A dog and hiker on a rocky ridge trail overlooking the Aravalli hills at sunrise Sunrise illustration of a rugged Aravalli ridge trail, layered hills fading into the distance, a dog and hiker silhouette on the ridge path, a peacock in the foreground scrub.

Note for Akash: placeholder illustration. Since this is a Tails Verified listing, swap this for a real photo from the actual visit as soon as you have one β€” gallery_images is currently empty in the DB, so anything from the February 2024 visit would be the right first upload here.

🐾 When we visited with Apple and Captain
We came here in February 2024 for a lakeside picnic with Apple and Captain β€” before Kimchi was born β€” and stayed through the whole golden hour by the water. It's a free, open space β€” no gates, no charges β€” where dogs can relax off-leash with good recall. The lake is shallow and safe for dogs to wade into, so they can paddle at the edge while you spread a mat under a tree and watch the light change. One of the best dog-friendly forest escapes in the Gurgaon Aravallis.
πŸ₯Ύ 5–10 km of ridge trail, depending on entry point and route
🎟️ Free entry, and open every day
⏱️ 2–3 hrs typical time on foot for the full route

Leopard Trail is one of those places that undersells itself in every generic write-up about it β€” most articles lead with the cafes and the biking crowd and mention the actual hiking almost as an afterthought. For dogs, it's the opposite: this is a genuine off-leash ridge trail through rugged Aravalli scrub, roughly 20 minutes outside Gurgaon, and it's the closest thing to a hill-station hike most Delhi NCR dogs will get without an actual road trip.

Is Leopard Trail pet friendly?

Yes β€” genuinely, not just tolerantly. Multiple independent visitors describe it as an off-leash area where dogs can run and sniff freely, and the terrain itself works in a dog's favour: wide ridge paths, open scrub rather than dense forest, and enough elevation change to make it a proper outing rather than a flat stroll. The trail connects loosely toward the Damdama Lake area, and several access points exist β€” Gwal Pahari is one commonly cited starting point, Gurat Pur Bas another.

The honest version
Several sources list named cafes along the route β€” including one called Ducks & Dog, which our own listing data confirms does specifically welcome dogs. That said, don't treat any name as a blanket pet policy β€” call ahead and confirm before assuming any other specific cafe here welcomes dogs, the same rule that applies everywhere on this site. The trail itself is unmaintained in the way a municipal park is maintained β€” loose stone, uneven footing, no formal water points, and no consistent parking infrastructure depending on which access point you use.

Wildlife and safety, honestly

About the name
Leopards genuinely inhabit the wider Aravalli range, and the trail's name isn't just marketing β€” but confirmed sightings on this specific stretch are rare, and most visitor accounts describe the trail as safe for daytime hiking. What you're actually likely to see is nilgai, jackal, mongoose, peacocks, and a wide range of birdlife β€” over 190 species are recorded across the Aravalli belt this trail sits within. The consistent caution across visitor reports is about dusk and after-dark visits specifically, not daytime hikes. Plan to be off the trail well before sunset, especially with smaller dogs.

What to do

  • Hike the full ridge route β€” allow 2–3 hours for the complete trail; a shorter roughly 15-minute climb to the first viewpoint is a good option if you're short on time or your dog isn't up for the full distance
  • Go for sunrise β€” this is consistently the most recommended time across every source, both for the light and for cooler, more comfortable hiking temperatures
  • Combine with Aravalli Biodiversity Park β€” the two sit in the same Aravalli belt and close enough together that an energetic dog (and owner) could reasonably do both in one extended outing; see our Aravalli Biodiversity Park guide for the comparison
  • Bring a camera, not just for the dog β€” the ridge views over the surrounding hills are the reason this gets compared to a hill station, minor exaggeration and all

Getting there

There's no metro or reliable bus option to Leopard Trail β€” this is a drive or a bike ride, roughly 15–20km and 40–50 minutes from central Gurgaon depending on traffic and your chosen entry point. The roads in are part of the appeal for a lot of visitors β€” winding hill-style roads that feel disproportionately far from the city given the actual distance.

Best time of year: October through March. Best time of day: sunrise, well before the day's heat sets in. No formal address β€” search "Leopard Trail, Gurgaon" or navigate toward Gwal Pahari / Gurat Pur Bas.

What to carry

Essentials
Water for both of you β€” no confirmed water points along the trail
A sturdy leash, and a long training lead if you want controlled off-leash freedom
Poop bags
For the terrain
Proper hiking or walking shoes β€” the ground is loose stone and genuinely uneven
A basic first-aid kit given the remoteness and terrain
A fully charged phone β€” cellular coverage can be patchy in the ridge sections

Frequently asked questions

How long is the Leopard Trail hike?
Sources vary between roughly 5 and 10 kilometres depending on the entry point and specific route taken, with 2–3 hours being the typical time on foot for the fuller routes.

Are there actually leopards on Leopard Trail?
Leopards exist in the wider Aravalli range the trail sits within, but confirmed sightings on this specific stretch are rare. The name reflects the ecosystem more than a common daily encounter.

Is Leopard Trail safe to hike with a dog?
Generally yes for daytime hikes, based on consistent visitor reports. The recurring caution is specifically about dusk and after-dark visits β€” plan to finish well before sunset.

Can dogs go off-leash on Leopard Trail?
Yes, multiple sources describe it as an off-leash-friendly trail, though it isn't a fenced or enclosed area, so a dog with reliable recall matters here as it does at Aravalli Biodiversity Park.

Are the cafes along Leopard Trail pet-friendly?
Ducks & Dog specifically welcomes dogs β€” our listing data confirms this. For other cafes along the route, call ahead before assuming, regardless of how the name sounds.

What's the best time of year to visit?
October through March, when temperatures are cooler and visibility across the ridge is clearest. Early morning is the best time of day year-round.

For the full context on how we approach outdoor listings like this one, see our verification page, or browse the rest of the Delhi NCR outdoor scene in our dog-friendly parks guide.