Here is a thought that surprises most people: June is arguably the best month to visit Manali. Not May, when the roads are still unpredictable. Not October, when half the town has packed up for winter. June, right in the thick of Indian summer, when the rest of the country is either melting or complaining about power cuts. That is when Manali quietly becomes one of the most beautiful places on earth.
The Beas River runs fat and loud with snowmelt. The pine forests above Old Manali glow a green so saturated it barely looks real. Rohtang Pass is open, the apple orchards are in full flush, and the temperature rarely climbs above 25°C. And because most people assume June is too hot, or too rainy, or too something. There is still a window before the full peak-season crowds of July descend. June is Manali’s open secret.
Whether you are planning a family summer trip, an adventure weekend, a romantic getaway, or a long overdue girls’ or boys’ trip. This guide covers everything you need to know: weather, things to do, how to get there, what to book in advance, and where to stay in a SaffronStays villa that actually feels like an escape rather than just another hotel room.
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Why June Is the Best Time to Visit Manali
Most hill station travel advice operates on a simple logic: go before the crowds, go after the rains, go when the weather is perfect. Manali in June checks all three.
The temperature is ideal. Daytime highs sit between 15°C and 25°C in the town, dropping to a pleasant 8–12°C at night. After months of 40°C in Delhi, Mumbai, or Pune, that first breath of Kullu Valley air feels like a physical relief.
Rohtang Pass is open. The Border Roads Organisation typically clears the pass by late May or early June, making it accessible to tourists from June 1 onwards (weather permitting). This is the gateway to Lahaul and the wider Himalayan landscape, and it is only accessible for a few months each year.
The valley is at its greenest. Post-snowmelt, the Kullu Valley transforms into a wall of green. Wildflowers bloom across Solang and Beas Kund. The apple orchards around Naggar are in full leaf. And the Beas River, swollen with glacial melt, thunders alongside the highway in a way that genuinely impresses even seasoned Himalayan travellers.
It is still shoulder season. By mid-July, Manali becomes genuinely crowded, with traffic jams on the way to Rohtang, booked-out properties weeks in advance, inflated rates. June gives you the same landscapes with perhaps 40–50% fewer people, and rates that reflect that. For SaffronStays guests, this also means more flexibility on check-in times, meal customisation, and bonfire evenings without a queue.
| LOCAL INSIGHT: Hotel occupancy in Manali reaches 80%+ by mid-July. June bookings, particularly for villa stays, should be secured at least 3–4 weeks in advance, but you will almost always find better rates and more caretaker attention than the peak-season rush. |

Manali in June: Weather & What to Expect
Understanding Manali’s June weather is not complicated, but it is worth being accurate about. The town sits at roughly 2,050 metres above sea level. Rohtang Pass, at 3,978 metres, operates in an entirely different climate on the same day.
| Zone | Altitude | Day Temp | Night Temp | Conditions |
| Manali Town / Mall Road | 2,050 m | 18–25°C | 10–14°C | Sunny, occasional afternoon showers |
| Old Manali / Vashisht | 2,100 m | 16–22°C | 9–12°C | Cool, forested, ideal for walks |
| Solang Valley | 2,480 m | 12–18°C | 5–8°C | Clear mornings, cloud builds by 2pm |
| Rohtang Pass | 3,978 m | 4–10°C | 0–5°C | Snow patches, fog possible, permit required |
A few practical weather notes for June specifically:
- Pre-monsoon showers can arrive in late June, usually as short, sharp afternoon bursts. They clear quickly and rarely disrupt a full day’s plans.
- Morning hours (6am–11am) are consistently clear and the best window for Rohtang Pass drives and high-altitude treks.
- Pack a light fleece or jacket. Evenings at your villa will be cool enough to want one, especially at altitude.
- Snowfall at Rohtang is possible in early June; by late June, snow is limited to patches at the highest points.
Things to do in Manali in June
June is Manali’s most activity-rich month. Rohtang is open, the rivers are high, the trails are clear, and the weather cooperates for most of the day. Here is how to spend your time well.
Rohtang Pass: The Drive Everyone Talks About
Fifty-one kilometres from Manali, Rohtang Pass sits at 3,978 metres above sea level and serves as the gateway to Lahaul and Spiti. In June, it has just reopened from winter closure, which means snow still dusts the higher ridges and the landscape feels almost impossibly dramatic.
Permit essential: All tourists require a permit, booked online at rohtangpermits.nic.in. Daily quotas apply: 800 petrol vehicles and 400 diesel vehicles. Book the night before your planned visit. Cost: ₹550.
Leave by 7am: Traffic builds rapidly. Early starters get clear roads, better light for photos, and more time at the pass before the afternoon clouds roll in.
Rohtang is closed on Tuesdays for road maintenance. Plan accordingly.

