Marriott's Chairman Comes to Kathmandu: South Asia's First Luxury Collection Hotel Opens in Nepal This October
David Marriott's first visit to Nepal puts a spotlight on a luxury hotel wave — a 225-room Luxury Collection flagship this year, with a Ritz-Carlton and a Westin behind it.

When the chairman of the world's biggest hotel company makes his first trip to Nepal, it is not sightseeing — it is a signal. David Marriott, Chairman of Marriott International, visited Kathmandu this season, touring the group's existing hotels and, most importantly, the nearly finished property that will carry the Luxury Collection flag: the first Marriott-managed Luxury Collection hotel anywhere in South Asia.
From the trail · Annapurna
















The hotel, owned by Nepali investors Shesh Ghale and Jamuna Gurung Ghale, is a 17-storey, 225-room flagship with a banquet hall for 2,000 guests, multiple restaurants, a spa and an infinity pool — and it is expected to open in October 2026, right at the start of the autumn trekking season.
The Marriott pipeline in Nepal
| Property | Tier | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Kathmandu Marriott | Premium | Operating |
| Fairfield by Marriott, Kathmandu | Select | Operating |
| Aloft Kathmandu Thamel | Select | Operating |
| The Luxury Collection, Kathmandu | Luxury | Opening Oct 2026 — 225 rooms |
| The Ritz-Carlton, Kathmandu | Luxury | Announced with CG Hospitality — by 2031 |
| The Westin, Kathmandu | Premium | Announced with CG Hospitality — by 2031 |
Alongside the Luxury Collection opening, Marriott and CG Hospitality (the Chaudhary Group) have signed to bring The Ritz-Carlton and The Westin to Kathmandu by 2031 — we broke down the Ritz-Carlton's roughly $100 million project in an earlier report. Add TIME magazine putting a Manang lodge on its World's Greatest Places 2026 list, and a pattern is impossible to miss: global hospitality has decided Nepal is a luxury market.
Why the big brands are coming now
The arithmetic is simple. Arrivals are breaking records — June 2026 alone was up 19.5 percent year-on-year — while the supply of internationally managed five-star rooms in Kathmandu has barely moved in a decade. Every new direct flight from the Gulf, China and India lands travellers with rising expectations for the nights before and after their mountains. The luxury segment is where the gap between demand and supply is widest, and Marriott is filling it three brands at a time.
What this means for trekkers
What this means for you
Trekking in Nepal no longer means roughing it end-to-end. The pattern our guests increasingly book: a five-star landing in Kathmandu, a teahouse trek in the mountains, and a proper recovery night before flying home. More international-standard rooms means better availability and sharper service citywide — though October 2026 in Kathmandu will be busy on both ends of the price scale, so book city nights when you book your trek.
For travellers who want the comfort thread to run through the whole trip, this wave pairs naturally with our Luxury Everest Base Camp trek — premium lodges on the trail itself — or a one-day Everest Base Camp helicopter tour between city stays. The mountains have always been world-class; the beds are catching up.
Sources: The Kathmandu Post (chairman interview), Himal Press (Luxury Collection details), Ratopati (Ritz-Carlton & Westin agreement).
Cover photo: Original: Anton Gutmann Derivative work: Aristeas via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0).
Source: The Kathmandu Post
Planning a trek?
We handle the permits, logistics & guides
NMA-certified local guides, transparent pricing, 5,000+ treks since 1998. Tell us your dates and we'll sort the rest.
Popular Nepal treks
All treks →



































