Mongolia, Wide Open
Move through Mongolia’s sweeping steppe, quiet horizons, and enduring nomadic traditions that continue to shape daily life across the land.
Inside the Heart of Mongolia
Wind-carved steppe, sacred mountains, river valleys, and rich pastureland—this journey moves through Mongolia’s Central Heartland, far from city sprawl and into landscapes shaped by deep history and belief. You’ll experience stark contrasts, from Ulaanbaatar’s creative scene to the granite and basalt formations of Khogno Khan (the Kingly Mountain), onward to the therapeutic hot springs of Tsenkher and the Orkhon River Valley, where green plains are dotted with ancient burial mounds.
About your trip
Mongolia is vast—one of the largest and least densely populated countries in the world—and each region carries its own rhythm, landscape, and way of life. Rather than rushing across thousands of kilometers, this journey is intentionally centered on the Central Heartland, often considered the cradle of Mongolia and the birthplace of Genghis Khan. The Central Heartland is often described in Mongolian cultural writing as the place where land, sky, and identity are inseparable, a perspective that comes into focus through the region’s living nomadic traditions and daily life shaped by the land itself.
The Gobi Desert and the northern taiga are extraordinary in their own right, but they demand the time and pacing of dedicated itineraries. By focusing on the Central Heartland, we’re able to go deeper—designing an experience that prioritizes context and connection over sheer distance, and allows you to travel with clarity, curiosity, and a strong sense of place.
What’s included
A professional photographer documenting the journey so you can stay present
Round-trip airport transfers
All activities listed in the itineraryAccommodations
8 breakfasts, 7 lunches, and 7 dinners
El Camino’s exclusive Eat, Play, Shop Guide
An experienced local host with you throughout the trip
Not included
Airfare in and out of the country
Incidental expenses
Alcohol except where noted
Tips for drivers, your local hosts, and photographers. We will provide suggested amounts.
Travelers must provide evidence that they have purchased travel insurance for the duration of their journey. If you’d like to upgrade to a single room, you can add this during the booking process. If you need assistance please contact our Customer Success team.
Dates + Prices
September 5-13, 2026
$5,500 for Shared Room
$6,300 for Private Room
Itinerary
Flight
☞ Please remember to book separately
Day 1
☞ Arrival in Ulaanbaatar (UBN) | Welcome Dinner at Art Gallery
Day 2
☞ Spiritual Mongolia | Cooking Experience | Creative Encounters Across the City
Day 3
☞ Khogno Khan Nature Reserve | Camel Trek Across the Sand Dunes
Day 4
☞ Sacred Mountain Walk | Overland Journey into the Central Heartland | Tsetserleg Town Exploration
Day 5
☞ Yak Herding Traditions | Lunch with a Local Family | Tsenkher Hot Springs
Day 6
☞ Orkhon River Valley | A Slow Day in Wide-Open Nature | Horseback Ride
Day 7
☞ Kharkhorin & the Orkhon Valley | Cultural Landmarks | Mongolian Barbecue Dinner
Day 8
☞ Return to Ulaanbaatar | Flexible Afternoon | Farewell Dinner
Day 9
☞ Departure from Ulaanbaatar
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Arrival in Ulaanbaatar
Монголд тавтай морилно уу! Welcome to Mongolia! Upon landing at Chinggis Khaan International Airport, you’ll be met by our driver team for a complimentary transfer to your hotel. Take time to settle in, rest, and adjust before gathering for a relaxed welcome dinner—your first introduction to Mongolian cuisine and the flavors that will shape the days ahead.
Accommodations: Boutique hotel in a central location
Meals included: Welcome Dinner
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Spiritual Ulaanbaatar & the Ger Districts
Begin the day at the most important active Buddhist monastery in Mongolia and a living center of spiritual life in the capital. Founded in the 19th century, Gandan remained partially open during the socialist era, making it a powerful symbol of religious continuity and resilience. As monks chant and carry out daily rituals, local people come to pray, make offerings, and seek guidance—offering a firsthand view into how Buddhism continues to shape everyday life in contemporary Mongolia.
