Packing for a Nepal trek is a delicate balance — bring too much and you (or your porter) suffer; bring too little and you freeze at 4,500 m. After 7 Nepal treks, I have refined my packing list to the essentials. This is the honest, no-fluff packing list I now use for any trek from Poon Hill to Manaslu Circuit.
The Golden Rules of Nepal Trekking Packing
- Less is more. Your packed bag should weigh 10–12 kg max (your porter carries 15–20 kg total for two trekkers).
- Layers, not bulk. Multiple thin layers are warmer and lighter than one thick jacket.
- Bring your own sleeping bag. Tea house blankets are not enough at altitude.
- Do not bring camping gear. Unless you are doing a camping trek, tea houses provide everything.
- Buy or rent big items in Kathmandu. Sleeping bags, down jackets, trekking poles can all be rented for $1–$2/day.
Complete Nepal Trekking Packing List
Clothing (Wear + Pack)
- 1 × trekking trousers (lightweight, quick-dry)
- 1 × trekking trousers or shorts (for lower elevations)
- 1 × thermal base layer top (merino wool)
- 1 × thermal base layer bottoms (merino wool)
- 2 × trekking shirts (quick-dry, long sleeve for sun protection)
- 1 × mid-layer fleece or synthetic pullover
- 1 × down jacket (essential — rent in Kathmandu if you don't own one)
- 1 × waterproof shell jacket (Gore-Tex or equivalent)
- 1 × waterproof shell trousers (for rain and wind)
- 4 × pairs trekking underwear (synthetic, quick-dry)
- 3 × pairs trekking socks (merino wool — Smartwool or Darn Tough)
- 1 × pair light socks for tea house evenings
- 1 × beanie / wool hat
- 1 × sun hat or cap
- 1 × buff or neck gaiter (sun, dust, cold protection)
- 1 × light gloves + 1 × warm gloves (or layered system)
Footwear
- 1 × pair trekking boots (broken in — do not bring new boots!)
- 1 × pair camp shoes (Crocs, sandals or trainers for tea house evenings)
Gear
- 1 × backpack (40–55L for porter-carried gear)
- 1 × daypack (20–30L for water, camera, layers, snacks)
- 1 × 4-season sleeping bag (rated to −15 °C for high-altitude treks, −10 °C for lower treks)
- 1 × sleeping bag liner (silk or cotton — adds warmth and keeps bag clean)
- 2 × trekking poles (adjustable — essential for descents)
- 1 × headlamp + spare batteries (Petzl or Black Diamond)
- 1 × water bottle (1L Nalgene) + 1 × hydration bladder (2–3L)
- 1 × water filter or purification tablets (Aquatabs, MSR, LifeStraw)
- 1 × stuff sacks / dry bags (for organisation and waterproofing)
- 1 × small padlock (for locker in tea houses)
First Aid Kit
- Diamox (acetazolamide) — 20 tablets for altitude sickness
- Ibuprofen and paracetamol
- Imodium (loperamide) — for diarrhoea
- Rehydration salts (ORS)
- Antihistamines (for allergies and motion sickness)
- Antiseptic cream and bandages
- Blister plasters (Compeed)
- Tape (zinc oxide or duct tape)
- Insect repellent (DEET 30%+)
- Sunscreen SPF 50+
- Lip balm with SPF
- Water purification tablets (Aquatabs)
- Any personal prescription medications + copies of prescriptions
Toiletries
- Toothbrush, toothpaste, floss
- Biodegradable soap (Dr. Bronner's)
- Shampoo (small bottle, biodegradable)
- Deodorant
- Quick-dry travel towel
- Toilet paper (1 roll — buy more on the trail) + ziplock for used paper
- Hand sanitizer (large bottle)
- Menstrual products (consider a menstrual cup for long treks)
- Razor and shaving cream
- Nail clippers
Electronics
- Phone (with offline maps downloaded — see our best trekking apps guide)
- Power bank (20,000 mAh minimum — Anker or RavPower)
- Solar panel (optional — useful for long treks above 4,000 m)
- Headphones
- Camera + spare batteries + memory cards
- Universal plug adapter (Nepal uses Type C, D and M)
- Kindle or e-reader (optional)
