Avoid
Hanle in April
Ladakh, India
April is transition month on the Changthang. Snow starts melting on the passes between Nyoma and Hanle, but the road is not reliably open for civilian vehicles. BRO crews begin clearance but the remoteness of this stretch means it gets attention after the Leh-Manali and Leh-Srinagar highways. Temperatures in Hanle reach -5°C to 8°C. The Hanle Monastery begins preparing for summer ceremonies. Changpa nomads start moving their goat herds to higher pastures. You might get through in late April with a well-equipped convoy and local intelligence — but it's a gamble. Most people should wait for June.
The April story
If you're serious about a May-June visit, April is when to finalise everything. The Leh-Hanle road has no services for the last 100 km — carry 2 jerry cans of spare fuel, 4 litres of water per person, basic tools, and a satellite communicator if you have one. Phone coverage drops out after Nyoma and doesn't return until you're within 2 km of Hanle village (BSNL only). The altitude — 4500m — requires genuine acclimatization: spend 2 nights in Leh, then ideally a night in Nyoma (3800m) before the final push. Symptoms of altitude sickness at 4500m can include severe headache, nausea, and dangerous fluid accumulation — carry Diamox, know the symptoms, and descend immediately if they worsen. The observatory tour is not guaranteed but IIA Bangalore occasionally arranges visits for astronomy groups — contact them at least 2 months ahead. Bring a star chart app loaded offline. At Hanle's latitude (32.7°N) and altitude, you can see both northern and some southern hemisphere objects clearly.
Why April scores 1/5
Weather
Thawing slowly, -15 to 0°C. Roads still blocked. Manali-Leh route closed. Only possible via Srinagar-Leh (if open). Too early and too cold.
Roads & Access
self drive: 4x4 mandatory. Highest motorable roads in world. Umlingla at 5883m.. road condition: Poor to fair. Unpaved. BRO maintains but conditions vary.. public transport: None. Must hire vehicle from Leh.. from nearest city: Leh→Hanle: 260km 8-10hrs.. last km difficulty: extreme
Safety & Emergency
Safety: 2/5. rescue: Army, ITBP. helpline: DC Leh: 01982-252010. ambulance: None. police station: Army/ITBP checkpost. nearest hospital: Army medical post. Nearest hospital Leh 260km.
Network
VI: No, JIO: No, BSNL: Yes, NOTE: Yes, AIRTEL: No. BSNL only, very weak. Satellite phone strongly recommended. No data.
Kids
Not ideal for kids —
Elevation
4,500m — High altitude, acclimatisation needed
Who should go
- ✓Experienced trekkers / adventurers
- ✓Nobody for civilian visits — the road is not yet reliably open
- ✓Permit applicants preparing paperwork at Leh DC office for summer
- ✓Astrophotographers scouting gear lists and star charts for a June-October trip
Who should think twice
- ✗First-time travelers
- ✗Anyone with health conditions
- ✗Everyone for tourist purposes — the road is not yet safe for civilian vehicles
- ✗Travellers who haven't spent 2+ days acclimatizing in Leh first
- ✗Anyone expecting to wing it — Hanle punishes unplanned visits
All 12 Months
| Month | Score | Note |
|---|---|---|
| January | 1/5 | Extreme cold -25 to -10°C. Road from Leh technically open but dangerous black ice. Hanle observatory area frozen. Only hardcore adventurers with proper vehicle. |
| February | 1/5 | Coldest month -30 to -12°C. Umlingla Pass (19,024 ft) buried in snow. Hanle village nearly inaccessible. Frostbite risk extreme. Do not attempt. |
| March | 1/5 | Still frozen -20 to -5°C. Roads blocked. Umlingla under deep snow. No facilities operational for tourists. Changthang plateau in deep winter. |
| Aprilviewing | 1/5 | Thawing slowly, -15 to 0°C. Roads still blocked. Manali-Leh route closed. Only possible via Srinagar-Leh (if open). Too early and too cold. |
| May | 1/5 | Roads opening slowly, -5 to 10°C. Leh accessible by air. Road to Hanle may open late May. Umlingla still dicey. ILP/PAP needed. Very early season. |
| June | 4/5 | Season opens, 0-18°C. Hanle Dark Sky Reserve accessible. World's highest observatory. Milky Way visible naked eye. Umlingla road opening. ILP mandatory. |
| July | 5/5 | Peak season, 5-22°C. Best stargazing — darkest skies in India. Umlingla Pass (world's highest motorable road) accessible. Wild ass sightings on plateau. |
| August | 5/5 | Perfect conditions, 5-20°C. Clear dark skies almost every night. Changthang plateau golden. Umlingla accessible. Nomadic Changpa camps visible. Unforgettable. |
| September | 5/5 | Best clarity for astronomy, 0-15°C. Driest, clearest skies of the year. Milky Way arch at its most dramatic. Umlingla still open. Season winding down. |
| October | 2/5 | Rapidly cooling, -5 to 10°C. Umlingla may close any day. Roads icing over. Last stargazing window. Check road conditions daily before departing Leh. |
| November | 1/5 | Freezing -15 to 0°C. Umlingla closed. Road to Hanle extremely dangerous with black ice. No tourist facilities. Season over. Do not attempt. |
| December | 1/5 | Extreme cold -25 to -8°C. Everything closed and frozen. Changthang plateau in deep winter. No access, no facilities, no reason to try. |
Practical Details
How to reach
Leh→Hanle: 260km 8-10hrs.. Roads: Poor to fair. Unpaved. BRO maintains but conditions vary.. Self-drive: 4x4 mandatory. Highest motorable roads in world. Umlingla at 5883m.. Public transport: None. Must hire vehicle from Leh.. Last stretch: extreme
Elevation
4,500m
Difficulty
extreme
Budget tier
budget
Permits required
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