Solang Valley: Adventure Base Camp
Thirteen kilometres from Manali and sitting at 2,480 metres, Solang Valley is the adventure hub of the region. In June, with residual snow on the upper slopes and clear blue skies in the morning, it is at its most photogenic.
- Paragliding: Tandem flights with experienced pilots. June offers excellent visibility and light winds. Approximately ₹1,000–3,000 depending on flight duration.
- Zorbing: Rolling downhill in a transparent ball, chaotically good fun and completely safe. Great for kids.
- ATV Rides: Quad bike trails through the valley floor. No licence required.
- Beas Kund Trek: An 8km moderate trek from Solang to the glacial lake that is the source of the Beas River. One of the finest half-day hikes in Himachal Pradesh.
- Ropeway: The gondola rises to Shitidhar peak at 2,960 metres, and worth it for the panoramic view alone.
Trekking: Best Trails for June
June is ideal for Manali’s classic treks. Snow has retreated from the mid-altitude trails, wildflowers are blooming, and the forest paths are dry underfoot.
| Trek | Distance | Difficulty | Duration | Highlight |
| Beas Kund | 16 km return | Moderate | 1 day | Glacial lake, source of Beas River |
| Bhrigu Lake | 22 km return | Moderate | 2 days | High-altitude lake at 4,300m, 360° Himalayan views |
| Hampta Pass | 35 km | Moderate-Hard | 4–5 days | Crosses from Kullu Valley to Spiti; dramatic landscape shift |
| Chandrakhani Pass | 30 km | Moderate | 3 days | Pir Panjal views; enters Malana village |
| Sajla Waterfall Walk | 2 km | Easy | 1–2 hrs | Family-friendly forest walk; near SaffronStays villas |
White Water Rafting on the Beas
Snowmelt in June means the Beas River is at its most powerful. Rafting stretches between Pirdi and Jhiri offer Grade II–III rapids, genuinely exciting without being reckless. Most operators run morning sessions. Cost: approximately ₹600–1,200 per person for a 14km stretch.

Old Manali and Vashisht: The Slower Side
Not every hour of a Manali trip needs to be adrenaline-fuelled. Old Manali, a 20-minute walk from the main market, has a completely different character: narrow lanes, wooden guesthouses, cedar trees, and cafés with mountain views. It is the kind of place that invites a second coffee and a slow afternoon.
Vashisht village, just across the river, has natural hot springs, a welcome counter to the cold evenings, and the ancient Vashisht Mandir. The SaffronStays Amlyn villa is located here, minutes from both.
Hadimba Devi Temple
One of Manali’s most photographed landmarks, this 16th-century wooden pagoda sits inside a cedar forest and is dedicated to the goddess Hadimba. June’s clear mornings make for the best light, so arrive before 9am to beat the crowds and get the forest to yourself.

A 3-Day Manali Itinerary for June
This itinerary works for families, couples, and groups of friends. Adjust the activity intensity to match your group.
Day 1: Settle In, Slow Down, Acclimatise
- Arrive in Manali by midday. Check into your SaffronStays villa, unpack, and let the altitude adjustment begin.
- Afternoon: Walk through Old Manali. Browse the Tibetan market. Have chai at a café overlooking the valley. Resist the urge to overplan.
- Late afternoon: Visit Hadimba Temple (30 minutes from most SaffronStays Manali properties). The cedar forest in the June afternoon light is genuinely lovely.
- Evening: Bonfire at the villa (arrange with your SaffronStays caretaker). Pahadi dinner. The first night in Manali should feel like a proper arrival.
Day 2: Rohtang Pass & Solang Valley
- 5:30am: Wake up. This is the most important early start of the trip.
- 6am: Depart for Rohtang Pass. Your permit should be booked the previous evening (rohtangpermits.nic.in). The drive up is approximately 2 hours.
- 8am–11am: Time at Rohtang. Snow activities, photos, the view into Lahaul. Do not rush: this is what the early alarm was for.
- 12pm: Drive back, stop at Solang Valley for lunch and one activity (paragliding or zorbing recommended).
- 3pm: Return to Manali. Hot shower, rest, Vashisht hot springs if legs permit.
- Evening: Dinner in town or in-villa meal. Ask your caretaker to arrange local Himachali food. The Siddu (stuffed bread with ghee) at Monarch Manor is worth knowing about.
Day 3: Trekking or River Day
- Option A (Active): Half-day Beas Kund trek from Solang. Start at 7am, return by 1pm. Wildflower season is at its peak in June.
- Option B (Moderate): White water rafting on the Beas (morning session), followed by a visit to the Roerich Art Gallery in Naggar village, a beautiful 45-minute drive through the valley.
- Option C (Families with younger children): Apple orchard walk near Naggar (SaffronStays Kesar Villa is set inside one), Naggar Castle visit, riverside picnic.
- Afternoon: Mall Road shopping for Himachali shawls, local honey, and walnut products.
- Evening: Pack up. If driving back overnight, depart by 7pm for Delhi.

