
Shoja Treehouse
4.9· 61 stays"Best view in the valley, weakest wifi in Shoja."
Every property below — we've visited, photographed, and negotiated rates for.
1,600–2,400 m · Best Mar–Jun · Sep–Nov

"Best view in the valley, weakest wifi in Shoja."

"Deep in the pines. Book two nights, one won't be enough."

"Best river sound, weakest wifi."

"Kids love the dog. Bring earplugs — rooster's punctual."

"Walk to the old tower from the terrace."
Tell us your budget + dates on WhatsApp. Get 3 handpicked options in 10 minutes — including rooms hosts don't list online.

"Actual hotel service — heater works, breakfast on time."

"Instagram-perfect. Ladder is steeper than it looks."

"20 min walk from the road. Worth it."

"Grandma runs it. You'll eat too much rajma."

"Full hotel with sunrise view — book east-facing."
Tell us your budget + dates on WhatsApp. Get 3 handpicked options in 10 minutes — including rooms hosts don't list online.

"Off the main road, quieter than it should be."

"Fancy tents, real beds, thin walls."

"Cheap, cold nights, bring a jacket even in June."

"Brand new. We stayed one night, felt honest."
Jibhi isn't one village — it's a small cluster of hamlets strung along the Tirthan river between roughly 1,600 m and 2,700 m. Where you sleep changes what you wake up to: river-side stays in Ghiyagi and Gushaini deliver the constant white-noise most people come for, while Shoja and Chehni Kothi trade the water for views of the Jalori range and a genuinely cold night, even in June.
Homestays here are almost always family-run. That's the good news: home-cooked rajma-chawal, one host who knows every driver in the valley, and no OTA commission. The trade-off is thin walls, a bukhari (wood stove) instead of central heating, and wifi that comes and goes with the electricity.
For groups of 4+, or anyone travelling with elderly parents, the two proper hotels — Jibhi Pine Boutique and Kandhi Hilltop — are worth the price bump. Heater actually works, breakfast is on time, and there's a manager to call at midnight.
Rates below ₹1,500/night in season (April–June, October) usually mean either a shared bathroom, a 15-minute walk from the road, or a camp with thick tents rather than a room. All three are fine — we've slept in them — but ask us before you book if that matters.
Treehouses photograph beautifully and are, structurally, small wooden rooms on stilts. Ladders are steep, kids under five are a stretch, and monsoon (July–August) can get uncomfortably damp inside them. Best for couples in May, June, September, October.
One rule that's saved us every time: call the host before you book. Every stay on this page has a phone number we've dialled. If someone doesn't pick up in two attempts on a Tuesday afternoon, we drop them from the list.
Free: stay comparison sheet (PDF)
Every listing side-by-side — price, wifi, heater, walk-to-market.