Pakistan Complete Guide 2026: Lahore, Hunza, Karakoram, Skardu, Mohenjo-Daro, Taxila
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TL;DR
Pakistan in 2026 surprised me. The country runs 881,913 square kilometres from Karakoram peaks to the Arabian Sea, with two UNESCO Indus Valley sites. I spent three weeks across Lahore, Hunza, Skardu, and southern ruins. Indian passport holders need a licensed operator package and a 30-day e-visa at USD 60. Plan April-October, budget USD 50-120 per day mid-range.
Why Visit Pakistan in 2026
I had been circling Pakistan on my map for years before I booked. The country runs 881,913 square kilometres (33rd largest) and holds 240 million people (fifth most populous). K2 sits at 8,611 metres, the second highest summit on Earth, and four of the world's 14 peaks above 8,000 metres rise inside these borders.
The post-2022 stabilization made several regions more practical to visit. For Indian passport holders the e-visa route reopened, but only through licensed operators in package form. My operator handled paperwork, itinerary lock, and police registration in each district. The visa cost USD 60 for 30-day single-entry, separate from operator fees.
Beyond the mountains, Lahore Fort and Shalimar Gardens (UNESCO 1981) anchor Mughal civil architecture. Mohenjo-Daro and Taxila (both 1980) cover human history from 2,500 BCE through Gandhara Buddhism. Add the Karakoram Highway, qawwali at Sufi shrines, and food that put me in a quiet trance. I returned with the trip in my personal top three.
Background & Context
Pakistan occupies the western edge of South Asia. The land area of 881,913 square kilometres ranks 33rd globally, population 240 million ranks fifth. Islamabad is the planned capital (designated 1967, around 1 million residents). Karachi on the Arabian Sea holds 17 million, founded around 1729, running the commercial economy. Lahore in Punjab carries 14 million as cultural anchor. Faisalabad, Multan, Peshawar, and Quetta round out the major urban centres.
Urdu is the national language, English is official, with regional Punjabi, Sindhi, Pashto, Balochi, and Saraiki. Currency: Pakistani Rupee, around 280 PKR per USD during my visit. The country runs on UTC+5, half an hour behind India.
Independence came August 14, 1947 at British India's partition. Pakistan is a parliamentary republic; Shehbaz Sharif took office as Prime Minister in 2024. Geography spans Karakoram and Hindu Kush in the north, Indus plains through Punjab and Sindh, the Thar Desert southeast, and the Balochistan plateau southwest. K2 (Mount Godwin Austen) was first summited July 31, 1954 by Italians Achille Compagnoni and Lino Lacedelli. The Karakoram Highway N-35 was built 1959-1979 with Chinese partnership across 1,300 kilometres from Hasan Abdal to Kashgar.
Lahore: Mughal Capital and Cultural Heart
Lahore was my entry point and I gave it five days. The city held the Mughal court 1584-1598 under Akbar, and the buildings from that century onward still set the tone. Lahore Fort and adjacent Shalimar Gardens earned UNESCO inscription in 1981.
Lahore Fort sprawls across 20 hectares inside walls Akbar rebuilt in brick in 1566. I walked the Alamgiri Gate, the Sheesh Mahal mirror work, and the Diwan-e-Khas where Shah Jahan held private court. The Picture Wall on the western flank runs 450 metres in glazed tile mosaic, the largest such surface anywhere.
Shalimar Gardens lies 6 kilometres east, ordered by Shah Jahan 1641-1642 across 40 acres on three descending terraces fed by a Ravi canal, with 410 fountains. Wazir Khan Mosque (1635, Shah Jahan) carries the most accomplished tile mosaic work I have seen. Badshahi Mosque next to the fort (1673, Aurangzeb) holds a courtyard for 5,000 worshippers and ranked as the fourth largest mosque on Earth through the 17th century. I climbed a minaret at dawn and watched Lahore wake up from 53 metres above the brick.
Lahore Museum took half a day for the Gandhara collection (the Fasting Buddha headlines the room). Anarkali Bazaar pulled me in for textiles. Gawalmandi Food Street fed me nihari, paya, and Lahori karahi that put every previous version into perspective.
