Kailash is not a destination. It is a confrontation with silence, with scale, with the part of yourself that has been waiting to be met beyond the noise of ordinary life.

Mount Kailash, Tibet

24 June 2026

35 to 40 seekers, held with intention

₹3,00,000 per person, all inclusive



At Kailash, the silence is so complete that you begin to hear what you have been drowning out for years.
Mount Kailash stands at 6,638 metres. It has never been climbed. Not because it is unreachable, but because some places are not meant to be conquered.
They are meant to be circumambulated, witnessed, and allowed to work on you in ways that the ordinary mind cannot initiate. The Kailash Yatra is a group journey of 35 to 40 seekers, held with intention throughout. Not a tour. Not a pilgrimage in the conventional sense.
A container for inner work, set against the most humbling geography on earth. Neeraj Gala leads the journey as a conscious guide, weaving dialogue, reflection, and presence practice throughout the expedition. The outer route is the Parikrama. The inner one is entirely your own.
Per person, all inclusive. Seats are limited to 35 to 40 seekers.

24 June 2026

Sacred geography, 6,638 metres

Intentionally held, not a tour group

Conscious guide and inner dialogue facilitator
Most people who come to Kailash arrive with a question they cannot quite articulate. Not a question about the mountain. A question about themselves. About what they have been carrying. About what is ready to be left behind. This journey creates the conditions for that question to surface and to be met. The altitude, the silence, the sheer scale of the landscape, the company of other honest seekers. All of it conspires to dissolve what is not essential. What remains, when the noise falls away, is what you actually came here to find.
The mountain does not care about your achievements. It only meets you as you actually are. That is the gift and the difficulty of Kailash.

The journey begins before the mountain. Travel, acclimatisation, and the gradual shedding of ordinary pace. The landscape begins its work before you arrive.

The circumambulation of Kailash. 52 kilometres. Three days. Each step an outer movement and an inner one. Dialogue and reflection are woven throughout.

What surfaces on the mountain needs space to settle. The return journey is not an ending. It is the beginning of what the mountain made visible.

The silence of Kailash is not the silence of a meditation room. It is geological. Absolute. It dissolves the mental noise that ordinary environments simply cannot quiet.

When external noise is removed, what remains is you. Not the performing version. Not the achieving version. The one that was always there beneath the roles.

People return from Kailash with decisions made, relationships seen differently, careers reconsidered. Not because of mysticism. Because of what honest silence reveals.
There is no religious requirement, no prior experience of pilgrimage, and no expectation of physical athleticism. What is required is a genuine willingness to be present and to be honest.
Kailash is not for the fit. It is not for the faithful. It is for the honest.
The journey is physically demanding but accessible with proper preparation. Neeraj and the team support every seeker throughout. You do not need to be an experienced trekker. You need to be genuinely ready. Seats are limited to 35 to 40 seekers to ensure the group remains a genuine container for inner work, not a crowd moving through a landscape.
Departure: 24 June 2026. Expression of interest does not confirm your seat. A brief conversation with Neeraj follows to ensure alignment before registration is complete.





You do not need to know what comes next. You only need to arrive honestly. The mountain does the rest.