The short version
Nepal is one of the easiest countries to trek as a vegetarian or vegan. Guide to plant-based eating on the trail — what to order, getting enough protein and calories, and tips for vegans.
- Nepal is one of the easiest countries in the world to eat vegetarian, and very manageable as a vegan.
- Dal bhat — rice, lentils, veg curry, pickle, with free refills — is the perfect, naturally vegetarian trekking fuel.
- Vegans should ask for oil instead of ghee, skip dairy and eggs, and carry backup snacks for higher elevations.
- Eat generously and carry plant-based snacks (nuts, dried fruit, peanut butter) to hit your calorie and protein needs.
A vegetarian-friendly country
Good news for plant-based trekkers: Nepal is one of the easiest places in the world to eat vegetarian, and manageable as a vegan. A large share of Nepalis eat vegetarian for religious reasons, so meat-free food is normal, abundant, and delicious — not an afterthought.
Dal bhat: the perfect veg meal
Dal bhat — rice, lentil soup, vegetable curry, and pickle — is naturally vegetarian, balanced, calorie-rich, and comes with free refills. It's the ideal trekking fuel and the safest hot meal at altitude. Eaten daily by trekkers and locals alike, it provides carbs, plant protein (lentils), and vegetables in one plate. Just confirm any ghee/dairy if you're vegan.
Other vegetarian trail options
Teahouse menus are full of meat-free choices: vegetable momos, fried rice and noodles (veg), thukpa and other noodle soups, potatoes in every form, Tibetan bread, porridge and pancakes, vegetable curries, and even pizza and pasta at lower elevations. Going meat-free is genuinely easy on every popular route.
Eating vegan
Vegan is very doable with a little communication. Dal bhat is usually vegan if cooked without ghee/butter — ask for oil instead. Avoid dairy items (curd/lassi, milk tea — order black tea or lemon), egg dishes, and butter. Plenty of naturally vegan options exist: many curries, dal, rice, momos (veg, check the wrapper/filling), beans, potatoes, and Tibetan bread. Learn to say you don't eat dairy/eggs, or have your guide explain.
Getting enough calories and protein
Trekking burns thousands of calories, and plant-based eating means being deliberate about quantity. Eat generously — dal bhat refills are your friend. Good protein sources: lentils (dal), beans, chickpeas, peanuts, soybeans, tofu (lower down), and nuts. Carry plant-based snacks: nuts, dried fruit, energy bars, peanut butter, and trail mix to top up calories between meals.
Practical tips
Tell your guide your dietary needs at the start — they'll smooth communication with teahouses. Carry backup snacks (especially vegan, as choices narrow high up). Take a B12 supplement if you're vegan (as always). Stick to freshly cooked, hot food for safety, and treat your water. Higher up, where fresh produce is limited, expect simpler meals — dal bhat remains the reliable staple.
The bottom line
Vegetarians will eat exceptionally well in Nepal with almost no effort — dal bhat alone makes it easy. Vegans need a little more communication and snack backup but will manage fine on all popular routes. Plant-based trekking in Nepal is not just possible — it's one of the easiest and most delicious places to do it. See our packing list for snack ideas, or contact us to flag your dietary needs before you go.
Frequently asked questions
Is dal bhat vegan?
Usually — but it's often cooked with ghee. Ask for it prepared with oil instead, and you have a balanced, free-refill vegan meal that's the safest hot food on the trail.
Will I get enough protein eating plant-based on a trek?
Yes, with deliberate eating. Lentils, beans, chickpeas, peanuts, soybeans, tofu, and nuts all provide protein — eat generously, use dal bhat refills, and carry plant-based snacks.

Written by
Travel Himalaya Nepal
Pokhara-based, NMA-certified trekking guides. We’ve led 5,000+ treks across the Annapurna and Everest regions since 1998 — every word here comes from the trail. Meet the team →
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