From there, you’ll head into one of Ulaanbaatar’s ger districts, residential neighborhoods made up of traditional felt gers and small homes that extend across the hills surrounding the city. Home to over half of the city’s population, these districts are central to urban life rather than peripheral. The specific area where we will go offers a panoramic view of these ger districts, helping to provide insight into contemporary life in the city beyond apartment blocks and tourist areas. You’ll spend the late morning at a community-driven social enterprise that provides a safe, welcoming gathering space for children and families. Using their kitchen and communal space, you’ll prepare lunch together—often dishes like tuisvan or khuushuur—while directly supporting the organization.
In the afternoon, you’ll spend time with the entrepreneurs and makers shaping Ulaanbaatar’s contemporary creative landscape. From women-led cooperatives working with traditional materials to independent artists and designers pushing new ideas forward, the day offers a grounded look at the people driving Mongolia’s creative economy and the innovations emerging from it.
Accommodations: Boutique hotel in a central location
Meals included: Breakfast and Lunch
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Sacred Mountains of Khogno Khan
Travel west into the Khogno Khan Nature Reserve, where granite mountains rise from open steppe and pockets of sand interrupt the plains. Enter a landscape shaped by Tengriism, Mongolia’s ancient spiritual tradition centered on reverence for the sky, the land, and the natural forces that govern balance and fate. Within this worldview, mountains act as living guardians. Here, generations gather at ovoo—stone cairns built along ridgelines and passes—to circle, leave offerings, and ask for protection and harmony. Local oral histories speak of Khogno Khan as a watchful presence, while the remains of monasteries anchor later Buddhist traditions of retreat and reflection.
Step into the Elsen Tasarkhai sand dunes, often called the Mini-Gobi, a narrow band of sand shaped by ancient river systems and prevailing winds. Walk from grassland into dunes, cross wetlands and granite outcrops, and experience the sharp geographic shifts that define central Mongolia. Notice how herding families continue to use this terrain seasonally, treating the dunes not as desert but as part of a lived, working landscape.
Spend the afternoon exploring on foot or set out on a camel trek with a local camel-herding family, moving slowly through a landscape defined by scale, silence, and change.
Accommodations: Traditional ger camp—simple, atmospheric stays with shared shower and bathroom facilities.
Meals included: Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner
Your Itinerary
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Tsetserleg, A Provincial Capital of Faith and Daily Life
Begin the morning with a hike to a small hillside monastery set within the Khogno Khan landscape, following a circular trail that climbs gradually through granite outcrops and open steppe. The route offers wide views across the surrounding valleys and a quiet introduction to the terrain you’ll continue moving through today.
Continue west into the Central Heartland and arrive in Tsetserleg, a working provincial capital that has long functioned as a spiritual and administrative center for the Khangai region. From the 17th century, the town grew around Zayain Gegeen Monastery, one of the most influential Buddhist institutions in central and western Mongolia. It served as a hub for worship, education, pilgrimage, and artistic production until much of its monastic life was destroyed during the socialist purges of the 1930s. That history remains visible today: some former temple buildings have been revived as active monasteries, while others house the Arkhangai Museum, preserving Buddhist art, ritual objects, and historical artifacts that survived the purges. Together, these spaces form a landscape of belief that is neither abandoned nor frozen in time, but still embedded in local life.
Spend the afternoon wandering Tsetserleg’s central market, a practical, everyday space shaped by the needs of the surrounding pastoral economy. Browse stalls selling meat and dairy products from nearby herding families, sacks of flour and rice, seasonal vegetables, wild berries, and dried curds (aaruul). Pass vendors offering household goods, clothing, tools, and horse tack, alongside small cafés and canteens serving simple meals. Walk tree-lined streets lined with Soviet-era buildings, schools, shops, and monasteries, and observe a town that functions as a service center—supporting herding communities with supplies, healthcare, education, and trade rather than catering to tourism.
Depending on timing, stop at a local café known for its pastries and coffee—widely considered some of the best in rural Mongolia—before settling in for the evening.