Hunza Valley: Karakoram Heartland
Hunza stretches roughly 100 kilometres along the Karakoram Highway in Gilgit-Baltistan. I flew Islamabad to Gilgit, then drove four hours up the N-35 to Karimabad. The valley opens between walls of rock and ice, with Rakaposhi at 7,788 metres (the world's 12th highest peak) dominating the southern view and Ultar Sar at 7,388 metres rising behind Karimabad.
Baltit Fort above Karimabad at 2,500 metres dates back about 700 years; the Mir of Hunza ruled from here until 1945. Altit Fort, two centuries older, sits 3 kilometres downvalley. Both were restored by the Aga Khan Trust for Culture in the 1990s and 2000s.
Attabad Lake formed on January 4, 2010 when a landslide blocked the Hunza River. The lake stretches 14 kilometres long and reaches 80 metres deep, with water between turquoise and lapis. I rode a boat across at dawn when the surface still held the peak reflections.
I drove the final 200 kilometres to Khunjerab Pass on the China border. At 4,693 metres, this is the highest paved international border crossing in the world, sitting inside Khunjerab National Park. I spotted a Marco Polo sheep and ibex tracks. The air at that altitude moves differently. I stayed 40 minutes before turning back.
Skardu and the Path to K2
Skardu sits in Baltistan at 2,228 metres, the gateway to the central Karakoram. The flight from Islamabad runs about 50 minutes when weather allows (mine took two attempts). The road through Chilas takes 16-20 hours along the Indus gorge below Nanga Parbat.
Shangri-La Resort sits beside Lower Kachura Lake 25 kilometres from Skardu. Upper Kachura, a short walk further, was where I swam briefly in water that tested every nerve in my chest.
Deosai Plains lie south of Skardu, accessible by jeep July and August. The plateau averages 4,114 metres (the second highest in the world after Tibet) and covers 3,000 square kilometres. In July the wildflowers reach knee height. I spotted Himalayan brown bear scat near a stream but did not meet the bears, which my guide assured me was a good outcome.
I did not complete the K2 base camp trek but met returning groups. The standard route runs 14 days round trip from Askole through the Baltoro Glacier to Concordia at 4,650 metres (confluence of Baltoro and Godwin Austen glaciers), then K2 base camp at 5,150 metres. Permit, porters, food, guide, and operator package run USD 2,500-4,500 per person depending on group size. Window: late June through early September.
Mohenjo-Daro: The Indus Valley Lives
Mohenjo-Daro reset what I thought I knew about ancient cities. The site sits in Sindh, 360 kilometres north of Karachi, on the right bank of the Indus. UNESCO inscribed it in 1980. The settlement was built around 2,500 BCE and abandoned by 1,700 BCE, contemporary with Old Kingdom Egypt and early Mesopotamia. The excavated area covers about 250 hectares.
Sir John Marshall led the major excavations 1922-1931 after R. D. Banerji identified the site in 1922. The Great Bath measures 12 metres by 7 metres, sits 2.4 metres deep, waterproofed with bitumen between two layers of fired brick. Drainage runs through brick channels that still function in rain. The Granary on the citadel mound covers 50 by 27 metres. Streets follow a cardinal grid with a precision European cities took another four thousand years to match.
I climbed the Buddhist Stupa on the citadel mound, added in the 2nd century CE long after the Indus city was forgotten. The site receives few visitors; I spent four hours and saw perhaps a dozen people. The unicorn seals, the bronze Dancing Girl figurine, and the bearded Priest-King head define what little we know. We still cannot read their script.
Taxila: Gandhara on Foot
Taxila lies 35 kilometres northwest of Islamabad. UNESCO inscribed it in 1980 covering layered Gandharan civilization from roughly 600 BCE through 500 CE across 18 archaeological zones over 60 square kilometres.
Dharmarajika Stupa dates to the 3rd century BCE, built under Mauryan emperor Ashoka to enshrine Buddha relics. The main dome rises about 15 metres, with votive stupas and monastic cells across two hectares. Sirkap, the Indo-Greek city laid out by Demetrius around 180 BCE, follows a Hippodamian grid familiar from Greek Mediterranean colonies; I walked the main street 700 metres north to south past the Apsidal Temple and the Double-Headed Eagle Stupa. Sirsukh, the later Kushan city east of Sirkap, sits less excavated.
