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How do Nepal's major treks compare in difficulty? This guide ranks the popular routes from easiest to hardest — by altitude, daily hours, and terrain — so you choose a trek that matches your level.
- Choose ★ easy treks (Ghandruk, Dhampus) if it's your first multi-day trek or you want low altitude.
- Choose ★★–★★★ treks (Poon Hill, Langtang, Mardi Himal, ABC) for a real Himalayan trek without extreme altitude.
- Choose ★★★★ strenuous treks (EBC, Gokyo, Annapurna/Manaslu Circuit) only with fitness and altitude experience.
- Choose ★★★★★ expeditions (Three Passes, Kanchenjunga, Upper Dolpo) only for seasoned, well-acclimatised trekkers.
Not all Nepal treks are equal
From gentle village loops to brutal high-pass expeditions, Nepal's treks span the full difficulty spectrum. Here they are ranked, easiest to hardest, so you can find your match. Difficulty is driven mostly by maximum altitude, daily walking hours, and terrain.
| Tier | Example treks | Max altitude | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| ★ Easiest | Ghandruk Loop, Dhampus | ~1,940–2,060m | First-timers, families |
| ★★ Easy–Moderate | Poon Hill, Langtang Valley | 3,210–3,870m | Beginners wanting altitude |
| ★★★ Moderate | Mardi Himal, Annapurna Base Camp | 4,130–4,500m | Fit walkers, some experience |
| ★★★★ Strenuous | EBC, Gokyo, Annapurna/Manaslu Circuit | 5,160–5,545m | Experienced, well-acclimatised |
| ★★★★★ Most challenging | Three Passes, Kanchenjunga, Upper Dolpo | 5,143–5,535m+ | Seasoned expedition trekkers |
Easiest (★)
Ghandruk Loop (max 1,940m): Short, low, gentle Gurung villages. The easiest multi-day trek.
Dhampus / Australian Camp (max ~2,060m): 1–2 days, big views, minimal effort.
Nagarkot & Kathmandu rim walks: Day hikes, no altitude.
Easy–Moderate (★★)
Ghorepani Poon Hill (max 3,210m): The famous beginner trek; some long stair days.
Langtang Valley (max 3,870m): Moderate altitude, steady trails, close to Kathmandu.
Moderate (★★★)
Mardi Himal (max 4,500m): A high-camp finish; manageable but real altitude.
Annapurna Base Camp (max 4,130m): Sustained climbs into the sanctuary; teahouse comfort.
Upper Mustang (max 3,840m): Long days but moderate altitude; remote.
Strenuous (★★★★)
Everest Base Camp (max 5,545m): High altitude, long days, the Lukla flight.
Gokyo Lakes (max 5,357m): Similar to EBC, slightly quieter.
Annapurna Circuit (max 5,416m): The Thorong La pass crossing.
Manaslu Circuit (max 5,160m): Remote, with the demanding Larkya La.
Altitude — not distance — is the main risk on ★★★★ and ★★★★★ treks. Every route above 4,000m needs proper acclimatisation days and a willingness to turn back if symptoms appear.
Most challenging (★★★★★)
Everest Three Passes (max 5,535m): Three high passes, long and exposed.
Kanchenjunga (max 5,143m): 20+ days, remote wilderness.
Upper Dolpo: Multiple 5,000m+ passes, camping, true expedition.
How to use this ranking
Be honest about your fitness and altitude experience. First Himalayan trek? Start at ★★ or below. Done a moderate trek and want more? Step up to ★★★★. The strenuous and challenging routes reward experience, fitness, and proper acclimatisation — they're not the place to start.
If you're unsure where you fit, pick one tier below your gym fitness for your first Himalayan trek — altitude makes everything harder than it feels at home.
Browse options by region in our best treks in Nepal guide, compare the classics in the Everest Base Camp and Annapurna Base Camp guides, or contact our team to match a trek to your fitness.
What is the easiest multi-day trek in Nepal?
The Ghandruk Loop (max 1,940m) is the easiest, with short, low-altitude days through Gurung villages — ideal for first-timers and families.
Which trek should a beginner avoid?
Beginners should avoid the ★★★★ and ★★★★★ routes — Everest Base Camp, the circuits, Three Passes, Kanchenjunga and Upper Dolpo — which demand fitness, experience, and serious acclimatisation.

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