Nepal is the global home of high-altitude climbing — a country shaped by the Himalayas, where eight of the world's fourteen 8,000-meter peaks rise within its borders and over 1,400 mountains above 6,000 meters are found across the country.
Our Peak Climbing in Nepal expeditions are designed for trekkers ready to take their first step into mountaineering and for intermediate climbers seeking a well-supported Himalayan ascent without committing to a full expedition. We operate climbing peaks across every major Nepali mountain region — the Khumbu (Everest region), Annapurna, Manaslu, Langtang, Rolwaling, Mustang, and the remote far-western and eastern Himalayas — each region offering its own character, scenery, and technical experience.
From the accessible glacier walk of Island Peak (Imja Tse, 6,189m) in the Khumbu for first-time 6,000-meter climbers, to the more technical alpine challenge of Lobuche East (6,119m), to the snow-walk summit of Mera Peak (6,476m) — Nepal's highest trekking peak — to the gentler training peaks of Pisang and Chulu in the Annapurna region, every itinerary in this collection is built around the same principles.
IFMGA-certified climbing leadership, premium lodges through the lower trek where available, the safety margin of proper high camps where the route demands them, helicopter support where it makes operational sense, and a buffer day in Kathmandu before international departure.
Daily mileage and altitude gain are paced to maximize summit success rather than compress the trip. Accommodation is the best available at every stop — five-star in Kathmandu, premium teahouses on established routes, basic teahouses or tented camps on remote routes, and honestly basic dome tents at the high camps where real comfort is not possible.
For the broader Nepal context, see our Best Time to Visit Nepal guide and the Altitude and Health Guide.



