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Sun. Apr 19th, 2026
Trending News: Alec Baldwin to face civil trial over Rust film set shootingWhy do grey whales keep dying in San Francisco’s waters?The US and Europe are still stronger togetherRat poison found in HiPP baby food jar in Austria, police sayObama and Mamdani sing with children in New YorkZelensky condemns US extension of Russian sanctions waiverLessons from the China shock 2.0Runners v robots at China half marathon'The weapons were loud, but there was always music': Sudanese band play on through the warBodies of 50 infants dumped at Trinidad graveyard'Croatia, but cheaper': The quirky holiday spots on trend for 2026Was Harry and Meghan’s Australia trip a success?Australia's most-decorated soldier vows to 'fight' war crime chargesHe made jazz under air raids – and built an Indian city's music sceneWhat does it take to survive in the Arctic’s extreme weather?Three sentenced for 'man in bear suit' insurance scamStrait of Hormuz closed again, Iran says, as ships attackedMexico's Sheinbaum denies 'diplomatic crisis' with Spain after conquest rowAll construction of Trump's White House ballroom can resume, appeals court saysWhite House and Anthropic hold 'productive' meeting amid fears over Mythos modelPope says 'tyrants' speech was not aimed at TrumpHiPP recalls jarred baby food in Austria over contamination fearsFrench peacekeeper killed in southern LebanonAt least two dead as gunman opens fire and takes hostages in KyivOne dead after car hits pedestrians in Melbourne, police sayMillions listen to Ethiopian star's song taking swipe at governmentFrench film star Nathalie Baye dies aged 77, media reportBBC reports from Lebanese border town as residents try to go backMadonna joins Sabrina Carpenter to surprise CoachellaDR Congo accepts first set of deportees from the USFuel truck leaves trail of fire on road in SyriaTurkey promotes ‘Middle Corridor’ as Strait of Hormuz alternativeOrbán’s era was over in a flash and Hungary’s next PM is a man in a hurryThe coming global food crisisSchool shootings a new trauma for Turkey as nation mournsPalestinians hand over suspect in 1982 attack on Jewish restaurant in ParisLutnick tells Canada ‘they suck’ and vows to wind back trade deal with USJapan reveals new name for 40C-and-hotter days after blistering summerOfficer on horseback chases suspect through New York streetsWhat next for South African opposition firebrand Malema after his five-year prison sentence?Kanye West concert in Poland cancelled over antisemitic commentsIrish fugitive and suspected crime boss Daniel Kinahan arrested in DubaiWidow, 86, back in France after being held by ICEThousands celebrate open-air Mass with Pope Leo in Cameroon – in picturesCeasefire with Israel brings respite to Lebanon, but obstacles to peace remainOil prices plunge as Iran says Strait 'open'Mugabe's son pleads guilty to pointing a gun in South Africa'I was tortured and lost my hand' – one student's struggle to get an education in NigeriaIranian footballers say Australia has given them 'hope' for safe futureArtemis commander tells BBC about 'powerful' moment crater named after his late wifeThree charged with arson on Persian media offices in London‘Tehran does not think it has lost this war’Are global trade imbalances just ‘one really big surplus’?Avengers reassemble and Top Gun flies back – Hollywood studios preview their new moviesFinance ministers and top bankers raise serious concerns about Mythos AI modelMoment wolf on the run in South Korea is foundWhat we know about the ceasefire between Lebanon and IsraelWill the energy shock change global trade imbalances? With Brad SetserBrazil's former spy chief released from ICE detentionScramble for biodiesel as price drops below regular diesel for first timeSouth Korea's runaway wolf finally captured after nine-day searchSinger D4vd arrested in connection to murder of missing teenRussia launches deadliest aerial attack in months, killing 18 in UkraineRising prices threaten Minnesota’s meat rafflesLawmakers clash with RFK Jr as he shifts focus away from vaccinesArtemis crew describes Moon mission and splashdown momentIsrael and Lebanon agree 10-day ceasefire, Trump saysTrump administration urges business partnerships instead of foreign aidUS oil bosses warn Trump to stand firm against Iran’s Hormuz tollRescuers to use air cushions in latest effort to save stranded whaleEx-Virginia deputy governor kills wife and himself in murder-suicide, police sayNaples bank robbers hold 25 people hostage then vanish through tunnelHow did a wolf become a fugitive in South Korea?Alex Manninger: Ex-Arsenal goalkeeper dies after car hit by trainIndia pushes for women's quota bill as row over parliamentary seats intensifiesWanted activist arrested in South Africa over support for Benin coup plotWhat’s really shocking about the second China shock?Pope criticises 'tyrants' who spend billions on wars, days after Trump spatPope Leo tells Cameroon’s government to root out corruption to find peaceThe Iran war will damage the petrodollarTurkish police order 83 arrests over online praise for school shootingsSouth African opposition figure Malema sentenced to five years in prisonThe China shock 2.0Trump threatens to fire Fed chair Powell if he doesn’t leave in MayHow the world is preparing for oil shortagesIsraeli demolitions levelling towns in south Lebanon, satellite images showChina shock 2.0: the countries feeling the ‘Chinese squeeze’Former US Marine pilot loses appeal against extradition from AustraliaChina’s first-quarter GDP grows 5%, driven by industrial outputTicketmaster-owner Live Nation ran a monopoly and overcharged fans, jury findsRate setters face ‘double danger’ from Iran war and tariffs, Fed official warnsLyse Doucet: Under fragile ceasefire, Iranians wonder if US deal can be doneUS crude exports hit record as Iran war disrupts Middle East suppliesStarmer says he's 'not going to yield' to pressure from Trump on Iran warNutella maker Ferrero raided over possible EU competition breachesFour killed in second Turkish school shooting in two daysTrump warns he could rip up trade deal with UKMore than 200 Iranian sailors stranded after US torpedo attack return homeThe China Shock 2.0Magyar meets Hungarian president as Trump says next PM 'a good man'
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Nepal’s travel and tourism hit hard by Iran war, soaring fuel prices

