AFGHANISTAN HIGHLIGHTS

Overview

Required number to run this tour: 2 or 2+ people

April 1-10, 2025     May 13-22, 2025          Sep 16-25, 2025        Oct 21-30, 2025

This is a 10-day tour to KABUL- HERAT- BAMYAN- BAND E AMIR- SAMANGAN- MAZAR E SHARIF AND BALKH DISTRICT which starts and ends at Kabul airport. The date is open for someone who can not join this tour on these dates. The tour is suitable for both solo and group travelers.

Being part of daily life and visiting sacred and historical places and tourist attractions are some of the experiences this trip will bring you along with tasting the best local delicacies.

Included/Excluded

  • Invitation Letter
  • Permit Costs and Taxes
  • Pick up and Drop off
  • English-Speaking Tour Guide
  • All Road Transportation
  • All Accommodation
  • All Site Entries
  • All Meals (Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner)
  • Bottled Water
  • Visa Fee
  • Flights
  • Afghan Clothing

Tour Plan

Day 1 Arrival in Kabul

Kabul, capital of Afghanistan since 1776.

  • Pick up by the tour guide and driver. Hotel check-in and a short briefing of the tour by the guide. Breakfast or lunch if needed
  • Money exchange and going to a tailor shop for the local outfit/shirt
  • Touring Kabul depending on what time remains: First of all, we will take you to BiBi Mahroo hill (the big flag) to have a bird’s eye view of Kabul city
  • Visiting the oldest market, Mandawi bazaar and the Bird market. Walking around Pul-e-Khishti Mosque (1793-1800), Nadir Pushtun Wat, Chahar Chatta bazaar and Pul-e-Bagh-e-Omumi to catch the atmosphere of Kabul. Visiting Mandawi Bazaar in Kabul, is an experience as it is not only a market but an amazing insight into life here – you will find blacksmiths, many street traders, butchers, bakeries, Banjara, fresh and dried fruits. You will visit the little Afghanistan there
  • Visiting the Shah-Do-Shamshira Mosque (1544) relates to an early legend concerning the arrival of Islam in Kabul
  • Kabuli Paluo, the best local meal in Afghanistan will be served
  • Breakfast, lunch and dinner
  • Accommodation: Khyber Hotel
Day 2 Towards Herat
  • Towards Herat by a flight and registration at the Provincial Afghan Tour Department
  • Visiting the Musallah Complex, designed and built (1417) under Queen Gawhar Shad, wife of Shah Rukh, son of Amir Taimur (Taimur Lang), artistic director. Most of these great works of art were irretrievably demolished under the direction of Amir Abdurahman and British troops in 1885 and some of them were subsequently downed by earthquakes. Only three examples remain:  1- Queen Gawhar Shad’s mausoleum, (inside are the tombstones of the Queen 1457, her son Baisunghur and various grandsons and great-grandsons), 2- the mausoleum of Mir Ali Sher Nawai (died in 1501), the prime minister of Sultan Husain Baiqara (1468-1506), last of the Timurid rulers in Herat. 3- The 5 minarets out of a total of 20 minarets, (4 of them stood at the four corners of a Madrassa built by Sultan Husain Baiqara).
  • Visiting the Masjid-e-Jami or Friday Mosque. The form in which it stands today was originally laid out on the site of an earlier 10th century mosque in the year 1200 by the Ghorid Sultan Ghiyasuddin (died 1202). His unadorned tomb lies under a dome situated behind the north iwan (portal). Today’s restoration of the mosque continues a tradition of architectural decoration of Timurid (15th century).
  • There is a Madrasa (Islamic school) inside the mosque where students continue a tradition active in the mosque since the 10th century.
  • Pushti Kabab, one of the best local meals will be served
  • Breakfast, lunch and dinner
  • Accommodation: Sadaf Hotel
Day 3 Herat around
  • Visiting the Citadel of Alexander the Great 330 B.C. and built in its present form by the Kart Malik Fakhruddin in 1305 A.D. Genghis Khan and Amir Timur (Timuri Lang) fought beneath its walls and it was the heart of the Timurid Empire for a hundred years (1405-1506) after that fighting.
