It is a very good idea to start your tour to Lake Baikal from Ulan-Ude city, there is a more unique nature and destinations. Also it is more than real to visit Olkhon Island across the frozen Lake Baikal.
There is a great option that is possible thanks to our partners from the Eastern side of Lake Baikal.
The route is like this:
1) From Ulan-Ude to Turka village by bus.
2) From Turka to Khuzhir village on Olkhon island on hovercraft. Making few stops and with outdoor picnic lunch.
3) Then off road minivan to the hotel.
Price
Total this way will cost 16900 per person, including food during the trip.
What You Will See
🔹 Crystal-like grottoes, massive piles of huge blue ice hummocks, and bubble ice 🔹 Visit to the site above Lake Baikal’s deepest point 🔹 Tasting of the purest Baikal water 🔹 Ice skating on a giant natural rink right on the transparent Baikal ice 🔹 The Shamanka rock formations in Khuzhir village 🔹 A delicious “Baikal lunch” enjoyed outdoors
The Plan
🧊 07:00 Departure by bus from Ulan-Ude, 12 Erbanova Street (Baikal Plaza Hotel)
🧊 10:00 Arrival at “Kamennaya Cherepakha” (Stone Turtle) area; preparation for heading onto the ice
🧊 10:30 We set off across the ice of Lake Baikal toward Olkhon Island. Approximately halfway—right above Lake Baikal’s deepest point 💙—we’ll make a scheduled stop. Using an ice auger, a hole is cut in the ice, and everyone who wishes can drink and savor the purest Baikal water. A photo session among the ice hummocks is included.
🧊 13:00 Arrival at Cape Khoboy, Olkhon Island At Cape Khoboy, you effortlessly forget about endless urban hustle, escaping city noise and everyday worries. Here, you reconnect with nature’s roots and become fully immersed in its serenity 🧘♀️🧘 🏔 Towering icy cliffs, whimsical icicles, ice caves, crisp air filled with the scent of the lake, crystal-clear ice, and endless blue skies—you step into a fairy tale and fall forever in love with winter Baikal!
🧊 15:00 Delicious “Baikal Lunch.” Departure to the Three Brothers Rock formation. Visit to ice caves and grottoes.
🧊16-17:00 Arrival to the village, trasfer to the hotel on the island.
In this one day tour you can stay on Olkhon island in the end, or you may go back to Ulan-Ude the same day. It is a really goog opportunity to travel to Olkhon island in the middle of Lake Baikal.
Dreaming of glistening ice caves, surreal turquoise ice sheets, and snow-dusted Siberian silence? Lake Baikal in winter is one of Earth’s most breathtaking natural wonders — and timing your visit just right makes all the difference. Here’s everything you need to know about when to go, how to cross the ice, and what to expect each month during the frozen season.
❄️ Winter Season at Lake Baikal: A Month-by-Month Breakdown
📅 Late December – Early January: The Arrival of Fresh Ice
The ferry to Olkhon Island typically stops running on December 31.
Right after, hovercrafts begin shuttling travelers across the newly forming ice.
From late December through January, you’ll find “fresh ice”—thin, crystal-clear, and often safe for ice skating near shorelines (especially in sheltered bays).
Pro tip: In mild years, you might even spot skateable ice as early as late November!
💡 Why it’s special: Fresh ice is Lake Baikal’s most photogenic phase—translucent, glassy, and full of air bubbles that glow like gemstones under sunlight.
🛻 Mid-February to Mid-March: Peak Ice Road Season
The official ice road usually opens around February 15–25 and stays open until March 15–20 (exact dates vary yearly based on ice thickness and weather).
This 25–30 day window is the peak of winter tourism:
The ice road is open 24/7 to all vehicles.
You can drive or take a tour to Olkhon Island anytime—no ferry or hovercraft needed!
Perfect for photographers, adventure seekers, and winter wanderers.
🇷🇺 Bonus: February 23 is Defender of the Fatherland Day—a major Russian holiday. Expect festive energy and more visitors!