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Nepal’s travel and tourism hit hard by Iran war, soaring fuel prices

  • joinanees5@gmail.comjoinanees5@gmail.com
  • Travel / Culture
  • April 6, 2026
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April 6, 2026

KATHMANDU – Yogendra Shakya, a prominent hotel entrepreneur, had to abruptly cancel a mid-April family trip to Hong Kong. The reason was simple: airfares had become prohibitively expensive.

“The airfare is so high. It terrorises everyone,” said Shakya, chairman of Ace Hotels, which operates Hotel Ambassador in Lazimpat and Club Himalaya in Nagarkot.

A one-way Kathmandu–Hong Kong ticket now costs around Rs190,000. “We have changed our plan and now intend to visit Jomsom instead,” he said.

Shakya’s case reflects a broader trend. Travel agencies say many prospective travellers—particularly those yet to book—are postponing or cancelling trips as prices surge.

The spike follows a sharp increase in aviation fuel prices.

On Wednesday, Nepal Oil Corporation raised aviation turbine fuel (ATF) rates to historic highs, citing soaring global energy costs triggered by the ongoing conflict in West Asia.

The price of ATF for international airlines surged 77.63 percent to $1,716 per kilolitre in Kathmandu, surpassing the previous record of $1,645 set in June 2022. For domestic carriers, fuel prices nearly doubled, jumping 97.63 percent to Rs251 a litre—well above the earlier peak of Rs190 per litre recorded in September 2022.

The ripple effects are being felt across the tourism sector.

“For inbound tourism, the situation has become even more difficult,” Shakya said. “We were expecting visitors from countries less affected by the West Asia tensions—Japan, Malaysia, China, India—but the fuel price hike has thrown everything into disarray.”

According to ticketing agents, travellers who had already purchased tickets for the peak tourism season remain largely unaffected. However, new bookings have slowed sharply as fares climb.

“Ticket prices have more than doubled since Friday,” said Sangam Lama, ticketing executive at Osho World Travel Nepal.

The cheapest one-way ticket from New York to Kathmandu now costs Rs167,000, up from Rs100,000 in February. Kathmandu–Dubai fares have jumped to Rs78,000 from Rs35,000.

Flights to Sydney now cost around Rs190,000, compared to Rs80,000 previously, while fares to Japan have risen to Rs130,000 from Rs80,000.

The steepest increase has been seen on the Bangkok route, where tickets have surged to Rs105,000 from Rs35,000. Flights between Kathmandu and Kuala Lumpur are sold out, with one-way fares reaching Rs170,000, up from Rs40,000 in February—a rise that disproportionately affects Nepali migrant workers.