Jaulian Monastery on the hill above is the best preserved Buddhist monastic complex on the subcontinent, dating from the 2nd century CE with stucco seated Buddhas in surrounding cells. The Healing Buddha cell carries a depression in the navel where pilgrims for centuries placed coins or touched fingers asking for cures. Taxila Museum holds the best Gandharan sculpture collection in Pakistan; the grey schist Buddhas with Greek-influenced drapery held me for two hours.
Islamabad: Planned Capital
Islamabad was designed by Greek architect Constantinos Doxiadis in the late 1950s and became capital in 1967, replacing Karachi. The city follows a strict grid of numbered and lettered sectors.
Faisal Mosque dominates the northern skyline. Saudi King Faisal funded it, Turkish architect Vedat Dalokay won the design competition, and construction ran 1976-1986. The main prayer hall holds about 5,000 indoors, the four 100-metre minarets give the silhouette, and total courtyard capacity reaches 100,000. It ranks as the sixth largest mosque in the world by area, with an eight-sided tent shape from Bedouin geometry rather than a dome.
Pakistan Monument on Shakarparian Hill takes the shape of an open flower with four large petals (provinces) and four small petals (federal territories). Margalla Hills National Park behind the city gives easy walking up Trail 5 and to Daman-e-Koh for sunset views back over the grid.
Karachi: Coast and Commerce
Karachi runs 17 million people across 3,500 square kilometres and operates the country's main port. Founded around 1729 by Baloch settlers, it grew under British rule into the coastal hub. After 1947 it absorbed waves of Muhajir refugees from India.
Mazar-e-Quaid, the tomb of Muhammad Ali Jinnah, sits in a 53-acre park at the city centre. The white marble structure rises 43 metres under a 75-foot dome with hourly guard changes. Mohatta Palace (1927, pink Jodhpur stone) serves as an art museum. Clifton Beach gave me sunset and a camel ride. Frere Hall (1865, Venetian Gothic) holds the Sadequain ceiling murals upstairs.
Multan: Sufi South
Multan is among the oldest continuously inhabited cities in South Asia, with settlement layers over four thousand years deep. It anchors southern Punjab and the Sufi tradition. The shrine of Bahauddin Zakariya, the 13th century Suhrawardi Sufi master, sits on the old fort mound, a square tomb under a hemispherical dome built in 1262. Three kilometres away, the shrine of Shah Rukn-e-Alam (Bahauddin's grandson) dates from 1320, with an octagonal mausoleum in three tiers and glazed blue and white tile dome visible from the highway approach. Multan hits 45 degrees Celsius in summer afternoons, so I walked at dawn and after 5 pm and hid at midday in an air-conditioned dhaba eating sajji.
Kalash Valleys: Pagan North
The three Kalash valleys (Bumburet, Rumbur, Birir) sit in Chitral district in the Hindu Kush. The Kalash people, about 4,000 strong, practice an animist religion predating Islam and remain the last polytheistic indigenous community in this part of Asia. The valleys are reached by jeep from Chitral town, 12 hours by road from Islamabad. I attended the Chilam Joshi spring festival in May. Women wear black cotton dresses with embroidered red, yellow, and orange panels, with goat-hair belts and shell headdresses unique to this group. Photography requires asking, asking again, and accepting a no when it comes.
Naran and Kaghan Valley
Naran sits at 2,409 metres in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa along the Kaghan valley, five to six hours from Islamabad, with the road closed November through April. Lake Saiful Muluk lies 9 kilometres above Naran at 3,224 metres, with 2.75 square kilometres of glacier-fed water and a clean reflection of Malika Parbat (5,290 metres). Babusar Pass at 4,170 metres connects Kaghan to Chilas on the Karakoram Highway, opening mid-June through September. Lulusar Lake at 3,410 metres reflects the surrounding ridges on still mornings.
