Bangladesh
Nepal tours from Bangladesh
Bangladesh and Nepal share a Himalayan watershed and an hour of sky. Dhaka to Kathmandu is the shortest international flight in your passport, the visa stamp is issued on arrival, and the rate-of-exchange works in your favour. This guide is the first commercial Nepal tour resource built specifically for Bangladeshi travellers. Last updated June 2026.
Why Nepal from Bangladesh
Most Bangladeshi travellers fly to Bangkok or Kuala Lumpur as the first international trip. Nepal is closer, cheaper, visa-free at the counter, and the only outbound country where the Himalayas open out of the airport window before landing. This guide is built specifically for travellers from Dhaka, Chittagong and Sylhet, with prices in BDT and food and prayer logistics planned around how Bangladeshi families actually travel.
Direct flights, visa on arrival, BDT pricing
Shortest international flight from Dhaka, just 1 hour 5 minutes.
Visa on arrival, no advance application or embassy visit.
BDT pricing works around 8.5 NPR per taka, hotels feel affordable.
Halal food widely available in Kathmandu Thamel and Pokhara Lakeside.
Direct daily services from Biman, US-Bangla and Himalaya.
English and Hindi widely spoken, no language barrier.
Last updated June 2026.
Frequently asked
Answers from our specialists
The things travellers ask most, answered by guides who lead these trips, not by a script.
No advance visa is needed. Bangladeshi passport holders are eligible for visa on arrival at Tribhuvan International Airport in Kathmandu and at all land borders. Carry two passport photos and the visa fee in fresh USD bills. The 15-day tourist visa costs USD 30, with 30-day and 90-day options also available.
Direct flights take 1 hour 5 minutes, the shortest international service from Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport (DAC). Biman Bangladesh, US-Bangla Airlines, and Himalaya Airlines all operate daily non-stop flights on the DAC-KTM route.
Standard 5 to 6 day Nepal packages from Dhaka start at around BDT 38,500 per person on twin sharing, including return flights, hotels, transfers, English-speaking guide, and breakfast. Muktinath helicopter packages start at BDT 55,000 and the full 8-day Kathmandu, Pokhara and Chitwan circuit runs around BDT 65,000.
USD is more widely accepted for tour payments and currency exchange. We accept tour payments in BDT via bank transfer to our partner in Dhaka, or in USD on arrival. Inside Nepal, NPR is the only daily currency, and most ATMs accept Bangladeshi debit cards on the Visa or Mastercard network.
Yes, in tourist areas. Kathmandu Thamel and Pokhara Lakeside have several established halal restaurants serving Indian, Mughlai, Middle Eastern and Bangladeshi cuisine. We pre-book these venues for our Bangladeshi groups so meals stay familiar. Halal options are limited in remote trekking areas, so we plan vegetarian meals on those days.
October to March offers the clearest mountain views and stable temperatures. October and November are peak season with the cleanest air after the monsoon. December and January get cold in Pokhara mornings, ideal for Muktinath darshan. Avoid June through August, which is monsoon season with poor flight reliability and limited mountain visibility.
Plan this destination
Talk to a specialist about Nepal tours from Bangladesh.
Hand-built itineraries, permits, and licensed guides from our Kathmandu desk. Most quotes go out within four working hours.