
Attabad Lake was born in January 2010 when a landslide dammed the Hunza river; today its 21 km of improbable turquoise carry boats, jet-skis and the KKH's tunnel bypass, with Luxus Hunza's water-front suites on its shore. Midday sun ignites the colour; boats run March–November.
The lake's beauty carries a memory — the village of Attabad lies beneath it, and boatmen who lived through 2010 tell the story with a survivor's precision. SafarGB's crossings use those boatmen deliberately: the colour brings you, the history keeps you quiet on the ride back.
The 'Attabad blue' is real, not filtered: rock flour suspended in glacial melt scatters exactly this wavelength. It peaks under high sun between 11:00 and 14:00 — the rare Karakoram sight that prefers midday.
20 min north of Karimabad through the KKH tunnels. Luxus and the boat jetties sit on the eastern shore; our Hunza itineraries stay the night on the water.
Questions, answered
Why is Attabad Lake so blue?
Fine glacial rock flour in the meltwater scatters short blue-green wavelengths — the same physics as Moraine Lake in Canada, at twice the scale and with the Karakoram Highway running through a tunnel beside it.
Are the boats safe?
Licensed boats with jackets are standard now; we book established operators and skip the jet-ski cluster for quieter water further up-lake.
