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Last light on a Mongolian ridge line, the steppe rolling away into dusk.

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The best time to visit Mongolia

A month-by-month guide to when to travel in Mongolia, what is open in each season, and how the festivals and the weather should shape your dates.

Baska · Co-founder & route designer · June 10, 2026

The short answer most travelers are looking for: June, July, and August are the heart of the Mongolian travel season, and if you can only go once, go then. But the longer answer is worth a few minutes, because the right month depends on what you came to see — green steppe, a festival, the autumn Altai, or simply fewer people.

Mongolia has a sharp continental climate: short warm summers, long cold winters, and very little in between. That single fact shapes everything about when to come.

Summer — June, July, August (peak season)

This is when the country is at its best for travel. Days are long, the steppe is green, every ger camp is open, and the mountain passes in the north and west are clear. Daytime temperatures across the central regions sit comfortably in the low-to-mid twenties Celsius; nights are cool, especially at altitude.

  • June — the steppe is at its greenest and the rivers are full from snowmelt. Wildflowers in the Orkhon Valley, foals everywhere, and fewer travelers than the high weeks of July.
  • July — the warmest, busiest month, and the month of Naadam (see below). The Gobi is hot but very doable; the north and the lakes are perfect.
  • August — still warm and reliable, with the first hint of autumn light toward the end of the month. A good choice if you want peak conditions without the July festival crowds in Ulaanbaatar.

If this is your first trip, summer is the obvious window — and Central Mongolia or the Gobi, or the two combined on a single 8-to-10-day loop, is the obvious route.

Naadam — July 11 to 13

Naadam is Mongolia’s national festival: wrestling, archery, and horse racing, held nationwide but centered on Ulaanbaatar. The main days are fixed — July 11 to 13 every year, including 2026. Our 4-day Naadam tour is timed to the festival and pairs it with a day at Terelj National Park.

One practical warning: the city fills for Naadam. Accommodation and flights book out months ahead, so plan early if your dates land on the festival.

Shoulder season — May and September

These are our quiet-season favorites for travelers who would rather trade a little warmth for far fewer people.

  • May — the steppe greens up, days lengthen, and the countryside opens. Nights are still cold and a few high routes may not be ready, so May suits Central and the Gobi better than the far north.
  • September — arguably the most photogenic month. The light turns golden, the larch forests in the north begin to colour, and the air is crisp and clear. Camps are still open through most of the month.

Early October — the Golden Eagle Festival

If your trip is built around one thing, this is the other date to know. The Golden Eagle Festival takes place in early October in Bayan-Ölgii, where the Kazakh eagle hunters of the Altai gather to compete with their birds. It is cold, remote, and unlike anything else in the country. Our 8-day Golden Eagle tour is timed to the festival and reaches it by flight to Ölgii rather than the long overland drive.

Winter — November to April

We are honest about this: we do not run countryside tours from November through April. Most ger camps close, the unpaved sections become unreliable in the deep cold, and temperatures across much of the country fall well below freezing for months. Ulaanbaatar itself stays open and there are winter experiences to be had, but the long landscape routes this site is built around are summer-and-shoulder trips. If your only possible window is winter, write to us and we will tell you honestly what is and isn’t worth doing.

So when should you go?

  • First trip, want it easy and green: late June to August.
  • Festivals: July 11–13 for Naadam, early October for the Golden Eagle Festival.
  • Fewer people, beautiful light: May or September.
  • Photography and autumn colour: September.

Whatever your dates, the trip is shaped around them — we plan the route from your window and group size, not the other way round. If you have a month in mind and aren’t sure what it allows, the Plan a trip page lays out the common shapes by length and season, or just write to us with your dates and what you most want to see.

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If this was useful, the next step is either a fixed itinerary or a custom one. Both start with a conversation.

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