1. Kachin State, Myanmar

Covered in the snow around the year, Shein Hkawn Village is located in the Zeehtan village tract of Khounlanphu Township, Kachin State. The snowy village sits 10,900 feet above sea level.

It is always cold all year round, and is not exactly a popular tourist destination, but visitors can still come to learn about the life of the people here. The village has a guest house, a public high school and electricity.

2. Cartenz Pyramid, Papua, Indonesia

Carstensz Pyramid or Puncak Jaya (4,884 m) is the highest summit of Mount Jayawijaya or Mount Carstensz in the Sudirman Range of the western central highlands of Papua Province, Indonesia (within Puncak Jaya Regency).

At 4,884 metres above sea level, Puncak Jaya is the highest mountain in Indonesia, it is also the highest point between the Himalayas and the Andes, and the highest island peak in the world. 

Although the massif of the Snow Mountains (Pegunungan Maoke in the local language) is not too high, and it lies 4 degrees south of the equator, it contains four relatively large glaciers. The largest of them is not the Carstensz Glacier, but Meren Glacier which fringes the Nga Pulu peak (4862 m). 

3. Sa Pa, Vietnam

The up-and-coming tourist town in the north-west of Vietnam dominated by the Notre Dame Cathedral is the winter playground for both Vietnamese and an increasing number of foreign tourists.

Snowfall has been recorded almost annually, particularly in months of December and January when the mercury is at its lowest.

Salivating after views of snow dusting on terraced paddy fields? You’ll find it here.

According to myanmore.com AND seasia.co

(https://www.myanmore.com/2021/01/shein-hkawn-a-village-hidden-in-snow/ AND https://seasia.co/2022/03/24/three-southeast-asian-countries-that-receive-regular-snowfall)