🌤️ Late March – Early April: The Melt Begins
By late March, the sun intensifies (Olkhon Island enjoys over 300 sunny days a year!), and the ice starts to crack and break up.
Hovercrafts return to transport travelers across open water and melting ice patches.
Most guided winter tours wrap up by early April, once large ice floes begin drifting.
🛥️ Spring Transition: Back to the Ferry
Once the lake is fully ice-free, the ferry resumes service on May 1, marking the start of the summer season.
✅ Key Takeaways: Best Time to Visit for Ice Lovers
For fresh, clear ice & photography:Late December to February 23
For safe driving & full access via ice road:Mid-February to mid-March
For unique hovercraft experiences:January to early February & late March– April
🌐 Why This Matters for Your Lake Baikal Winter Tour
Understanding Baikal’s dynamic ice calendar isn’t just about convenience—it’s about safety, access, and capturing the lake at its most magical. Whether you’re gliding over glassy ice in January or driving across a frozen highway in March, every week offers a different slice of Siberian wonder.
📸 P.S. Bring your camera—Baikal’s winter light is legendary among photographers!
Plan your unforgettable Lake Baikal winter adventure today—and step onto the world’s clearest, oldest, and most mesmerizing frozen lake.
Few natural spectacles rival the winter transformation of Lake Baikal. Tucked deep in Siberia, this ancient lake—the deepest and oldest on Earth—doesn’t just freeze over in winter. It crystallizes into a vast, otherworldly mirror, so clear you can see stones resting two meters beneath your boots. But this icy marvel doesn’t appear overnight. Like a slow, silent symphony conducted by frost and wind, Baikal’s ice tells a story that unfolds over months—and it’s worth knowing if you ever dream of walking across its glassy surface.
October–November: The First Whisper of Ice
It all begins in late October, when the first breath of Siberian winter nips at the lake’s edges. In sheltered bays—like the shallow waters of Maloe More near Olkhon Island or the Chivyrkuysky Bay—tiny ice crystals, called salo, start to shimmer on the surface like scattered diamonds. These fragile specks soon knit together into thin, brittle sheets, pushed and pulled by wind and current.
At this stage, the ice is deceptive. It may look solid from afar, but step too soon, and you’ll find yourself knee-deep in icy water. November ice is a promise, not a path—beautiful, but not yet trustworthy.
December–Early January: The Lake Locks In
By mid-December, Baikal begins to seal itself shut. The ice thickens, spreads, and eventually blankets most of the 31,500-square-kilometer expanse. By early January, you can often walk across large stretches—carefully, mind you. The ice now measures 30 to 40 centimeters thick, but it’s still a work in progress: cloudy, snow-dusted, and riddled with hidden weaknesses like underwater springs or shifting currents.
This is winter’s rehearsal. The stage is set, but the grand performance hasn’t begun.
Early February: The Golden Hour of Ice
Ah, February. This is when Baikal reveals its true winter magic.
After weeks of relentless cold—often plunging below –30°C (–22°F)—the lake finally achieves what photographers, scientists, and wanderers come from across the globe to witness: crystal-clear, mirror-like ice. With snow blown away by steady winds and the water beneath perfectly still and cold, new ice forms slowly, trapping almost no air bubbles. The result? A transparent pane stretching for kilometers, through which you can watch sunlight dance on pebbles far below.
By now, the ice is 70 to 100 centimeters thick—thick enough to support not just hikers, but snowmobiles, jeeps, and even impromptu ice roads. Locals have long used these natural highways; today, they’re part of guided tours that take visitors to ice caves, methane bubble fields, and surreal pressure ridges called torosy.
If there’s a perfect time to visit frozen Baikal, it’s early February. The ice is at its strongest, clearest, and safest. The light is soft and golden. And the silence—broken only by the occasional groan of shifting ice—is profound.
March: The Ice Begins to Dream of Spring
As March rolls in, the sun climbs higher, and the days grow noticeably longer. The ice remains thick, especially in the northern and central parts of the lake, but subtle changes begin. Puddles form on the surface. The once-pristine clarity dulls as meltwater seeps in. Cracks—some narrow, others wide enough to swallow a boot—start to spiderweb across the surface.
