How Many Days Should You Spend Outside Ulaanbaatar on a Mongolia Trip?
Almost Everyone Lands in Ulaanbaatar First
It happens all the time. Someone starts planning a Mongolia trip and ends up spending hours searching hotels, cafés, museums, and restaurants in Ulaanbaatar. Before they know it, a big part of the itinerary is already centered around the capital.
“The best part of the trip starts after leaving Ulaanbaatar.”
That doesn’t mean the city isn’t worth visiting. It simply means the experiences most people associate with Mongolia begin outside the capital — the open landscapes, nomadic culture, and long scenic drives.
Quick Time Split Guide
| Trip Length | Ulaanbaatar | Outside Ulaanbaatar |
|---|---|---|
| 5 Days | 1 Day | 4 Days |
| 7 Days | 1–2 Days | 5–6 Days |
| 10 Days | 2 Days | 8 Days |
| 14 Days | 2–3 Days | 11–12 Days |
The Most Common First-Time Visitor Mistake
Many travelers spend weeks researching Ulaanbaatar because it’s where the trip begins.
Then they discover their favorite memories happened somewhere completely different.
If you’re visiting Mongolia for:
- Landscapes
- Ger camps
- Nomadic culture
- Wildlife
- Open spaces
- Authentic experiences
Most of those happen outside the city.
Where Do Travelers Usually Create Their Favorite Memories?
Ulaanbaatar → Museums, food, culture, history
Rural Mongolia → Ger stays, landscapes, nomadic life, sunsets, adventure, unforgettable moments
And that’s why most successful Mongolia itineraries heavily prioritize the countryside.
But Wait… Is Ulaanbaatar Worth Visiting at All?
Absolutely.
Let’s clear up a common misunderstanding.
Just because most travelers shouldn’t spend half their trip in Ulaanbaatar doesn’t mean the city isn’t worth visiting.
It definitely is.
Here’s What Ulaanbaatar Does Really Well
The city gives you context.
Before you head into Mongolia’s vast landscapes, Ulaanbaatar helps you understand the country itself.
You’ll find:
- Museums
- Historical sites
- Local food
- Cultural performances
- Modern Mongolian life
This is the side of Mongolia many travelers never expect.
Here’s What Ulaanbaatar Doesn’t Represent
When people imagine Mongolia, they usually picture:
- Nomadic families
- Horses on open grasslands
- Remote valleys
- Ger camps
- Endless horizons
That’s not really Ulaanbaatar.
The capital feels very different from the Mongolia shown in travel brochures and social media photos.
Why We Still Recommend Spending Some Time Here
Because Mongolia isn’t only about landscapes.
The city helps explain how Mongolia balances:
- Ancient traditions
- Modern lifestyles
- Nomadic heritage
- Contemporary culture
Pros and Cons
How to Plan Your Time in Ulaanbaatar
Spend Time in Ulaanbaatar Because…
- Cultural context and history
- Local food experiences
- Museums and monasteries
- Easy arrival and departure base
Don’t Spend Too Long Because…
- Limited natural landscapes
- Not the core Mongolian experience
- Rural culture is outside the city
- Wilderness begins beyond the capital
Think of Ulaanbaatar as the introduction chapter. The rest of Mongolia is where the story unfolds.
Free Mongolia Itinerary Consultation
Not sure how much city time is enough? We’ll help you divide your trip between Ulaanbaatar and the countryside based on your interests, available days, and travel style.
The Moment Mongolia Starts Feeling Like Mongolia
Ask ten travelers about the highlight of their trip.
Most won’t mention a museum.
Most won’t mention a city street.
Instead they’ll describe a moment.
The First Night in a Ger
The city lights disappear.
The air feels different.
The silence feels different.
For many travelers, that’s when the trip starts feeling real.
The First Open Grassland
Photos don’t prepare you for the scale.
The landscapes feel endless.
There’s a sense of freedom that’s difficult to explain until you’re standing there.
The First Nomadic Family Visit
This is often the moment travelers stop feeling like tourists.
The experience becomes personal.
Human.
Authentic.
The First Sunset Outside the City
Many travelers remember this more vividly than any attraction.
Because Mongolia isn’t a destination built around attractions.
It’s built around experiences.
A Journey Many Travelers Follow
Arrival → Ulaanbaatar → Countryside → Ger Stay → Nomadic Culture → “Now I understand why people love Mongolia”
Something We Hear Repeatedly
The trip usually changes once travelers leave the city behind.
That’s when Mongolia starts becoming the destination they imagined.
So How Much Time Does Ulaanbaatar Actually Need?
For most people?
Less than they initially think.
Recommended Time by Traveler Type
How Much Time to Spend in Ulaanbaatar?
Traveler Type
First-Time Visitor
History Enthusiast
Culture Lover
Nature Traveler
Photographer
Recommended Time
1–2 Days
2 Days
2–3 Days
1 Day
1 Day
An Honest Reality: Very few travelers leave Mongolia saying they wished they spent more time in Ulaanbaatar. Most wish they had more days in the countryside.
