← Back to Blueprints

Nepal: The $400/Month Ultra-Cheap Himalayan Base

How ultra-budget bootstrappers use Nepal's tourist visa stacking to live in Kathmandu for $400/month at the foot of the Himalayas.

The Bureaucracy Hacker ·

Nepal: The $400/Month Ultra-Cheap Himalayan Base

Nepal allows tourist visa stays of up to 150 days per calendar year, obtainable in 15/30/90-day increments with straightforward extensions. Kathmandu — with its ancient temples, mountain views, and a growing café culture — costs under $400/month for a comfortable lifestyle. For the ultra-budget bootstrapper, Nepal is one of the cheapest English-friendly countries on Earth.

The Visa Structure

  • Tourist Visa on Arrival: Available at Tribhuvan International Airport (KTM)
  • 15 days: $30
  • 30 days: $50
  • 90 days: $125
  • Extensions: Available at the Department of Immigration in Kathmandu — up to 150 days/year maximum
  • After 150 days: Must leave Nepal. Re-entry starts a new calendar year cycle.

The Cost of Living

Kathmandu (Thamel/Lazimpat):

CategoryMonthly (USD)
1BR apartment$100-200
Groceries + eating out$80-150
Transport (local bus + taxi)$15-30
Mobile (Ncell unlimited)$5-10
Internet (home fiber)$10-20
Total$210-410

Pokhara (lakeside, near Annapurna) is similarly priced with better air quality and mountain views.

The Infrastructure

  • Internet: Fiber is available in Kathmandu and Pokhara (10-50 Mbps for $10-20/month). WorldLink and Vianet are the main providers. Power is now stable (Nepal eliminated load-shedding through hydropower expansion).
  • Coworking: Growing scene — WorkHub, Bikalpa Art Center coworking, and various café-offices
  • Healthcare: Very limited. Norvic International Hospital and Grande Hospital in Kathmandu handle routine care. Serious issues require evacuation to Delhi or Bangkok.
  • Flights: Direct flights to Delhi, Dubai, Doha, Kuala Lumpur, and Bangkok

The Tax Structure

Nepal taxes residents on worldwide income at progressive rates up to 36%. Tourist visa holders are not Nepalese tax residents and owe zero tax on foreign income.

The Altitude

Kathmandu sits at 1,400m (4,600 ft) — manageable for most people. Pokhara is at 800m (2,600 ft) — even easier. Neither causes significant altitude issues for healthy individuals.

Want the complete playbook?

Get the full geo-arbitrage execution guide for your specific situation.

Take the Passport Compass →