*Last Updated: April 2026*
**Big news for solo travelers:** Effective March 22, 2026, the Government of Nepal has officially removed the minimum two-person group requirement for Restricted Area Permits. You can now legally trek Nepal’s most exclusive regions — Upper Mustang, Manaslu, Kanchenjunga, Upper Dolpo, Tsum Valley, and more — as a solo traveler.
For years, Nepal’s restricted trekking zones were off-limits to solo adventurers. The Department of Immigration required a minimum group of two foreign nationals to issue a single Restricted Area Permit (RAP). If your partner cancelled, you were done.
That changed on March 22, 2026, when the government quietly removed this rule entirely. It’s the most significant change to Nepal’s restricted area trekking policy in over a decade — and most travelers haven’t heard about it yet.
Bottom line: You can now go alone, but you cannot go without a guide and a registered agency behind you.
Here is a full breakdown of the regions now open to solo trekkers, with permit costs as of Spring 2026:
| Region | Permit Cost (USD/week) | Why It’s Special |
|---|---|---|
| Upper Mustang | $500/week | Ancient walled kingdom, Tibetan plateau landscapes |
| Manaslu Circuit | $70–$100/week (season-dependent) | Dramatic high passes, off-the-beaten-path villages |
| Kanchenjunga | $20/week | World’s 3rd highest peak, pristine wilderness |
| Upper Dolpo | $500/week | The most remote region in Nepal, unchanged for centuries |
| Tsum Valley | $40/week | Sacred Himalayan pilgrimage valley |
| Nar Phu Valley | $90/week | Hidden valley above the Annapurna Circuit |
| Humla (Simikot to Hilsa) | $50/week | Gateway to Mount Kailash, Tibet |
Note: Permit fees are in addition to standard TIMS cards and National Park entry fees, which also apply.
Getting your permit is straightforward when you work with a licensed Nepali agency. Here is exactly what the process looks like when you book with Tranquil Himalaya Journeys:
Step 1: Contact us with your intended region and travel dates.
The earlier you contact us, the better — especially for peak seasons (March–May and September–November) when permits are in high demand.
Step 2: We prepare your permit application.
We will need a copy of your passport, your Nepal visa, two passport-size photos, and proof of travel insurance. We handle all the paperwork, fee payments, and liaisons with the Department of Immigration on your behalf.
Step 3: We pair you with your licensed guide.
We take guide matching seriously. We match you with an English-speaking, licensed guide who has specific expertise in your chosen restricted area. Your guide is not just a requirement — they are your translator, your safety officer, and your gateway to understanding the culture you are walking through.
Step 4: We handle your Kathmandu logistics.
Most solo trekkers are in Nepal for more than just the restricted area. We can arrange your luxury hotel in Kathmandu, private airport transfer, pre-trek city sightseeing, and a comfortable post-trek stay so you can decompress before flying home.
Step 5: You trek. We handle everything else.
Your permit is in place. Your guide is ready. All you have to do is show up.
Not all restricted areas are created equal. If this is your first time trekking in a restricted zone, here are our recommendations based on difficulty and experience:
The Manaslu Circuit has emerged as the top alternative for trekkers wanting an Everest Base Camp-level experience without the crowds. The restricted area section (above Samagaon) is dramatic but manageable, and the permit is relatively affordable. At under $100/week, it’s the best value in Nepal’s restricted zone network.
Tsum Valley is one of Nepal’s best-kept secrets. The entire valley follows a strict “peace zone” policy — no hunting, no fishing. Monasteries, chortens, and prayer flags line nearly every trail. For a solo traveler seeking solitude and spiritual depth, Tsum Valley is unmatched.
If you’ve read Peter Matthiessen’s The Snow Leopard, you know Upper Dolpo. This is Nepal’s most remote, most unchanged region — a land that has resisted modernization for centuries. The permit is expensive ($500/week) for good reason: the government limits visitor numbers to protect the ecosystem. Book early.
The ancient walled city of Lo Manthang sits at 3,840 metres and feels like stepping into medieval Tibet. Upper Mustang is technically a desert — it lies in the rain shadow of the Himalayas — which means it can be trekked even during the monsoon season (July–August) when most of Nepal is inaccessible. This makes it uniquely valuable for solo travelers with limited windows.
We are a Kathmandu-based travel agency. We live and work here. Here is honest, on-the-ground advice that no travel blog written from abroad can give you:
1. Apply at least 4–6 weeks before your trek.
Permit processing typically takes 1–2 working days, but during peak season (October especially) the Department of Immigration queue can slow things down. Do not leave this to the last minute.
2. Do not trust permit “shortcuts” online.
We have seen solo travelers arrive in Kathmandu with “permits” purchased through sketchy online intermediaries, only to be turned back at the first checkpoint. Restricted Area Permits are issued exclusively through registered agencies with legitimate government access. If a website is offering you a fast online RAP with no guide requirement, it is a scam.
3. Your guide is an investment, not a cost.
Solo trekkers sometimes push back on the mandatory guide requirement. We understand the instinct. But in restricted areas — where trails are poorly marked, altitude can be lethal, and villages speak Tibetan dialects — your guide is genuinely the difference between a transformative experience and a dangerous one. Our guides are among the most experienced in Nepal.
4. Consider the full trip, not just the trek.
Most of our solo trekking clients also want to spend 2–3 days in Kathmandu before heading to the mountains. We can arrange cultural sightseeing (Boudhanath, Swayambhunath, Pashupatinath), comfortable boutique hotels, and private transfers so your entire Nepal trip is seamlessly handled.
Tranquil Himalaya Journeys is now officially accepting bookings for solo travelers on all restricted area treks in Nepal.
We are a Kathmandu-based, government-registered travel agency affiliated with the Nepal Tourism Board. We have been curating premium Nepal travel experiences for discerning travelers — and with the new solo permit rules in place, we are ready to design a completely personalized Nepal experience around your individual adventure.
Our Solo Trekker packages include:
The autumn 2026 season (September–November) is Nepal’s busiest period and permits fill fast. If you are planning a restricted area trek this year, now is the time to secure your dates.