Not all routes have seen dramatic increases. Fares on the Kathmandu–Delhi sector remain relatively stable at around Rs18,000, compared to Rs15,000 earlier. Similarly, tickets to South Korea hover at Rs87,000, up modestly from Rs70,000.

“We haven’t yet seen significant cancellations since the fuel price hike,” Lama said. “But the real impact is likely to emerge in the coming weeks.”

Tourism entrepreneurs warn that rising airfares are undermining Nepal’s appeal at a critical time.

“Globally, tourists are looking for safe destinations and avoiding West Asia, which should benefit Nepal,” Shakya said. “But airfare has now become the primary factor forcing them to cancel or postpone trips. The situation is alarming.”

The fallout is already visible in tourism data.

Nepal’s tourism season had started strongly. Arrivals grew 15.5 percent in January despite it being an off-season month, followed by an 8.8 percent year-on-year increase in February. Encouraged by political stability and strong bookings, operators had expected arrivals to grow by over 20 percent in March—the start of the peak trekking and expedition season.

Instead, arrivals fell.

March recorded a 1 percent year-on-year decline, with 120,516 visitors entering the country, according to official data.

The downturn coincides with escalating geopolitical tensions. On February 28, the United States and Israel launched aerial attacks on Iran, disrupting air routes through West Asia—a key transit corridor linking Asia with Europe and North America.

According to the Civil Aviation Authority of Nepal, nearly 400 flights from major transit hubs in the United Arab Emirates and Qatar have been cancelled over the past month, severely affecting connectivity.

“We did not expect cancellations at this scale for April,” said Thaneshwor Guragain, manager at Seven Summit Treks, Nepal’s largest expedition agency. “Cancellations, particularly among trekkers, have reached alarming levels.”

He said nearly 60 percent of trekking bookings for April have been cancelled. “This is huge,” he added.

Tourism remains a cornerstone of Nepal’s economy, contributing about 7 percent to gross domestic product. In 2023, the sector generated around $2.5 billion and supported over 1.19 million jobs, accounting for 15.2 percent of total employment, according to the World Bank.

The latest disruption comes just as the industry was recovering from the Covid-19 pandemic and the impact of last year’s protests.

Data from the Nepal Tourism Board show sharp declines in visitors from Europe, West Asia, Africa and the Americas in March. Only South Asia and Oceania recorded growth.

March to May marks Nepal’s peak tourism season, when favourable weather draws trekkers and climbers to the Himalayas.

Tourism is a vital economic pillar for thousands of people residing on the slopes of the Himalayas, acting as a primary source of income and livelihood in regions where agriculture is difficult and seasonal. At this time of year, the seasonal adventure tourism activities provide critical income to thousands, including porters, guides, cooks, and lodge operators.

Yet the season has begun with negative growth, defying expectations of a strong rebound.

Arrivals from India have provided some relief, rising 20 percent to 25,728 in March and helping cushion the overall decline.

Air connectivity has been significantly disrupted since March 1, when flights from the UAE and Qatar—key transit hubs accounting for roughly a quarter of international flights to Kathmandu—were suspended.

Although some travellers have rerouted through alternative hubs such as Thailand, Singapore and India, operators say the shift has not been enough to offset losses.

Guragain said that April bookings remain weak, though high-altitude climbers—especially those targeting peaks above 8,000 metres—have largely stayed on schedule.

The Everest climbing season begins in early April, with summit attempts typically starting in mid-May. As of April 3, the Department of Tourism had issued 70 climbing permits, including 33 for Mount Everest.

“If the war does not stop, the damage to Nepal’s tourism will be severe,” Guragain said. “A wide range of sectors—from guides and hotels to airlines, restaurants and helicopter operators—depend on tourism revenue.”

Deepak Raj Joshi, chief executive officer of the Nepal Tourism Board, struck a cautious note.

“Despite global conflicts and disruptions, arrival figures are not discouraging,” he said. “While arrivals from Europe and America have declined, increased numbers from neighbouring countries, particularly India, are a positive sign.”

Joshi said the board is focusing on promoting Nepal in nearby markets while preparing for further uncertainty.

“The situation does not warrant panic, but neither can we afford complacency,” he said. “The evolving crisis in West Asia could impact global tourism in the coming days, and we are adopting a balanced strategy, including expanding into alternative markets.”



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