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Nepal’s Next Great Adventure Doesn’t (Just) Involve Climbing a Mountain

For decades, Nepal has been defined by one image.

Snow-capped Himalayan peaks. Prayer flags fluttering in the wind. Trekkers making their way towards Everest Base Camp.

For many travellers, the land-locked South Asian nation has long been the destination you visited to conquer a mountain.

But that’s beginning to change.

A new generation of travellers is looking beyond bucket-list achievements in favour of something slower, more immersive and, ultimately, more meaningful. Rather than asking “What can I see?”, they’re asking “Who can I meet?”

It’s a shift that’s quietly reshaping tourism around the world. And nowhere is it more evident than in Nepal.

The country’s newly announced Visit Nepal 2028 strategy marks a deliberate move away from relying almost exclusively on trekking tourism. While the Himalayas remain one of the world’s great adventures, Nepal is now shining a light on another side of the country: one built around local communities, Indigenous cultures, traditional crafts, regional food and everyday life.

It’s an invitation to experience Nepal not simply as a landscape, but as a living culture.

The timing couldn’t be better.

Australia and New Zealand both lowered their travel advisories for Nepal earlier this year, making the destination an increasingly attractive option for travellers looking beyond Europe’s crowded summer or Southeast Asia’s well-trodden backpacker trail.

What they’re finding is a country that rewards curiosity.

Yes, there are ancient temples and spectacular mountain vistas. But there are also villages where generations of artisans continue centuries-old traditions, Indigenous communities welcoming visitors into their homes, and landscapes that unfold at a pace impossible to appreciate from a trekking itinerary alone.

It’s exactly this style of travel that organisations like Community Homestay Network have spent years developing.

Working alongside more than 50 communities across Nepal, the locally owned social enterprise creates experiences designed by the people who live there, rather than around them. Travellers stay in community homestays, learn traditional cooking techniques, meet local artists and craftspeople, and gain an insight into Nepal that few visitors have historically experienced.

Until now, many of these journeys were offered on request.

For the first time, the organisation has introduced guaranteed departure itineraries, making it easier for international travellers to plan multi-day community-based adventures across the country.

For example, the eight-day Hidden Gems of the Kathmandu Valley journey explores Newari culture through cooking classes, artisan workshops, village homestays and hikes through the hills surrounding the capital.

Elsewhere, Live the Tharu Way ventures into Nepal’s Terai region, combining wildlife safaris with time spent alongside the Indigenous Tharu people, while Eastern Nepal: The Road Less Taken explores one of the country’s least-visited regions through community stays, cultural traditions and sustainable travel experiences.

It’s a very different vision of Nepal.

One where the highlight isn’t necessarily reaching a summit, but learning to fold momos alongside a local family. Watching Mithila artists paint intricate works passed down through generations. Sharing stories over dinner in a village few international tourists have ever heard of.

The government’s ambition is to attract more visitors while spreading tourism beyond the country’s best-known trekking routes. That means directing travellers towards places where tourism supports local businesses, creates opportunities for women and young entrepreneurs, and encourages communities to preserve traditions that might otherwise disappear.

For travellers, the reward is equally compelling.

Instead of seeing Nepal through the window of a tour bus or from the summit of a mountain pass, they experience it through conversations, kitchens, workshops and family homes.

It’s the kind of travel many people say they’re searching for. And increasingly, Nepal is becoming one of the best places to find it.

Marie-Antoinette Issa: Meet Marie-Antoinette Issa, the Beauty & Lifestyle Editor steering the lifestyle content across The Carousel, Women Love Tech, and Women Love Wellness. With an impressive career spanning top-tier women's magazines and digital giants, she has written for everything from Cosmopolitan and Cleo to The Huffington Post, Daily Mail, and Concrete Playground. Whether she’s uncovering the latest in wellness for I Quit Sugar or tracking down the best of city life for The Urban List, Marie-Antoinette delivers polished, trend-driven insights that connect deeply with modern women. She is also a travel writer on Women Love Travel.