Still, the first half of March can be glorious. The ice holds firm, and the landscape glows under crisp blue skies. But caution is essential: what looks solid in the morning might soften dangerously by afternoon. By mid-to-late March, the transformation accelerates. The edges fray. Ice floes break loose in bays. Winter’s grip begins to slip.
April–May: The Great Thaw
By late April, Baikal starts to awaken. The southern basins crack and melt first, followed by the center and, lastly, the remote northern reaches. What was once a seamless white plain fractures into a mosaic of drifting floes, grinding and groaning as they collide. This is ledokhod—the ice run—a dramatic, noisy finale to winter’s reign.
By early May, the lake is mostly open water again, breathing freely under the spring sun. The ice is gone—but not forgotten.
Epilogue: A Season of Wonder
Lake Baikal’s ice is more than frozen water. It’s a seasonal masterpiece, shaped by time, temperature, and the lake’s own ancient rhythm. And while it lasts only a few months, those who witness it—especially in that magical window of early February—carry its memory like a secret: of walking on glass, over the soul of the planet’s deepest lake, under endless Siberian skies.
From Bangkok… to the Most Beautiful Frozen Lake in the World!
A new winter experience at Lake Baikal. Beauty you’ve never seen before.
Are you tired of the endless summer? Imagine a world of breathtaking beauty, where the air is crisp and clean, and the world’s oldest and deepest lake transforms into a magical landscape of turquoise ice and dramatic frozen bubbles.
This is Lake Baikal, and your unforgettable adventure starts in Irkutsk.
We are the leading tour operator on Lake Baikal, and we’ve made it incredibly easy for you to experience this wonder.
Why Choose Our Tour for Your Baikal Adventure?
Easy Journey from Bangkok: Fly directly from Bangkok to Irkutsk, and our daily tours are ready for you! It is only 7 hours flight and you are in the middle of Siberia. Near the biggest fresh water lake in the world.
The Best Value on the Lake: We offer the perfect combination of price, quality, and unforgettable experiences. No hidden costs, just pure value.
First-Class English Service: Our friendly staff speaks excellent English. From your first inquiry to the end of your tour, we are here for you.
Pay with Ease and Innovation: We accept cryptocurrencies alongside traditional payment methods. Booking your dream trip is fast, secure, and modern.
Simple & Easy Booking: Our booking process is straightforward. Your adventure is just a few clicks away.
The Perfect Time for Thai Travelers: February – March This is the peak of the frozen magic! The ice is at its strongest and most spectacularly clear, creating a once-in-a-lifetime photo opportunity. It’s the ultimate cool escape from the Thai hot season.
But Every Season is a New Adventure! While winter is magical, Lake Baikal is stunning year-round. Return in summer for hiking through wild nature, or in autumn for golden forests—all in a cool, safe, and pristine environment. Also the price of the ticket from Thailand to Russia goes down very much in Spring and Autumn time, absolutely magical and colorful seasons. Also the best for the people who like cool weather.
Ready for your cool escape? Book your everyday tour today and discover the cleanest air and the most awe-inspiring nature on Earth.
After years of expecience hosting travelers from all over the world we can provide you with best ideas to start with thinking about travelling to Lake Baikal. The best Baikal tour can vary depending on individual preferences and interests. However, there are several popular Baikal tours that are highly recommended by travelers who visit the first time:
Trans-Siberian Railway Baikal Route: This ia one day tour across most beautiful part of The Circum-Baikal Railroad. This tour combines the iconic Trans-Siberian Railway journey with a stop at Lake Baikal. It allows you to experience the breathtaking scenery of the region while enjoying the comfort of the train. The Circum-Baikal Railway is a historic railway route that circles the southern shore of Lake Baikal. A tour of this route offers a blend of stunning landscapes, architectural masterpieces, and fascinating historical sites.
