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The most useful apps for trekking in Nepal — offline maps, GPS tracking, altitude and weather, and translation. What to download before you lose signal, and why your guide still matters most.
- Download offline maps (Maps.me / Organic Maps), the Google Translate Nepali pack, and your route while you still have Wi-Fi in Kathmandu or Pokhara.
- Phone GPS works without signal as long as the map is pre-downloaded — keep your device in airplane mode to save battery.
- Carry a 10,000mAh+ power bank; apps are useless on a dead phone and high-altitude charging is paid and slow.
- Apps are a backup, not a replacement for a licensed local guide, who reads terrain, weather, and altitude in ways no app can.
Download before you lose signal
Connectivity on Nepal's trails is patchy and disappears entirely in remote areas, so the key is to download everything you need while you still have Wi-Fi in Kathmandu or Pokhara. Here are the most useful apps and tools for trekkers — though none replace a good local guide.
Offline maps & navigation
Maps.me and Organic Maps — free, offline, and surprisingly detailed for Nepal's trails, with many teahouses and trail junctions marked. Download the Nepal map before you go.
Gaia GPS and AllTrails — popular with trekkers for downloadable topo maps and recorded routes; some features need a subscription.
Maps with GPS work even without signal because your phone's GPS doesn't need a network — just keep the map pre-downloaded and your battery charged.
Altitude & weather
A barometric altimeter app (or your watch) helps you track elevation gain and pace acclimatisation. Weather apps are unreliable for precise mountain forecasts but give a general picture; mountain weather changes fast, so trust your guide and the sky over any app.
Communication & translation
Download Google Translate's offline Nepali pack for basic communication. A messaging app (WhatsApp, Messenger) works wherever there's teahouse Wi-Fi for checking in with home. Save offline copies of your itinerary, permits, and insurance details.
Power is everything
Apps are useless with a dead phone. Carry a 10,000mAh+ power bank, keep your phone in airplane mode (GPS still works) to save battery, keep batteries warm in the cold, and budget for paid charging at teahouses high up.
Why your guide still matters most
Apps are a helpful backup, but they fail — batteries die, GPS drifts, maps miss a fresh landslide detour or a snow-covered junction. A licensed local guide reads the terrain, the weather, and your body in ways no app can, and is your real safety net for navigation and altitude. Use the tech to enhance your trek, never to replace the guide.
Your download checklist
Before you leave the city: offline Nepal map (Maps.me/Organic Maps), Google Translate Nepali pack, your route saved/recorded, offline copies of permits and insurance, and a fully charged power bank. Then enjoy being gloriously off-grid.
Planning your route? Browse our best treks in Nepal guide and check the trekking permits you'll need to carry — then save them offline before you go.
Frequently asked questions
Does my phone's GPS work without any signal in Nepal?
Yes. GPS is satellite-based and does not need a phone or data network — as long as you have pre-downloaded the offline map (via Maps.me, Organic Maps, Gaia GPS or AllTrails), your location will show even in the most remote areas with no signal.
Can a trekking app replace a guide in Nepal?
No. Apps are a useful backup, but batteries die, GPS drifts, and maps miss fresh landslide detours or snow-covered junctions. On most routes a licensed guide is now required by law, and a guide reads terrain, weather, and altitude symptoms in ways no app can.

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Travel Himalaya Nepal
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