Accommodations: Modest hotel with en suite rooms, offering a comfortable break before heading deeper into the countryside
Meals included: Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner
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Yak Herding Life in the Khangai Mountains & Tsenkher Hot Springs
Travel into the Khangai Mountains, one of Mongolia’s oldest and most important mountain systems, long valued as a life-supporting heartland rather than a frontier. Move through high-altitude grasslands and forested valleys that have provided reliable pasture, water, and shelter for centuries. The cooler climate and terrain make this region especially well suited to yak herding, and it remains one of the country’s key centers for yak and yak–cattle hybrid families today.
Spend the morning with a local yak-herding family, stepping directly into daily routines. Help comb yaks for their wool, try milking under guidance when conditions allow, and take part in the early stages of turning milk into everyday dairy products. Move between pasture, yard, and workspace as the morning unfolds, experiencing how care for animals, land, and food are closely linked.
Join your local guides in preparing a simple, home-cooked lunch, often centered around hand-cut noodles or dumplings.
In the afternoon, continue on to Tsenkher Hot Springs, where warm mineral pools rise from the forested steppe. Soak, rest, and slow the pace in a landscape shaped by pasture, water, and long-standing patterns of movement across the land.
Accommodations: Traditional ger camp—simple, atmospheric stays with shared shower and bathroom facilities.
Meals included: Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner
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Riding the Orkhon River Valley
Travel into the Orkhon River Valley, a UNESCO World Heritage landscape shaped by rolling hills, open pasture, and the broad sweep of the river itself. Long a spiritual, political, and pastoral center of Mongolia, the valley’s scale only fully registers once you arrive—wide horizons, slow-moving herds, and long stretches of open pasture.
Settle into the ger camp and take the afternoon at your own pace, whether that means walking the valley floor, following the river’s edge, or resting on site.
For those who ride, set out on horseback with a local herding family, riding horses that are part of everyday herding life. With no designated route, the ride follows the contours of the valley, guided by people for whom this landscape is home rather than a marked trail. The experience offers a way of moving through the Orkhon that reflects daily use and long-standing familiarity with the land.
Accommodations: Traditional ger camp—simple, atmospheric stays with shared bathroom facilities. Please note that showers are not available at this camp; instead, a hot towel service is provided.
Meals included: Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner
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Kharkhorin, Empire Legacy & Mongolian Barbecue
Travel a short distance to Kharkhorin, the former capital of the Mongol Empire and a central site within the Orkhon River Valley UNESCO World Heritage landscape. Spend the day moving between monasteries and museums that trace the region’s political, religious, and artistic importance—from imperial power to Buddhist influence—offering context for how this valley shaped Mongolia’s past and continues to inform its present.
In the evening, gather for a traditional Mongolian barbecue, prepared communally using methods shaped by nomadic life on the steppe. Meat is slowly cooked using heated stones layered inside a lidded pot, allowing residual heat to do the work. The process is unhurried and social, with time spent talking, watching, and waiting as the meal comes together. Once ready, the stones are passed hand to hand—a customary gesture believed to support wellbeing—before the meal is shared together, followed by the rich broth produced during cooking. More than a technique, the barbecue reflects a way of eating rooted in shared time, fire, and community.
Accommodations: Traditional ger camp—simple, atmospheric stays with shared shower and bathroom facilities.
Meals included: Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner
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Return to Ulaanbaatar
Make the full-day journey back to Ulaanbaatar, traveling across some of the widest and most varied landscapes of the Central Heartland. It’s a long stretch on the road, but the shifting scenery—steppe, hills, and open sky—offers a final, memorable look at Mongolia’s scale.
Once back in the city, the rest of the day stays flexible. In the evening, we’ll gather for a farewell dinner to close out the journey and share reflections from the week.
Accommodations: Boutique hotel in a central location
Meals included: Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner
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Departure from Ulaanbaatar
After breakfast, transfer to the airport for your onward journey. As you depart Mongolia, you’ll carry with you the wide-open landscapes of the Central Heartland and the moments of connection that shaped your time here.
Meals included: Breakfast
Important Notes
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Our small group trips are intentionally designed for a specific kind of traveler.
Before booking, all travelers must read and agree to our Traveler Values. This ensures we’re aligned on expectations, travel style, and how we show up—for each other and for the communities we visit.
By joining an El Camino small group trip, you’re confirming that:
You are open-minded, curious, and present—more interested in the moment than perfection.
