How do I get to Shogran from Islamabad or Lahore?+
Shogran is a road trip — there is no airport in Kaghan, so most people fly or drive to Islamabad first. From Islamabad it is roughly a 6-8 hour drive up the Kaghan road via Mansehra and Balakot to Kiwai, where a short but steep jeep track climbs to Shogran itself. From Lahore, add the 4-5 hour motorway leg to Islamabad. A normal car can usually reach Kiwai in good weather, but the final climb to Shogran and the onward track to Siri Paye are best done in a hired 4x4 jeep.
When is the best time to visit Shogran?+
Summer, roughly May to September, is the season. The meadows are green, the days are mild and the jeep track up to Siri Paye is open. July and August are the busiest with family holidaymakers. By late autumn it turns cold, and heavy winter snow can block the road up, so check the latest conditions before you set off outside summer.
What is there to do and see in Shogran?+
The highlight is the jeep ride up to the Siri Paye meadows above Shogran — wide green pastures with mountain views on a clear day. Around the plateau you can walk in the pine forest, let kids run in the open meadows and take in the valley from your hotel. It is a relaxed, family-friendly base rather than a hard-trekking spot, and it pairs well with other Kaghan Valley stops like Naran.
Where should I stay in Shogran?+
Shogran has a cluster of hotels, guesthouses and forest resorts spread across the plateau, plus simpler rooms down at Kiwai and in Balakot if the top is full. In peak summer the better places book out early, so reserve ahead. Many travellers stay a night or two in Shogran, then continue up the Kaghan Valley to Naran.