Costs Table
| Category | Budget (USD) | Mid (USD) | Luxury (USD) | PKR Mid | INR Mid |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Accommodation per night | 15 to 30 | 50 to 120 | 200 plus | 14,000 to 33,500 | 4,150 to 9,950 |
| Meals per day | 5 to 10 | 15 to 25 | 40 plus | 4,200 to 7,000 | 1,250 to 2,075 |
| Karahi or biryani plate | 1.50 to 2 | 3 to 5 | 8 plus | 200 to 500 | 125 to 415 |
| Nihari bowl | 2 to 3 | 4 to 6 | 10 plus | 500 to 1,500 | 165 to 500 |
| PIA Islamabad to Skardu one way | n/a | 80 to 120 | n/a | 22,000 to 33,500 | 6,640 to 9,950 |
| Daewoo bus Lahore to Islamabad | 12 to 15 | 18 to 25 | n/a | 5,000 to 7,000 | 1,000 to 2,075 |
| Jeep Karakoram day rental | 60 to 80 | 100 to 140 | n/a | 28,000 to 39,000 | 8,300 to 11,600 |
| K2 base camp trek 14 days | n/a | 2,500 to 3,500 | 4,500 plus | n/a | 207,000 to 290,000 |
| Hunza tour 7 days inclusive | 800 to 1,200 | 1,500 | 2,500 plus | n/a | 66,000 to 124,000 |
| E-visa fee | 60 | 60 | 60 | 16,800 | 4,975 |
Planning Section
The best time depends on which Pakistan I wanted. For northern mountains (Hunza, Skardu, K2 region) the window runs late April through October, peak June-September. The Karakoram Highway clears of snow by May at Khunjerab Pass, and trekking opens late June. For southern plains (Lahore, Karachi, Multan), comfortable months run October-March at 15-25 degrees Celsius. April-September pushes past 40 degrees, with Multan and Jacobabad hitting 50 in May-June. I combined northern weeks in June with southern days in October.
The visa process for Indian passport holders is the key logistical fact. The e-visa runs USD 60 for 30-day single entry, with no independent application route. A licensed Pakistani tour operator must submit a fixed itinerary, hotel bookings, and a sponsorship letter. Processing runs four to six weeks. The visa ties to the operator package and listed cities. Other nationalities have wider access through the standard e-visa portal.
Flights from India never go direct. Standard routes connect through Dubai (Emirates, flydubai), Doha (Qatar Airways), or Abu Dhabi (Etihad), with total travel time six to nine hours. Return shoulder-season prices ran INR 35,000-50,000 during my booking window. Direct flights from other countries connect to Islamabad and Lahore on PIA, Emirates, Etihad, Qatar, Turkish Airlines, and Saudia.
Internal travel uses three modes. PIA runs domestic flights between Islamabad, Karachi, Lahore, Skardu, and Gilgit. The Islamabad-Skardu route is weather dependent, so I built buffer days. The N-35 covers 1,300 kilometres from Hasan Abdal through Mansehra, Chilas, Gilgit, Hunza, to Khunjerab Pass and Kashgar. Islamabad to Hunza takes 18-22 hours over two driving days. Daewoo Express and Faisal Movers run premium intercity buses, Lahore-Islamabad in roughly 5 hours.
Climate divides Pakistan into zones. The Karakoram and Hindu Kush north runs alpine and continental, with Hunza at minus 5 to 18 in winter and 15 to 30 in summer at Karimabad's 2,500 metres. Indus plains carry continental and arid patterns, with monsoon July-August adding 200-400 millimetres to Punjab and Sindh. The Thar Desert and Balochistan stay arid year-round. Karachi remains mild because of Arabian Sea moderation.
Dress codes matter. Pakistan is roughly 96 percent Muslim. Women should cover hair in religious sites, keep shoulders and knees covered, and prefer loose cotton in summer. Rural Punjab and Sindh are stricter than Karachi or Islamabad. The shalwar kameez is the practical solution; two sets cost me under USD 30 in Lahore. Shoes come off at mosques and shrines. Friday afternoon prayers shut some sites for an hour. Ramadan falls in March 2026, with daylight restaurant closures I would avoid.
FAQs
Can Indian passport holders get a Pakistan visa? Yes, but only through a licensed Pakistani tour operator as part of a packaged itinerary. The 30-day single-entry e-visa costs USD 60. Independent visa application is not available. Processing runs four to six weeks. Allow longer in peak season.
ATMs and currency? Pakistani Rupees are required for daily transactions. ATMs work in Lahore, Karachi, Islamabad, and Multan (HBL, UBL, Faysal Bank accepting Visa and Mastercard). In Hunza and Skardu, ATMs are unreliable, so I carried cash. US dollars in large clean bills change at official counters in Lahore and Karachi.