Getting There: How to Reach Manali in June
| Route | From | Duration | Notes |
| By Road (Drive / Taxi) | Delhi | 12–14 hrs | NH3 via Chandigarh → Mandi. Leave at 5am or take overnight. Book AC taxi ₹8,000–12,000 one way. |
| By Volvo Bus | Delhi (ISBT) | 12–15 hrs | HRTC and private operators. Overnight buses depart 5–8pm. Comfortable, cost-effective (₹1,200–1,800). |
| By Flight + Taxi | Any major city | 3–4 hrs total | Fly to Bhuntar (Kullu-Manali Airport, 50km). Taxi ~₹2,500. Flights are limited and weather-sensitive. |
| By Train + Taxi | Any major city | 14–18 hrs | Train to Chandigarh or Kalka. Taxi to Manali (₹7,000–8,000, 6–7 hrs). |
| SAFFRONSTAYS TIPS: In June, road conditions are generally excellent. The Atal Tunnel (opened 2020) has transformed travel times: it bypasses Rohtang entirely, cutting 1.5–2 hours off the Manali-Lahaul journey and making the route usable year-round. For guests driving from Delhi, the Manali-bound NH3 is well-maintained through summer. Do check for any IMD weather alerts before departure. |
Where to Stay: SaffronStays Villas in Manali
There is a version of a Manali trip that most people have had: a hotel corridor, a front desk that does not quite remember your name, a breakfast buffet shared with forty strangers, and walls thin enough to hear the family next door debating what to order for dinner. A SaffronStays villa in Manali is the opposite of all of that.
When you stay in a private villa, the space is entirely yours. No shared lobbies, no queues for the hot water, no negotiating with hotel staff about whether you can have a bonfire. Your caretaker is on-site, knows your name, and has already arranged the firewood. The kitchen can prepare Pahadi meals to order: a proper Siddu with ghee and walnut chutney, a pot of local rajma, chai on the veranda whenever you want it. There is no fixed breakfast slot, no checkout pressure, no sense that you are one room among many. The villa operates around your trip, not the other way around.
In the mountains specifically, this matters more than anywhere else. After a long day at Rohtang Pass or a morning rafting on the Beas, returning to a private living room with a fireplace, a garden with Himalayan views, and a caretaker who has already figured out dinner is a categorically different experience to a hotel room. The evenings in Manali in June are cool enough to sit outside with a blanket and watch the sky go dark over the ranges. That is not something a hotel can give you. A villa can.

What to Sort Before You Go
Book 3–4 Weeks in Advance
June is not peak season but it is busy enough that the best SaffronStays villas fill up 3–4 weeks out. Villa stays in popular hill station destinations move faster than people expect, especially for groups and families travelling over weekends. Do not leave it to the last moment.
Rohtang Pass Permit
Book online at rohtangpermits.nic.in the evening before. 800 petrol and 400 diesel vehicle slots per day. Cost: ₹550. Closed every Tuesday.
What to Pack
- Light fleece or zip-up jacket (essential for evenings and high altitude)
- Waterproof layer (afternoon showers in late June are short but real)
- Trekking shoes if you plan to hike (trail runners work for Beas Kund)
- Sunscreen SPF 50+. UV intensity at altitude is much higher than at sea level
- Warm socks and a thermal layer for the Rohtang Pass drive
- Cash: ATMs at higher altitudes can be unreliable. Carry ₹10,000 in notes
Altitude Note
Manali town sits at 2,050 metres, so most healthy adults acclimatise in a few hours. Rohtang at 3,978 metres is a different matter. If you or anyone in your group has a history of altitude sickness, take it easy on Day 1 and consider carrying Diamox (consult a doctor before travel). Symptoms to watch for: headache, nausea, breathlessness at rest.

FAQs: Manali in June
Is Manali good to visit in June?
Yes. June is one of the best months to visit Manali. Temperatures range from 10–25°C, Rohtang Pass is open, the valley is at its greenest, and it is still shoulder season before the full July–August rush. For families travelling during school summer holidays, early June offers the best combination of good weather and manageable crowds.
Is there snow in Manali in June?
Snow remains at higher elevations in June, particularly at Rohtang Pass (3,978m) and Solang Valley. In Manali town itself (2,050m), there is no snow. Early June typically has more snow at altitude; by late June it is reduced to patches at the highest points.
Is Rohtang Pass open in June?
Yes. The BRO (Border Roads Organisation) typically opens Rohtang Pass in late May or early June. In 2026, the pass was open from June 1. Tourists require an online permit (rohtangpermits.nic.in, ₹550). The pass is closed every Tuesday for maintenance. Weather can cause temporary closures, so always check the day before you plan to go.
How many days in Manali are enough in June?
Three full days is the ideal minimum for a June visit. Day 1 for settling in and exploring the town, Day 2 for Rohtang Pass and Solang Valley, and Day 3 for trekking or the Kullu Valley. Five days gives you space to do all of this without rushing, plus a day trip to Naggar.
Is Manali safe for families in June?
Manali is a well-established, family-friendly destination and very safe in June. Road conditions are good, the town is calm, and altitude is manageable at 2,050 metres. For families with young children, stick to Manali town and Solang Valley on Day 2 rather than the Rohtang Pass drive, which can be strenuous for small children.
What is the best SaffronStays property in Manali for a family group?
For families and groups, Monarch Manor on Old Manali Road is the best choice: it sleeps up to 14 guests across 6 rooms, serves Pahadi meals on-site, and has the character of a genuine Himalayan heritage home rather than a serviced apartment. For smaller families or couples wanting a river view, The Amlyn in Vashisht is the pick.