Forget the Alps: why American hikers are trading Colorado's peaks for the Himalaya
For roughly the cost of a week in a U.S. ski town, Americans are flying to Nepal to walk beneath the highest mountains on Earth. Here's why the Himalaya became the American hiker's dream trip in 2026.

American hikers have never had more mountains at home — the Rockies, the Sierra, the Cascades. And yet, in record numbers, they are flying halfway around the world to walk in Nepal. In 2025 more than 112,000 Americans visited, making the United States Nepal's third-largest market. The reason is simple: nothing in North America comes close to the scale, the value, or the sheer human story of the Himalaya.
Why Americans come
- Nepal holds 8 of the 10 highest mountains on Earth
- The USA is Nepal's #3 source market (112,000+ in 2025)
- A guided trek runs a fraction of a comparable Western trip
- Colorado's high point is 4,401m; Everest Base Camp sits at 5,364m
The scale you cannot get at home
The tallest peak in the contiguous United States, Mount Whitney, is 4,421 metres. On the Everest Base Camp trek you sleep higher than that — and then climb Kala Patthar at 5,545 metres for a sunrise over a mountain that tops 8,800. The Himalaya operates on a vertical scale that simply does not exist in the Lower 48, and standing among peaks nearly twice the height of anything back home is what every returning American trekker talks about first.
| Feature | Alps / Rockies | Nepal Himalaya |
|---|---|---|
| Peak scale | 3,000–4,800m | 6,000–8,849m |
| Nightly lodging | $$$ huts/hotels | $ teahouses |
| Guided cost | High | Far lower per day |
| Culture | Alpine villages | Sherpa & Buddhist heartland |
The value Americans cannot believe
This is the part that converts skeptics: a world-class, guided two-week trek to Everest Base Camp — permits, a licensed guide, a porter, lodging and meals on the trail — costs less than many Americans spend on a week of skiing in Colorado or a national-park road trip. Nepal is one of the most affordable countries on earth, and a strong U.S. dollar stretches remarkably far here. You are not paying resort prices; you are paying for the team and the mountains.
What this means for you
If you have hiked the 14ers, walked the JMT, or just always wanted the trip that resets your sense of scale, the Himalaya is the answer — and it is more affordable and more achievable than you think. Start with Everest Base Camp or the gentler Annapurna Base Camp, both designed for fit American hikers with no technical climbing. We handle the permits, the Lukla logistics and a Sherpa guide; you bring the boots.
Source: Travel And Tour World; Nepal Tourism Board.
Cover photo: Vyacheslav Argenberg via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 4.0).
Source: Travel And Tour World
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