What We Usually Recommend: One full day or two partial days is enough to experience museums, food, and culture without reducing your time in the Mongolian landscapes.
Sample Day: Morning museum visit → Local lunch → Afternoon cultural site → Evening traditional performance & dinner.
Free Mongolia Travel Planning Consultation
Already building an itinerary? We’ll review whether you’re spending too much time in the city and help you maximize your countryside experience.
If Most Experiences Happen Outside the City, How Much Time Should You Spend There?
This is actually the easiest part of the planning process.
The answer is:
Most of your trip.
Five-Day Trip
Spend roughly 80% outside Ulaanbaatar.
That’s usually:
- 1 day city
- 4 days countryside
Seven-Day Trip
Push that number even higher.
Around 85%.
Something like:
- 1–2 days city
- 5–6 days countryside
Ten-Day Trip
This is where Mongolia becomes really enjoyable.
You can comfortably spend:
- 2 days city
- 8 days countryside
Why This Formula Works
Because it aligns with why travelers choose Mongolia in the first place.
The Planning Rule We Follow
Use Ulaanbaatar as the introduction.
Use rural Mongolia as the main event.
It’s a simple rule.
But it improves almost every itinerary.
Ideal Time Allocation
City: 10–20%
Countryside: 80–90%
That’s usually where the sweet spot sits.
What Happens When Travelers Spend Too Much Time in the Capital?
Let’s say someone spends four or five days in Ulaanbaatar.
Can they still enjoy the trip?
Of course.
But every extra city day comes with a trade-off.
The Real Cost Isn’t Money
The real cost is opportunity.
Because every day spent in the city is a day not spent experiencing:
- Ger camps
- National parks
- Nomadic culture
- Scenic drives
- Remote landscapes
The Regret We Hear Most Often
“We didn’t realize the best parts of Mongolia were outside the capital.”
One Extra Day: City vs Countryside
How to Split Your Time in Mongolia
Extra Day in Ulaanbaatar
- Museums
- Cafes
- City walks
- Urban exploration
Extra Day in Rural Mongolia
- Nomadic culture
- Landscapes
- Ger stay
- Outdoor experiences
This doesn’t mean city experiences aren’t valuable. It simply means Mongolia’s strongest identity is found outside the capital.
What we see most often: travelers rarely regret extra countryside days, but sometimes regret spending too much time in the city.
Free Mongolia Route Optimization Consultation
We’ll review your route and help you balance city vs countryside time so you don’t miss the experiences that matter most.
Does This Advice Change for Couples, Families, and Photographers?
A little.
But not much.
Couples
Most couples visit Mongolia for:
- Scenic experiences
- Unique memories
- Ger stays
- Open landscapes
That naturally points toward more countryside time.
Families
Families often benefit from:
- Mostly countryside
- Occasional city stops
- Balanced pacing
Photographers
Photographers are the easiest category.
Give them as much countryside as possible.
Recommended Time Outside Ulaanbaatar
How to Plan a 7-Day Mongolia Trip
Traveler Type
- Couples
- Families
- Photographers
- Adventure Travelers
Outside Ulaanbaatar Time
- 85–90%
- 80–90%
- 90–95%
- 90–95%
Almost all meaningful Mongolia experiences come from landscapes, nomadic culture, ger camps, and open outdoor environments — not the capital city.
What creates the strongest memories is consistent: landscapes, cultural encounters, and life in the countryside.
Sample One-Week Plan
- Day 1 – Ulaanbaatar
- Day 2–6 – Rural Mongolia
- Day 7 – Return & Departure
Why This Works
- History & culture included
- Food & city exposure
- Nomadic experiences prioritized
- No rushed travel days
The city introduces Mongolia. The countryside explains it. That’s why most well-planned itineraries follow this structure.
Free Mongolia Route Consultation
Not sure how to split your week? We’ll design a route that balances city and countryside time based on your travel style and interests.
Our Recommendation for First-Time Travelers
If You Have 5 Days
1 day city.
4 days countryside.
If You Have 7 Days
1–2 days city.
5–6 days countryside.
If You Have 10 Days
2 days city.
8 days countryside.
Classic Mongolia Trip
Prioritize rural Mongolia heavily.
That’s where the real experience lives.
Spend enough time in Ulaanbaatar to understand the country. Then leave. Because the Mongolia most travelers imagine begins beyond the city.
Final Recommendation Table (Simplified)
5 Days
Ulaanbaatar: 1
Outside: 4
7 Days
Ulaanbaatar: 1–2
Outside: 5–6
10 Days
Ulaanbaatar: 2
Outside: 8
14 Days
Ulaanbaatar: 2–3
Outside: 11–12
The Mongolia you are imagining is most likely waiting outside the city limits.
Free Mongolia Trip Planning Consultation
We’ll help you design a route that balances culture, history, landscapes, and travel time so your trip feels complete and well-paced.