- Plug extension lead (some tea houses have only one socket)
Documents
- Passport (with valid Nepal visa — at least 6 months validity)
- Passport photos (6 — for permits)
- Travel insurance documents (with 24-hour emergency number)
- Cash (USD and NPR — see below for amounts)
- Credit card (Visa/Mastercard — accepted in larger tea houses)
- Trekking permits (TIMS, ACAP, restricted-area if applicable)
- Vaccination certificate (yellow fever if arriving from endemic country)
- Printed itinerary and emergency contact numbers
How Much Cash to Bring
| Trek Length | NPR Cash (Tea Houses) | USD Cash (Emergency) | Total per Trekker |
|---|---|---|---|
| Poon Hill (4 days) | 10,000 NPR | $50 | ~$130 |
| Annapurna Base Camp (7 days) | 20,000 NPR | $100 | ~$250 |
| Annapurna Circuit (14 days) | 35,000 NPR | $150 | ~$450 |
| Everest Base Camp (14 days) | 45,000 NPR | $200 | ~$550 |
| Manaslu Circuit (15 days) | 40,000 NPR | $200 | ~$500 |
| Kanchenjunga BC (22 days) | 55,000 NPR | $250 | ~$700 |
| Upper Dolpo (24 days) | 70,000 NPR | $300 | ~$900 |
Cash is king in Nepal's mountains: There are NO ATMs above the trailheads. Tea houses, snacks, hot showers, charging, Wi-Fi and beer all cost cash. Bring more than you think you need — running out of cash on day 10 of a 14-day trek is miserable. See our Nepal trekking costs guide for the full cost breakdown.
What NOT to Bring
- Cotton clothing — cotton kills at altitude because it stays wet. Stick to synthetic or merino wool.
- Jeans — heavy, slow-drying, useless for trekking.
- Hiking boots you haven't broken in — blisters will end your trek. Break them in for at least 50 km before you arrive.
- Tent, stove, cooking gear — unless you are on a camping trek. Tea houses provide everything.
- Books — heavy. Bring a Kindle instead, or swap books at tea houses.
- Hair dryer, straightener, large toiletries — tea houses do not have the power for these.
- More than 2 changes of trekking clothes — you will smell the same regardless.
What to Buy or Rent in Kathmandu
Kathmandu's Thamel district has dozens of trekking shops selling and renting gear. You can rent:
- 4-season sleeping bag: $1.50/day ($20 deposit)
- Down jacket: $1/day ($20 deposit)
- Trekking poles: $0.50/day
- Trekking boots: $2/day (but quality varies — better to bring your own)
- Backpack: $1.50/day
- Rain gear: $0.50/day
Buy in Kathmandu (cheaper than buying at home):
- Merino wool base layers
- Trekking trousers and shirts
- Wool hats and gloves
- Headlamp
- Water bottles
- First aid items (Diamox, antibiotics — much cheaper than at home)
- Trekking snacks (chocolate, nuts, energy bars)
Do NOT buy in Kathmandu:
- Trekking boots (buy at home and break in)
- Sleeping bag (rent — buying a quality bag is more expensive than renting for 2 weeks)
- High-end technical gear (climbing harness, crampons — quality control is unreliable)
Packing Tips for Specific Treks
- Poon Hill / Helambu / Mardi Himal (lower altitude): 3-season sleeping bag, light down jacket, no heavy thermals.
- Annapurna Circuit / EBC / Manaslu (high altitude): 4-season sleeping bag, expedition down jacket, full thermal layering, microspikes for passes.
- Upper Dolpo / Kanchenjunga / Dhaulagiri (extreme altitude): Mountaineering-grade gear, 4-season tent if camping, full expedition kit. See our best sleeping bags for high altitude guide.
Packing for a Nepal trek is an art, not a science. The list above is a starting point — adjust based on your trek, the season, and your personal tolerance for cold. The biggest mistake first-timers make is over-packing. Trust me: by day 5, you will wish you had brought less. For more on specific gear, see our layering guide for cold mountain weather and our best trekking boots for Nepal guide.