Olkhon Island Tour: Olkhon Island is the largest island on Lake Baikal and offers stunning landscapes and a unique cultural experience. A tour of Olkhon Island allows you to explore its natural wonders, visit the famous Shaman Rock, and immerse yourself in the local Buryat culture. This budget tour starts everyday from Irkutsk, more details about this and booking form on our page here: Self-Guided Tour to Olkhon Island, the most cost effective way to see heart of Lake Baikal. Also we organize private experiences with more travel opportunities.
Baikal Ice Marathon: For adventure enthusiasts, the Baikal Ice Marathon is a thrilling experience. Taking place in March, it allows participants to run across the frozen surface of Lake Baikal, surrounded by the stunning winter scenery.
Baikal Winter Expedition: This tour is ideal for those who want to experience Lake Baikal’s winter wonderland. It includes activities like ice fishing, dog sledding, snowmobiling, and even winter diving in the crystal-clear ice. Feel yoursefl far away ino the frozen wilderness, the beauty of pure nature with no traces of presence of humanity.
Ultimately, the best Baikal tour will depend on your personal preferences, time available, and budget. It is recommended to research local tour operators, like the team of Irkutsk Free Tour, read reviews, and consider the specific activities and destinations included in each tour to find the one that suits you best.
My name is Dimitriy, and I am happy to help you find the best experience in the area of Lake Baikal. Feel free to contat anytime.
Our site is a constructor of the simplest and the most important tour to Baikal for those who come to us for the first time. The first day, of course, we recommend to devote to the city of Irkutsk. We realize that it is difficult, but you will reward yourself with an interesting experience, and the city really leaves a good impression, you should give it a chance. And then everything is simple, 1 day to Listvyanka, and 3 days to Olkhon. This is the minimum. If you have more days, then you can add 1 or 2 days on Olkhon, and there is also Tunkinskaya valley, which is better to spend 2 or more days travelling around. That makes a good week on Baikal.
But there is much more, and we will tell it to those who want to make a long trip or come not for the first time.
Russian physicists are building the largest deep-water neutrino detector in the world, Baikal-GVD, in Lake Baikal. It works in tandem with IceCube, a large-scale sensor installed in the Antarctic ice sheet. Together, they form a new type of astronomical telescope to study the most incredible objects in the Universe – active galaxy nuclei, quasars, and blazars. The head of the project, head of the Laboratory of Neutrino Astrophysics of High Energy at the Institute for Nuclear Research, corresponding member of the Russian Academy of Sciences Grigory Domogatsky told about how the unique instrument was created and how it operates.
How the idea of a detector on Baikal was born
I got involved in neutrino physics by chance. It was winter 1964, I graduated from the Physics Department of the Moscow State University. The Academy of Sciences of the USSR had just decided to create the Baksan neutrino observatory and neutrino laboratory at the PhIAN (Lebedev Physical Institute). We, the students, were ready to be admitted there, we were told that we would be involved in neutrino physics. We read a little bit about it, asked around, I, of course, already knew something about neutrinos, and agreed.
I worked under the leadership of the outstanding physicist Moisy Alexandrovich Markov. The chairman of the Neutrino Council of the Academy of Sciences was Bruno Pontecorvo, who had predicted the oscillations of this elementary particle. In the early 1980s, he invited me to become Scientific Secretary of the Council, and when he left for his home country Italy, he recommended me for his position.
In 1960, Markov was the first to formulate the idea of using large volumes of water – oceans, underground lakes – to register neutrinos. In the mid-1970s, American physicists Frederick Raines (a future Nobel laureate, who first registered neutrinos from the reactor) and John Lerned tried to realize the idea. They invited a group of Soviet scientists led by Markov and began discussing the construction of a neutrino detector in the ocean. However, after the introduction of Soviet troops in Afghanistan, the U.S. government refused to fund this joint work.
At the scientific council of the institute on October 1, 1980, Markov said that this project must be continued, so that its development in our country could not be stopped. Then Alexander Chudakov, a remarkable Russian experimentalist, one of those who discovered the Earth’s radiation belts on the second Soviet rocket, proposed to make a detector in Baikal. A laboratory was set up for this project, and I was chosen to head it.
