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Best Waterfalls in Uttarakhand to Visit During Monsoon

  • Writer: Ridhi Sharma
    Ridhi Sharma
  • Sep 6, 2025
  • 3 min read

The first time I saw a waterfall in Uttarakhand during monsoon, it was almost overwhelming. The sound, the mist, the way water seemed to fall endlessly it felt like the mountains were alive. If you’ve ever been to the hills during the rains, you know what I mean. Every bend in the road hides a stream or a sudden fall of water. Some are famous, some just appear out of nowhere. Here are a few that stayed with me.


Kempty Falls, Mussoorie


Everybody talks about Kempty. Honestly, it’s crowded most of the time, but if you go early in the morning, it feels different. The water crashes down in steps, and the spray hits your face before you even get close. I once stood there alone for a few minutes, before the tourist buses arrived, and the sound of the water was so strong it drowned out everything else. That’s the Kempty you don’t usually see.


Tiger Falls, Chakrata


Tiger Falls is wilder. It’s not as easy to reach you walk through fields and small forest patches but the walk itself is beautiful. During monsoon, you hear the waterfall long before you see it. When you finally get there, it drops with such force that you feel it in your chest. Mist rises everywhere, and the rocks around stay slippery. It feels untouched, almost secret.


Neer Garh Falls, Rishikesh


Just outside Rishikesh, hidden behind winding roads and tea stalls, is Neer Garh. It’s not massive, but it’s refreshing. You climb a little, and then you’re suddenly standing next to cool pools where people dip their feet. In monsoon, the flow is stronger, and everything around is green and wet. I remember sitting there once with a cup of chai from a stall, watching water run wild while the city buzzed far away.


Corbett Falls, Ramnagar


Corbett Falls doesn’t look like much from photos, but in person it feels peaceful. It’s inside the forest, and the sound of birds mixes with the sound of water. You walk a little trail and suddenly, it’s just there clear water falling into a small pool. Nothing grand, but something calming. In the monsoon, the forest smells of wet leaves, and the water shines brighter through the trees.


Vasudhara Falls, Badrinath


This one makes you work for it. From Badrinath, it’s a trek of a few kilometers. The path itself is scenic streams crossing, clouds drifting low, snow peaks in the distance. And then you see Vasudhara. The waterfall drops like a silver line from a cliff so high you have to bend your neck to follow it. The spray floats in the air, turning into tiny rainbows when the sun comes out. Locals say the water only touches the pure hearted. I don’t know about that, but the place does feel sacred.


Birthi Falls, Munsiyari


Birthi is hard to forget. You see it even from the road water falling from a cliff so high it looks unreal. When you walk closer, the roar gets louder and louder until it’s all you can hear. By the time you reach the base, the spray covers you like rain. In the monsoon, it feels less like a waterfall and more like a storm crashing down the mountain.


Final Thought

Waterfalls in Uttarakhand aren’t just about the view. They’re about the walk through wet forests, the smell of rain on mud, the surprise of turning a corner and finding water pouring out of rocks. Some are famous like Kempty, some hidden like Birthi, but in monsoon they all come alive. If you ever travel here during the rains, don’t just rush past. Stop, listen, and let the water drown out everything else for a while. Original Source

 
 
 

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