You enjoy stepping outside your comfort zone and are excited to engage with cultures different from your own.
You’ve read the full itinerary, understand the travel style and accommodations, and feel comfortable with what’s outlined.
You recognize that you’re visiting places where daily rhythms may differ from home, and you approach those differences with patience and respect.
You understand that travel can be unpredictable, and that last-minute changes due to weather, logistics, or local circumstances are sometimes unavoidable.
You’re adaptable, easy-going, and able to roll with changes—knowing that some of the best moments come from the unexpected.
You know you can opt out of any activity at any time, and will communicate openly with your guide when you do.
If concerns arise, you’re willing to raise them directly with your local host or the El Camino team so we can address them proactively.
You value inclusivity and are excited to travel alongside people from different backgrounds, experiences, and perspectives.
You show up with generosity—toward fellow travelers, local partners, and the places we’re privileged to visit.
Our trips are rooted in responsible tourism, mutual respect, and shared experience. Agreeing to these values helps ensure a positive, connected journey for everyone involved.
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Most Mongolia itineraries try to cover too much—crossing vast distances to squeeze in the Gobi, the northern taiga, and the Central Heartland all in one trip. The result is days spent rushing between locations instead of actually experiencing them. We take a different approach.
We’ve intentionally centered this journey in the Central Heartland, a region that captures Mongolia’s cultural backbone, historic sites, and the everyday rhythms of herding life. By not stretching across the entire country, you’ll have the time and space to understand how the landscape, nomadic traditions, and community life intersect here. There are still long car rides—Mongolia’s size makes that unavoidable—but they’re far more manageable than trying to cover multiple regions in a single week.
You’ll explore the former capital of the Mongol Empire, walk sacred mountain trails, spend time with a yak-herding family, and soak in the natural hot springs that locals visit. Each experience is designed for depth, not speed—offering a grounded understanding of a region that is often overlooked in favor of headline destinations.
Rather than skimming Mongolia at a distance, you’ll experience one of its most defining regions in a way most travelers don’t: by slowing down, staying longer, and engaging meaningfully with the people and places that shape the Central Heartland.
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This isn’t about content creation or social media—it’s about presence. Having a photographer allows travelers to fully experience a place and the people they meet, without feeling pressure to document every moment themselves.
The photographers we work with are highly respected professionals who know how to move quietly, capture real moments, and tell the story of a journey with sensitivity and care.
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Fly into and out of Chinggis Khaan International Airport (UBN) in Ulaanbaatar.
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We encourage travelers to arrive no later than 1 pm. This gives you enough time to settle in before the welcome dinner.
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This trip is designed for travelers with an adventurous spirit—the kind of person who values meaningful experiences over polished comforts and understands that some of Mongolia’s most compelling places come with extremely limited infrastructure. Accommodations in the Central Heartland are simple and basic, but for the right traveler, that’s part of the appeal: the chance to experience a way of life and a landscape that simply doesn’t exist in many other destinations.
This traveler is open-minded, curious, and comfortable with unpredictability. They appreciate long drives through wide-open terrain, shared facilities at ger camps, and days shaped by the rhythm of the land rather than a rigid timetable. They enjoy learning from local families, spending time outdoors, and immersing themselves in a culture that operates at a very different pace from their own.
This trip also works well for solo travelers who prefer to journey with a small, interesting group rather than navigate Mongolia alone, and for anyone who wants a thoughtfully designed experience without spending countless hours planning it themselves.
Our adventurous style of group travel is not for everyone. Please read the itinerary and this description carefully to make sure this trip aligns with your comfort level.
Please review our Traveler’s Values here prior to booking.
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We are not a luxury travel company, but we’re not budget either. At El Camino Travel, our version of “high-low” is rooted in culture. We believe that a destination reveals itself through contrast—shared meals in family homes and thoughtfully chosen dinners in the city, afternoons spent with artisans and evenings at design-forward spaces, moments of stillness in nature and moments of creative energy in local studios. Both ends of the spectrum matter, and both are essential to understanding a place.