That’s how it’s been going ever since. Don’t listen to people who say that something could not be done due to lack of money. Finding the money is the easiest thing to do. You have to spend some time on it, of course, but it all depends on how good the task is. And ours was so obviously good – a deep-sea neutrino detector – that everyone was happy to help under any circumstances. We were financed by the State Planning Committee, the USSR State Committee on Science and Technology, and the Academy of Sciences. In 1987, the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and Council of Ministers adopted the resolution signed by Mikhail Gorbachev and Nikolai Ryzhkov on strengthening the material and technical basis for research in high energy physics. They allocated very respectable, at the time, money for gas pedals – in Novosibirsk, Protvino, in INR in Troitsk. They also supported our Baikal. For three years, we lived freely, bought everything we needed. Then the Soviet Union began to fall apart, difficulties arose, but even then we were not lost. A group of physicists from the DESY Institute, the largest particle physics center in Germany, the German equivalent of CERN, worked with us. Seeing our unstable position, they began to help, and thanks to this, we safely survived the 1990s.
Boris Saltykov, Minister of Science and Technology in those years, also supported us. So there was nothing to be offended by.
Giant volume of water is required
It was supposed to register astrophysical neutrinos in order to find their sources in space.
Old projects
The first detector was made under Chudakov’s direction at Baksan in the North Caucasus, deep in the mountain. It was a huge underground scintillation telescope, almost 3.2 thousand photomultipliers, the largest in the world at that time. It was very good, but it recorded low-energy neutrinos, which are born in the Earth’s atmosphere during the passage of cosmic rays. It was not possible to see any clumps or local sources on their background. It became clear that we have to go to higher energies, which means making detectors of fundamentally larger size. We built the first deep-water detector at Baikal – NT-200. We registered high-energy neutrinos in water, and our priority is recognized worldwide.
Ice Cube telescope
Somewhat later, the Americans confirmed this result on the AMANDA subglacial detector in Antarctica. Ten years later, they realized that even these instruments, much larger than the Baksan one, are still small: it is necessary to increase the volume to at least one cubic kilometer. So there was the IceCube project in Antarctica, the Americans from 2005 to 2011 have spent about 300 million dollars on it. They didn’t rush it consciously, because fuss leads to mistakes. This is a reference detector, five thousand photomultipliers.
We started building a new detector at Baikal in 2015, when a powerful research center – the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research in Dubna – actively joined the work. Now we have eight clusters – 2304 photomultipliers, with an effective volume of 0.4 cubic kilometers. Last year we made one cluster and paid a lot of attention to malfunction repair. If nothing extraordinary happens we will put two clusters of 288 optic modules each this winter. We will keep this pace. By 2024 we will reach 0.7, and after that to 1.5 cubic kilometers.
Underwater telescope
Both detectors complement each other. There are directions that IceCube does not see, but Baikal-GVD does. Together they see the entire celestial sphere. The Europeans are also making a deep-water neutrino detector, KM3NeT, in the Mediterranean Sea off the coast of France and Sicily. As of today, there are 12 garlands of 18 optical modules each. It’s not a quick thing to do. KM3NeT will be part of a network of detectors to record astrophysical neutrinos.
Preparations for the launch of the Baikal-GVD deep-water neutrino telescope on Lake Baikal.
Checking deep water module before installation
The telescope Baikal-GVD will be installed 3.5 kilometers from the shore and at a depth of 750-1.3 thousand meters in the southern basin of the lake. It is designed to search for ultra-high energy neutrino sources, including those in the bowels of galaxies, which are born or die.
Ready to be installed deep in Lake Baikal
What the Baikal telescope sees
All neutrino astronomy is based on the idea expressed by Markov in 1959: to register the Cherenkov light of charged particles. A neutrino does not manifest itself in any way until it interacts with something and gives birth to a charged particle: a muon, an electron, a tau-meson, a cascade of charged particles – electrons, positrons, protons. When they move at a speed higher than the speed of light in water, a combination of waves and a blue glow appear – the Vavilov-Cherenkov effect, which can be registered.
