Bhutan Reisgids
Essentiële reisinformatie — alarmnummers, veiligheid, valuta, visa, gebruiken en vervoer.
Bhutan is one of the safest countries in the world for travelers, with very low rates of violent crime and a stable, peaceful society. Most visitors travel with a guide, and the controlled tourism model means logistics are well managed. The main genuine risks are environmental rather than criminal: high-altitude conditions (altitude sickness above ~3,000m), winding mountain roads with steep drops and occasional landslides during the monsoon, and changeable weather that can delay flights. Standard precautions, good travel insurance covering mountain travel and medical evacuation, and acclimatization for high-altitude treks are the key concerns.
Bhutanese ngultrum (BTN)
Types D, F, and G; 230V, 50Hz
Tipping is not traditionally part of Bhutanese culture but has become common with tourism. It is customary to tip your guide and driver at the end of a tour (a modest discretionary amount per day is appreciated). Restaurant and hotel tipping is not expected, though rounding up or leaving small change is welcomed. Tips are best given in cash.
Two main mobile operators, B-Mobile (Bhutan Telecom) and TashiCell, sell prepaid tourist SIM cards with data; you can buy one at Paro airport or in Thimphu with your passport. Coverage is good in towns and along main roads but patchy in remote mountain valleys. Free Wi-Fi is available in many hotels and cafes but can be slow; download maps offline before heading into rural areas.
Almost all foreign visitors (except citizens of India, and historically Bangladesh and the Maldives) require a visa, which must be arranged in advance and is issued online. Independent travel is permitted, but visitors must pay a Sustainable Development Fee (SDF) — around USD 100 per person per night for most international tourists (reduced rates apply for certain nationalities, children, and Indian nationals who pay a lower fee). The visa application and SDF are processed through the official online portal or a registered Bhutanese tour operator; book well ahead.
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Public transport is limited. Thimphu and larger towns have local city buses and shared taxis, and intercity public buses run on main routes but are basic and infrequent. There is no metro or rail network anywhere in the country. Most tourists rely on the private guide-and-driver arrangement included in their tour package rather than public buses.
DrukRide, Taxi (metered/negotiated, hailed on street)
Travel is overwhelmingly by road on winding mountain highways; the main lateral road links Paro, Thimphu, Punakha, and points east, but journeys are slow (e.g., Thimphu to Bumthang can take 8-10 hours). Most foreign visitors travel with a licensed guide and private vehicle/driver, which is the standard and recommended way to move between regions. Domestic flights connect Paro to Bumthang (Jakar), Gelephu, and Yongphula on small aircraft, though they are weather-dependent. Paro International Airport is the only international airport and famously one of the world's most challenging to land at.
- • Always walk clockwise around stupas (chortens), prayer wheels, monasteries, and other religious monuments, keeping the structure on your right.
- • Remove your shoes and hat before entering temples and dzongs, and dress modestly with shoulders and knees covered; ask permission before photographing altars (often forbidden).
- • Bhutan banned the sale and public smoking of tobacco for years and remains highly restrictive; smoke only in designated areas and never inside religious or government buildings.
- • Show deep respect for the King and royal family; defacing or disrespecting images of the King or Buddhist symbols is taken very seriously.
- • The phallus is a traditional protective symbol (linked to the 'Divine Madman' Drukpa Kunley); colorful phallus paintings on house walls are auspicious, not crude — treat them respectfully.
- • Greet people with a slight bow and accept gifts, food, or tea with both hands; it is polite to initially decline an offer once or twice before accepting.
Modest, conservative dress is expected, especially at religious sites and dzongs (fortress-monasteries) where shoulders and knees must be covered and no hats or revealing clothing are allowed. Locals wear the national dress — the gho (men) and kira (women) — which is legally required in government offices, schools, and during formal or religious occasions. Carry warm layers for high-altitude evenings.
Bhutan is a deeply Buddhist (Vajrayana/Drukpa Kagyu) society and religion permeates daily life. Always move clockwise around religious structures, spin prayer wheels clockwise, and never point your feet toward altars, statues, or monks. Do not touch sacred objects, climb on stupas, or photograph the interiors of temples where prohibited. Remove shoes and headwear before entering, speak quietly, and ask before taking photos of monks or ceremonies. Stepping over religious texts or sitting above an altar is considered highly disrespectful.
Archery (Dha) — Archery is Bhutan's national sport and a beloved cultural institution, played at village, district, and national levels with both traditional bamboo bows and modern compound bows. Matches are festive, raucous social events featuring teasing chants, celebratory dances by teammates after each hit, and players in traditional gho. Targets are set an astonishing ~145 meters apart. Other traditional games include khuru (a heavy outdoor dart-throwing game) and digor (similar to shot put/horseshoes). Football (soccer) and basketball are popular among younger Bhutanese, and the national football team famously played in well-publicized international matches. Trekking and the spectacular high-altitude Snowman Trek also draw adventurous visitors.
September/October (varies by lunar calendar)
Thimphu Tshechu
One of Bhutan's largest and most famous religious festivals, held in the courtyard of Thimphu's Tashichho Dzong. Masked Cham dances performed by monks reenact Buddhist legends over several days, drawing huge crowds in their finest traditional dress.
March/April (varies by lunar calendar)
Paro Tshechu
A spectacular spring festival at Rinpung Dzong featuring days of sacred masked dances, culminating before dawn on the final day with the unfurling of a giant silk thongdrel (religious appliqué tapestry) said to cleanse viewers of sin.
December 17
National Day
Celebrates the establishment of the Wangchuck monarchy in 1907, marked nationwide with cultural performances, parades, archery, and patriotic ceremonies, often attended by the King.
Late October/November (varies)
Jambay Lhakhang Drup (Bumthang)
A vivid festival at one of Bhutan's oldest temples in Bumthang, famous for the Mewang (fire blessing ritual) and the midnight Tercham 'naked dance' performed to ward off evil spirits.