In Mongolia, this philosophy takes on a unique shape. Once we leave Ulaanbaatar, the Central Heartland offers very limited accommodation options, and ger camps are the most authentic and realistic way to experience the region. These camps are atmospheric and culturally significant, but they come with basic amenities and shared facilities. For our most adventurous travelers, this is part of the experience—a chance to engage with a landscape and way of life that can’t be replicated elsewhere.
Our approach remains the same: prioritize deep cultural experiences, meaningful relationships with local partners, and design-forward choices where possible. But Mongolia requires flexibility and an openness to the realities of rural travel in a country defined by vast distances and nomadic traditions.
Luxury travel in Mongolia takes a very different form. High-end outfitters typically create private, mobile camps built exclusively for each group—a model that starts around $10,000–$15,000 per person. Our boutique approach keeps the experience more accessible while still offering depth, intention, and an entry point into a region few travelers explore in this way.
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Accommodations & Rooming
Our standard pricing is based on shared double rooms or shared gers. This helps keep the trip accessible and allows us to operate responsibly in a region where accommodations and infrastructure are limited. If you’re traveling with a friend, partner, or family member, let us know and we’ll room you together.
Traveling solo? Most of our travelers do. Before departure, we’ll connect with you to understand your preferences and match you with a compatible roommate. If you have any questions or concerns about sharing a room or ger, we’re always happy to talk them through.
Single Room Upgrades
Single room upgrades are available only in locations where the infrastructure allows. If you book a private room, it will apply on the following nights:
Ulaanbaatar: Day 1 (arrival), Day 2, and the final night back in the city
Tsetserleg: Day 4
Kharkhorin: Day 7
All other nights are spent in traditional ger camps, where private single-room options do not exist due to the structure and capacity of the camps.
If guaranteed single rooms are sold out at checkout, please email us at info@elcamino.travel, and we’ll let you know if any additional availability can be secured.
About Ger Camps (Important)
Please read this section carefully, as it’s essential to understanding the accommodations on this trip.
Ger camps are permanent camps made up of traditional felt gers, similar to yurts, adapted for travelers. Staying in a ger camp is closer to comfortable camping than to a hotel experience. Each ger typically includes beds, bedding, and a central stove (used depending on the weather), with shared dining and washing facilities on site.
Some camps are connected to the electrical grid, while others rely on generators. Most draw water from wells rather than a continuous supply, which can affect shower pressure and availability. This is part of staying in rural Mongolia and requires patience, flexibility, and a sense of adventure.
What to Expect Overall
Ulaanbaatar: Clean, safe, well-located boutique hotels
Central Heartland: Traditional ger camps—simple, atmospheric stays with shared bathroom and shower facilities
Ger camps are the most realistic way to experience rural Mongolia and are best suited for travelers who are comfortable with limited infrastructure.
We reserve accommodations well in advance to keep the group together. That said, rural Mongolia has limited infrastructure, and unexpected changes can happen. If anything shifts, we’ll communicate promptly and ensure a suitable alternative.
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We have a roster of well qualified hosts that we work with. Prior to your trip, you will receive a welcome packet that will inform you on who will be guiding your adventure. We proudly work with local hosts because no one is better equipped to provide layer upon layer of context than someone who is actually from there.
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A non-refundable deposit of 30% of the total trip cost is due at booking. The remaining balance is due 90 days prior to departure.
Please read our Booking Terms and Conditions for more information about our cancellation policy.
Payment plans are now available using Affirm. Apply now to make monthly payments.
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Our trips are active and require travelers to be comfortable walking, standing, and moving across varied terrain. In Mongolia, this can include uneven ground, hills, steps, and walking in open landscapes without paved paths. While we work to accommodate different needs, alternative transportation is not always available in rural areas, and many experiences—such as monastery visits, walks in the steppe, or time in the dunes—require moving on foot.
Travelers should be able to walk up to 3–4 miles a day, navigate stairs and inclines, and stand for extended periods. Days also include long car rides due to Mongolia’s size and limited infrastructure, and getting in and out of vehicles frequently is part of the experience.
If you have concerns about the activity level, have recently had surgery, or have a history of mobility issues, please reach out to us at info@elcamino.travel before booking. We want to ensure every traveler can safely participate and fully enjoy the itinerary. By signing up for this trip, you acknowledge that a certain level of physical fitness is required for travel in Mongolia.