Visualization of concept
Detectors record Cherenkov radiation from neutrinos flying from all directions. From above, however, come muons formed by the decay of pi mesons, which are born from the interaction of cosmic rays with the Earth’s atmosphere. From this background it is very difficult to isolate the neutrinos we need. This is why we go deep under water, ice, under the ground – so as not to interfere with the particles that fall from above. Water and ice are significantly different media. Transparency is determined by two parameters: the scattering length, which is how long it takes for a particle to scatter, and the absorption length, how long it takes for light to be absorbed. The ratio of these quantities in water and in ice is very different.
Antarctica’s wonderfully transparent ice scatters light a lot. By the time you collect it, you lose information about the properties of the source. Baikal water is less transparent, but has very little effect on scattering. So IceCube and Baikal-GVD see different things.
On IceCube, the long muon tracks are more visible, but they are few. The neutrino spectrum is dominated by cascade showers, but they lose information about them because of scattering in ice. And we see them well and distinguish them, and from very long distances, even beyond the instrumental limits of the detector, in the outer water. Both detectors are sharpened for events with energies of 60 teraelectronvolts and higher – there are more neutrinos from distant sources than atmospheric sources in this spectrum. We’re lucky that nature works that way. This was discovered at IceCube, starting neutrino astronomy. We’re trying to localize on the celestial sphere the objects from which these particles emanate.
In fact, we get a living witness from very distant regions of the Universe, from blazars, quasars, from various incredible generators of the most powerful energy.
The IceCube recorded about a hundred events, we have a dozen. That’s not enough to draw reliable conclusions. So far, only guesses. For example, there is a good work of Alexander Plavin, father and son Kovalevs and Sergey Troitsky, which showed that radiolasers emit high energy neutrinos at the peak of activity. Maybe they do, but we need to gather statistics.
Installing tiny part of the telescope deep underwater from the ice surface of Lake Baikal
Our group has been spending every winter at Baikal since 1981. I have stopped going in recent years – the guys are better at everything than I am. I remain the head of the expedition, I manage from a distance. Recently I counted that I have been in Baikal for almost three years.
Translated from Russian. Interview by Tatiana Pichugina, RIA Novosti. Photos by RIA Novosti. (link to original)
Irkutsk Free Tour is experiencing a total lack of customers right now. People stopped travelling to Irkutsk and Lake Baikal, unless there is a private airplane to use. My friend Alexander Konkov who lives on Olkhon island was happy to meet traveler from USA, who landed there for fuel and fun on the island in the middle of Lake Baikal, on the April 29th few days ago.
Private American airplane taking off from Olkhon Island (Photo by Alexander Konkov)Great way to travel during pandemic situation (Photo by Alexander Konkov)
Any other way to travel to Lake Baikal is not available, so I have decided to teach myself to make virtual tours in form of videos and video streams on Youtube. It seems the easiest way, and I like it, it’s fun.
So please take a look at what I got ready so far. I promise to develop skills in the future, it is very interesting for me. Here is the link to my Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/soyhim
I hope you can take a look and see that it is not very bad after all. Sorry for the quiet sound, I will fix that in future. Please write to me if you want to learn something special about Irkutsk and Lake Baikal.
Also I am thinking about live streams, where I can make a virtual tours with live communications. Let me know if that is what may be interesting.
One of the oldest souvenir shops in Irkutsk located on the road cross of Lenin and Karl Marx street offers 10% off for the visitors of our website. Khudozhnik shop, which means ‘artist’ in English.
They have a great variety and prices, Russian and Siberian souvenirs, and the most welcoming sales staff even though they don’t speak English.
The season of dogsledding in Irkutsk and Lake Baikal has started, so welcome to experience this exciting activity.
We offer private and group trips to dogsledding locations. The prices start from 1800 RUB per person for a 10-minute ride. There are 3 main locations, later we will create a special page for that.
But if you don’t want to wait, just call us or write a letter and we can discuss the price and make it happen. Everyday availability. Dogs are waiting and happy to run!
Every dogsledding company is unique and located in a great natural place with forests, rivers, lakes. And lots of snow. Great stuff for nature lovers.