE and rediscovered only in 1922.

Guided Tours Available Photography Allowed Food & Restaurants Nearby +5