Is alcohol available? Prohibited under Pakistani law for Muslims. Foreign non-Muslim visitors can purchase at licensed hotel outlets in Karachi, Islamabad, and Lahore, though selection is limited and prices high. I drank none and did not feel the lack.
Dress code for women travellers? Modest dress expected everywhere: cover shoulders, chest, and knees. Hair covering is required in mosques and shrines and advisable in rural Punjab, Sindh, and KPK areas. Karachi and Islamabad cafe culture is more flexible. The shalwar kameez is comfortable and easy to buy locally.
Vegetarian options? Yes. Dal varieties, sabzi, palak paneer, aloo gobi, channa, roti, paratha, and naan are widely available. Punjab has strong vegetarian options from shared culinary heritage with Indian Punjab. Strict vegans face more difficulty since ghee and yogurt run through most dishes.
Security situation? I checked current advisories before booking and again before flying. Main tourist corridors in Punjab and KPK (Lahore, Islamabad, Multan, Hunza, Skardu, Naran-Kaghan) ranked safe during my visit. Balochistan and the former FATA tribal areas remain restricted and require special permits. Check Foreign Office India, UK FCDO, and US State Department pages before departure.
Photo restrictions? Yes. Military installations, airports, government buildings, bridges, and dams are off limits. I never photographed people, especially women, without asking. The Kalash specifically request consent and many decline. Religious sites permit architecture photography but generally not worshippers.
Monsoon impact? The monsoon runs late June through August in Punjab and Sindh, peaking in July. The 2022 floods killed around 1,700 and displaced over 30 million. Plains flood, secondary roads close, and landslides cut the Karakoram Highway. Internal flights mostly run. I would not plan a Punjab-Sindh trip in July or early August.
Useful Urdu Phrases
- Salaam Alaykum: Peace be upon you (standard greeting)
- Walaikum Salaam: And upon you peace (the response)
- Shukriya: Thank you
- Khuda Hafiz or Allah Hafiz: Goodbye, literally "God protect"
- Jee haan: Yes (polite)
- Jee nahin: No (polite)
- Mehrbani: Please, also kind of you
- Maaf kijiye: Excuse me, sorry
- Aap ka naam kya hai?: What is your name?
- Mera naam Saikiran hai: My name is Saikiran
- Kitne ka hai?: How much is it?
- Bahut zyada hai: Too expensive
- Pani: Water
- Khana: Food
- Bilkul theek: Absolutely fine
- Inshallah: God willing (common in plans)
- Bus station kahan hai?: Where is the bus station?
- Mujhe samajh nahin aaya: I did not understand
Cultural Notes
Pakistan's population spans Punjabis 44.7 percent, Pashtuns 15 percent, Sindhis 14 percent, Saraikis 8 percent, Muhajirs 8 percent (Muslims who migrated from India in 1947), Balochis 4 percent, plus smaller groups. Religion: Sunni Islam covers about 80 percent (mostly Hanafi school), Shia Muslims (Twelver and Ismaili) run 15 to 20 percent with Ismailis concentrated in Hunza, Sufi traditions (Barelvi and Deobandi) define the popular culture of shrines and qawwali. Hindu communities (1.6 percent) live mainly in Sindh, Christians (1.3 percent) in Punjab and Karachi, with small Sikh and Parsi minorities.
The Indus Valley Civilization at Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa peaked 3,300 BCE to 1,300 BCE, among the earliest urban civilizations alongside Egypt, Mesopotamia, and the Yellow River. Gandhara Buddhism flowered 600 BCE to 500 CE, with Greek influence after Alexander's invasion in 326 BCE giving the Hellenistic-Buddhist syncretism at Taxila. The Mughal era from 1526 under Babur, then Akbar (1556-1605), Jahangir, Shah Jahan, and Aurangzeb shaped Lahore's monuments. Partition on August 14, 1947 created Pakistan, with India following on August 15. The displacement involved 14 to 20 million people and one to two million deaths through communal violence and the migration across the new border.
The Wagah-Attari border ceremony runs every evening at sunset, with synchronized flag-lowering by Pakistani Rangers and Indian BSF troops since 1959. Qawwali, the Sufi devotional music tradition, gained global recognition through Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan (1948-1997) and earned UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage listing in 2017 anniversary. Truck art covers freight vehicles on every highway with painted floral, geometric, calligraphic, and figurative designs.
