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Nights at altitude in Nepal are freezing even in peak season. Guide to staying warm while trekking — layering, the right sleeping setup, keeping extremities warm, and clever tricks for cold high camps.
- Even in peak season, Himalayan nights drop well below freezing — staying warm is about sleep, energy and safety, not just comfort.
- Master the three-layer system and adjust it constantly: strip off while climbing to avoid sweat, add layers the moment you stop.
- Nail your sleep setup: a -15 to -20°C rated bag plus liner, dry thermals and socks, a beanie, and a hot-water bottle in the bag.
- Protect extremities with liner + outer gloves, wool socks and chemical hand/toe warmers; keep batteries, filter and water inside your bag overnight.
The cold is real — be ready
Even in peak trekking season, nights at Himalayan altitude drop well below freezing, and winter or high-pass mornings can be brutally cold. Staying warm isn't just about comfort — it's about sleep, energy, and safety. Here are the techniques that work.
Master your layering
The three-layer system is your foundation: a wicking base layer (merino/synthetic, never cotton), an insulating mid layer (fleece + down jacket), and a windproof shell. The key skill is adjusting constantly — remove layers while climbing so you don't sweat (wet clothing chills you), and add them the moment you stop. Carry your down jacket accessible for breaks and summits.
The key layering skill is adjusting constantly: remove layers while climbing so you don't sweat — wet clothing chills you fast — and add them the moment you stop. Keep your down jacket accessible at the top of your pack for breaks and summits.
Nail your sleep setup
Cold nights ruin sleep and recovery. Use a properly rated bag (-15 to -20°C comfort for high treks) plus a liner. Change into clean, dry thermals and dry socks for sleeping — never the sweaty clothes you trekked in. Wear a beanie (huge heat loss from the head). Add teahouse blankets on top. A hot-water bottle (fill from the teahouse) in your bag is a game-changer. Eat a good dinner — your body burns fuel to make heat.
A -15 to -20°C comfort-rated bag with a silk or thermal liner for high treks.
Change into clean, dry thermals and dry socks — never the sweaty clothes you trekked in.
Wear a beanie against head heat loss and pile teahouse blankets on top of your bag.
Fill a bottle from the teahouse and tuck it in your bag — a genuine game-changer.
Protect your extremities
Hands, feet, and head lose heat fastest. Carry liner gloves plus warm outer gloves/mittens, warm wool socks (and dry spares), a beanie, and a buff for your neck and face. Hand and toe warmers (chemical packs) are cheap and brilliant for cold pass mornings. Keep your feet dry — wet feet get cold and blistered.
Stay warm from the inside
Eat plenty (calories = warmth), and keep hydrated with warm drinks — ginger tea, hot lemon, soup. Don't skip meals. A warm drink before bed helps. Avoid alcohol at altitude — it makes you feel warm but actually cools you and impairs acclimatisation.
Avoid alcohol at altitude. It makes you feel warm but actually cools you, dehydrates you, and impairs acclimatisation. Warm your body from the inside with food and hot non-alcoholic drinks instead.
Clever cold-weather tricks
Keep your phone, batteries, and water filter in your sleeping bag overnight (cold kills batteries and freezes filters/water). Sleep with the next day's base layer inside your bag so it's warm to put on. Do a few jumping jacks before bed to warm the bag. Vent your bag slightly to avoid condensation. In the dining room, the stove is the social and warming hub — enjoy it before retreating to a cold room.
For pass crossings
High passes (Thorong La, Cho La, Larkya La) mean cold pre-dawn starts. Layer up fully before you set off, use hand/toe warmers, keep moving steadily, and have a warm drink and snacks ready. The cold eases as the sun rises.
The bottom line
Beat the Himalayan cold with smart layering, a warm sleep setup (rated bag, liner, dry thermals, beanie, hot-water bottle), protected extremities, plenty of warm food and drink, and tricks like keeping batteries in your bag. Stay warm and you'll sleep better, trek stronger, and enjoy the high mountains far more.
How cold does it get at night on a Himalayan trek?
Even in peak season, nights at altitude routinely drop below freezing, and winter or high-pass mornings can reach -15 to -20°C. That's why a properly rated sleeping bag, a liner and a warm sleep setup are essential, not optional.
What's the single best trick for sleeping warm at altitude?
A hot-water bottle filled from the teahouse and tucked into your sleeping bag is a game-changer. Combine it with dry thermals, dry socks, a beanie and keeping your batteries and water filter inside the bag overnight.
Cold-weather kit ties directly into what you pack and wear — see our full Nepal trekking packing list and the beginner's guide to trekking in Nepal. Planning a high winter route? Read the Everest Base Camp trek guide or contact our team for season-specific advice.

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