  • Walking around the old city of Herat. The four main bazaars of the old city come together at a center square called the Chahrsuq or Four Bazaar. In addition to the old shops lining the streets there are several covered bazaars in the vicinity. covered bazaars are now rarely to be seen outside of Herat and visitors are encouraged to include a visit to a a few of these bazaars.
  • You will visit the neighborhood of Jewish Afghans who were forced to leave their country years ago and their Synagogues and bath.
  • Visiting the Caravanserais located on Silk Road around Chahrsuq.
  • Visiting the Malan bridge 1100AD.
  • A visit to the Shrine of Khwaja Abdullah Ansari, the celebrated Sufi poet and philosopher who was born in Herat in 1006 and died here in 1088. Here Shah Rukh built many buildings which were lavishly decorated with brilliant tilework. Work began in 1425. Inside the shrine there is a most remarkable and must see sarcophagus, called the Haft Qalam Stone (Seven Pens) which is fashioned of black marble and dates from the reign of Sultan Husain Baiqara (1468-1506)
  • Dizzi, a local meal will be served
  • Breakfast, lunch and dinner
  • Accommodation: Sadaf Hotel
Day 4 Back to Kabul- Drive to Bamyan
  • Back to Kabul by a flight and drive to Bamyan after lunch in Kabu. This is a 4-hour beautiful drive, traveling through the fascinating Hajigak Pass (3700 m: 12,140 ft.), with stops at picturesque rest areas to refresh and take unforgettable photos
  • Breakfast, lunch and dinner
  • Accommodation: Gholghula Hotel
Day 5 Bamyan Around
  • Registration with the Provincial Afghan Tour Department
  • Visiting the ruins of Buddha Statues (once tallest standing Buddhas in the world), the Large Buddha, 55 m: 180 ft high (late 5th to the early 7th centuries A.D.). The Small Buddha, 38 m: 125 feet high (the 3rd or very early 4th centuries A.D.). Both were demolished by the Taliban in 2001
  • Visiting the ruins of Gholghula City (The City of Screams), one of the eight UNISCO Heritage Sites in Bamyan. Build by Ghaznavids (977-1186) and demolished by Genghis Khan in 1221
  • A visit to the ruins of Zuhak City (The Red City). The fortress is believed  to have been founded between 500-600 A.D. by the Hephthalites, around the same time as the Buddhas of Bamyan were created and demolished by Genghis Khan in 1221
  • Visiting the people who live in caves
  • Walking around downtown and bazaar, meeting people and their daily life and culture
  • Breakfast, lunch and dinner
  • Accommodation: Gholghula Hotel
Day 6 Band e Amir Blue Lakes
  • A full day hiking and sightseeing around Band-e-Amir Blue Lakes. Altitude: 2916 m: 9567 ft. There are five lakes in all. The largest lake, Band-e-Zulfiqar is four miles long and…
  • Lamb Roosh, one of the most popular local meals in Bamyan will be served
  • Breakfast, lunch and dinner
  • Accommodation: Gholghula Hotel
Day 7 Towards Samangan
  • This is a 10-hour drive passing through Salang Tunnel (Hindu Kush mountains). Altitude of 3363 m: 11034 ft. and 2,7 km: 1,7 mi. long. Work began in August 1958 and was officially opened in November 1964.
  • We will drive through another fascinating road, Dara-e-Ghurband, through the Shibar Pass. It winds along beside the Ghorband River. We will pass Sia Gird district and many local bazaars and markets
  • You will pass through Parwan and Baghlan (Pul-e-Khumri) provinces
  • Many stops on the way for photography and lunch
  • Kabab, the most popular local meal will be served
  • Breakfast, lunch and dinner
  • Accommodation: Riaz Hotel
Day 8 Samangan and Balkh District

There is an important Buddhist site dating from the 4th – 5th centuries A.D, Takht-e-Rustam stone stupa in Samangan. The dome-shaped structure of highly polished limestone, 8 meters high and 28 meters across, is encircled by a two-meter wide passageway at its foot which was used by pilgrims for circumambulation. On the slope of the hill where this stupa is located, there is a monastery complex (Cave 1, a large round room with two niches originally sheltering statues of the Buddha. Cave 2, there are numerous individual cells once used by Buddhist monks as retreats. Cave 3, is similar to Cave 1. Cave 4, a series of four small rooms, served as the bathhouse. Cave 5, as a lavatory.) Destroyed by the Hephthalites c. 460 A.D.