Pre-trip Preparation Checklist
- Indian passport visa: contact a licensed Pakistani tour operator eight weeks ahead. Operator submits e-visa with sponsorship, hotel bookings, and itinerary. USD 60 fee, four to six weeks processing.
- Passport validity: minimum six months beyond return date with two blank pages.
- Tour bookings: confirm hotels, internal flights, jeep transfers, and trekking porters before visa submission.
- Return ticket: required for visa and at arrival immigration.
- Cash: US dollars in clean large bills for exchange in Lahore or Karachi. ATMs work in cities but not reliably in the north.
- Modest dress: shalwar kameez or equivalent, scarves for women, knee-length minimum.
- Electrical: plug types C, D, M on 230V 50Hz. UK and EU adapters work.
- Security advisory: check Foreign Office India, UK FCDO, and US State Department within the week before departure.
- Karakoram timing: April-October for Hunza and Skardu. June-September for the K2 region.
- Water: bottled only. SteriPen useful for village water.
- Medical: tetanus, hepatitis A and B, typhoid up to date. Diamox for altitude. Standard diarrhoea kit.
- SIM: Telenor or Jazz at the airport, around PKR 1,000 for 30 days unlimited data with passport copy.
Itineraries
Eight-day Lahore focused. Days 1-3: Lahore Fort, Shalimar Gardens, Wazir Khan Mosque, Badshahi Mosque, Walled City, Lahore Museum, food street. Day 4: Wagah border ceremony, return Lahore. Day 5: Day trip to Multan for shrines and sajji lunch. Day 6: Day trip to Taxila via Islamabad. Day 7: Islamabad (Faisal Mosque, Pakistan Monument, Margalla Hills). Day 8: Departure.
Twelve-day Lahore-Hunza-Islamabad. Days 1-3: Lahore. Day 4: Fly Lahore-Gilgit, drive Karimabad. Day 5: Baltit and Altit Forts, Karimabad walk. Day 6: Attabad Lake boat, Passu cones. Day 7: Khunjerab Pass day trip. Day 8: Naltar Valley, back to Gilgit. Day 9: Fly Gilgit-Islamabad. Day 10: Taxila full day. Day 11: Islamabad (Faisal Mosque, Lok Virsa Museum, Margalla Hills). Day 12: Departure.
Fifteen-day Lahore-Mohenjo-Daro-Hunza-K2 Base Camp. Days 1-2: Lahore highlights. Day 3: Fly Lahore-Karachi, Mazar-e-Quaid and Clifton Beach. Day 4: Drive to Mohenjo-Daro. Day 5: Mohenjo-Daro full day. Day 6: Fly Karachi-Islamabad, Taxila if light permits. Day 7: Skardu. Days 8-9: Shangri-La Lake, Upper Kachura, Deosai Plains. Day 10: Drive Askole for K2 group, or to Hunza. K2 group continues days 10-23 on the trek, returns Skardu day 24, flies Islamabad. Hunza route: days 11-13 Hunza highlights, day 14 fly Gilgit-Islamabad, day 15 departure.
Related Guides
- India Punjab Amritsar with Wagah border crossing context and Sikh heritage
- India Kashmir historic cultural cross reference and Mughal era continuity
- Afghanistan Bamiyan Buddhist heritage cross reference (current advisory permitting)
- China Xinjiang Kashgar at the eastern end of the Karakoram Highway
- Iran Mashhad Shia pilgrimage cross reference to Pakistani Shia communities
- Tajikistan Pamir Highway as the northern Silk Road extension from Khunjerab
External References
- Wikipedia, Pakistan country profile, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pakistan
- UNESCO World Heritage Centre, Mohenjo-Daro (1980), Taxila (1980), Lahore Fort and Shalimar Gardens (1981), Historical Monuments at Makli Thatta (1981), Buddhist Ruins of Takht-i-Bahi (1980), https://whc.unesco.org
- Pakistan Tourism Development Corporation, https://tourism.gov.pk
- Wikivoyage Pakistan travel guide, https://en.wikivoyage.org/wiki/Pakistan
- Lonely Planet Pakistan destination page, https://www.lonelyplanet.com/pakistan
Last updated: 2026-05-19
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