Balkh, is a town of prodigious antiquity where Zoroaster preached sometime between 1000 and 600 B.C. Alexander the Great chose if for his base from 329-327 B.C. Under the Kushans, when Buddhism was practiced throughout Afghanistan, many holy Buddhist temples flourished in Balkh. The Arabs, the bearers of Islam, called Balkh the Mother of Towns, so impressed were they with its magnificence but in 1220 Genghis Khan left it utterly devastated. Balkh was abandoned for Mazar-e-Sharif in 1866

  • Registration with the Provincial Afghan Tour Department
  • Visiting the stupa-m0nastery complex at Samangan
  • Visiting Bagh-e-Jahanama and the palace (Jahanama garden) built in 1890-92 by Abdur Rahman the king. This palace is Central Asian in style
  • A 2 hour drive to Mazar-e-Sharif registration and a short drive to Balkh District
  • Visiting Masjid-e-Haji Piyada or Nuh Gunbad Mosque (early years of the 9th century A.D.) the earliest Islamic monument yet identified in Afghanistan
  • A visit to Khwaja Abu Nasr Parsa Mosque (built in the late Timurid style) and to the tomb of Rabia Balkhi (1964) the first woman of the Islamic period to compose poems in Persian
  • Visiting the ruins of the Mawlana Jalaluddin Balkhi (known in the west as Rumi) abbey. Rumi was born in Balkh in 1207. Perhaps the most eminent sufi poet of all time
  • Visiting Burj-e-Ayaran Wall (the city wall). The whole city was rounded by this massive wall with stout towers. and finally a visit to Bala Hisar-e-Balkh
  • Mantu and Ashak, the most popular local meals in Mazar-e-Sharif will be served
  • Breakfast, lunch and dinner
  • Accommodation: Arsalan Hotel and Guesthouse
Day 9 Back to Kabul and Kabul Around
  • Visiting the Blue Mosque of Mazar-e-Sharif, built in 1136 by the great Seljuk Sultan, Sanjar. Genghis Khan destroyed it in 1221, having heard there was great treasure beneath its pillars. The reign of the Timurid Sultan Husain Baiqara rebuilt it in 1481.
  • Back to Kabul by a flight
  • A visit to the UNISCO Heritage Site,  iconic Babur Garden built by the Mughal Emperor Babur Shah (1528 CE). There are a beautiful marble mosque build by the Moghul Emperor Shah Jahan (1646) and the modest tomb of Babur, founder of the Moghul dynasty of India. A son, Mirza Hindal, and a a grandson, Mohammad Hakim Mirza, lie beside him. A daughter, Nawab Gawhar Nisa Begum, lies to the west of the emperor: a grand-daughter, Roqia Sultan Begum, daughter of Mirza Hindal, lies on the upper terrace.
  • A visit to Kabul’s Bala Hissar or high Fort (rising 150 feet above the plain), witnessed most of the exciting vents of Afghanistan history up until the spring of 1880.  Babur, founder of the Mogul Empire of India, lived here early in the 16th century.  Succeeding kings alternately ruled from it or languished in its dungeons.
  • A visit to Ziarat-e-Sakhi or Sakhi Shrine. This is a beautiful and important shrine of Kabul where the Cloak of the Prophet was kept for a few days as it was conveyed from Badakhshan to Kandahar during the reign of Ahmad Shah Durrani (1747-1772)
  • Breakfast, lunch and dinner
  • Accommodation: Khyber Hotel
Day 10 Back Home
  • We will take you to Chicken Street (antique market). You will find all kinds of handicrafts, Afghan handmade Rugs, gemstones, calligraphy, glass miniatures and oil paintings, antique and ornamental works in Chicken Street.

Finally, after a 10-day tour to Afghanistan with lots of unique experiences and heart touching stories we will drop you at the Kabul airport for your flight back home.
Brdakfast and lunch
End of the tour.

Tour Map

From
$ 1,700 $ 2,000
Enquiry Form
1
$ 1,700
Deposit Option $ 0 Per item
Available:
Total:
1
$ 1,700