WanderSafe — LGBTQ+ Travel Safety
Kathmandu, Nepal
Nepal has emerged as one of Asia's most legally progressive countries for LGBTQ+ rights. The Supreme Court of Nepal issued a landmark interim order in June 2023 directing the government to register same-sex marriages, making Nepal effectively the first country in Asia to recognize same-sex marriage (building on the 2007 Supreme Court ruling in Sunil Babu Pant v. Nepal Government that directed the government to end discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity and to study same-sex marriage). The 2015 Constitution of Nepal (Article 18) guarantees equality and prohibits discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. Nepal introduced a third gender option ('O' for 'Other') on citizenship certificates and passports beginning in 2007, making it one of the earliest countries globally to do so. Despite this progressive legal framework, social attitudes in Nepal remain conservative, shaped by Hindu and Buddhist traditions. Kathmandu, as the capital, has the most visible LGBTQ+ community, anchored by the Blue Diamond Society (BDS), one of South Asia's most prominent LGBTQ+ organizations.
Safety by Community
Confidence C · LGBTQ+ data as of 2026-06-18
- LGBTQ+ 64 (Exercise Caution)
- Trans 60 (Exercise Caution)
- HIV+ 74 (Generally Safe)
- Neurodivergent — not yet scored
- Blind / Low-vision — not yet scored
- Deaf / HoH — not yet scored ⚠
- Mobility — not yet scored ⚠
- Chronic illness — not yet scored
- Religious minorities 52 (Exercise Caution)
Travel Warnings
Accessibility barrier: text-to-911
Nepal's emergency line (100 / 112) is voice-only. No text-to-emergency, SMS-to-emergency, or relay service exists for deaf or non-speaking callers to reach police, fire, or ambulance. Plan around this before you travel.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_emergency_telephone_numbers · verified 2026-06-18
Accessibility barrier: step-free public transit
Most public transport remains inaccessible to people with disabilities even years after the 2013 accessibility directive; only SajhaYatayat has introduced a limited number of ramp-equipped disabled-friendly buses. Reported 2024. Plan around this before you travel.
Source: https://risingnepaldaily.com/news/50946 · verified 2026-06-17
Legal Status
Nepal's LGBTQ+ legal framework is among the most progressive in Asia, driven primarily by Supreme Court rulings and constitutional protections rather than parliamentary legislation.
How these scores are computed
- Legal 68 — derived from 4 verified indicators (85% coverage)
- Safety 55 — legacy number, re-verification in progress
- Community 50 — legacy number, re-verification in progress
- Infrastructure 52 — legacy number, re-verification in progress
Anchors, weights, and the full formula are published in the methodology.
Local Resources & Who to Contact
Vetted organizations and helplines that can assist travelers here. In countries where this community is criminalized, contact notes flag how to reach out safely.
+977-1-4443350 · www.bds.org.np
Nepal's pioneer LGBTQIA+ rights org (est. 2001), 40+ offices nationwide; provides advocacy, sexual-health services, crisis support and documents violence against queer Nepalis. Headquartered in Kathmandu.
fpan.org.np
Nepal's first trans-focused clinic (Family Planning Association Nepal with Blue Diamond Society), offering supervised HRT and laser therapy via an endocrinologist, dermatologist and psychiatrist for those 18+ in Kathmandu.
+977-1-4258219 · ncasc.gov.np
Government HIV/STD body in Teku, Kathmandu coordinating free nationwide ART (test-and-treat); directs people to the 96+ ART sites for testing and treatment.
sparshanepal.org
NGO providing HIV prevention, diagnosis, treatment and support (plus TB and Hepatitis B/C services) for people living with and affected by HIV; useful contact for confidential HIV care.
www.aidshealth.org/global/nepal
International HIV org running free testing and treatment-support programs in Nepal; partners with NCASC on data quality and care across ART sites.
Identity-Specific Guidance
Trans Women
Third gender passport option since 2007. Marriage equality since 2023. Blue Diamond Society provides support.
Trans women in Nepal benefit from one of Asia's most progressive legal frameworks. The third gender 'O' marker is available on citizenship certificates and passports since 2007/2015 — based on self-identification. The 2015 Constitution prohibits discrimination. The metis tradition provides some cultural familiarity with gender diversity. The Blue Diamond Society in Kathmandu is a key resource for community connection and emergency support. Trans-affirming healthcare is limited but available through some Kathmandu clinicians. Tourist areas (Thamel, Durbar Square, Patan) are generally safe. Outside Kathmandu, visibility carries more social risk. Carry travel insurance covering medical evacuation.
Trans Men
Legal recognition available. Community support through Mitini Nepal and BDS.
Trans men are covered by Nepal's constitutional anti-discrimination protections and can access the third gender marker. Testosterone and hormone supplies should be brought from home, as availability in Kathmandu is unreliable. Mitini Nepal provides community support for trans men and masculine-presenting LGBTQ+ individuals. Tourist areas are comfortable. Bring adequate medical documentation for customs.
Gay Men
Marriage equality since 2023. Growing community in Kathmandu. Moderate discretion advised.
Gay men benefit from Nepal's historic marriage equality ruling and constitutional protections. Kathmandu has a small but accessible queer community centered around BDS. Dating apps (Grindr, Blued) function in Kathmandu though the user base is small. No dedicated gay bars exist, but some cafes and restaurants in Thamel and Lazimpat are known as queer-friendly. Public displays of affection between men will attract attention; between male friends, physical closeness (arm-linking, hand-on-shoulder) is culturally normal and not read as sexual, which provides some social cover. HIV/STI services are available through BDS's health clinic.
Lesbian & Bi Women
Constitutional protections and marriage equality apply. Mitini Nepal is the key community resource.
Lesbian and bisexual women benefit from Nepal's progressive legal framework, with Mitini Nepal as the dedicated community organization. The word 'mitini' itself refers to a culturally recognized bond between women, providing some cultural precedent. Female same-sex affection in Nepal is less conspicuous than male, as physical closeness between women is culturally normal. The lesbian community in Kathmandu is small and primarily accessed through social networks and Mitini Nepal events. Public affection between women is unlikely to be read as romantic by most Nepalis.
Nonbinary Travelers
Third gender option available since 2007. Cultural context through metis tradition.
Nepal is one of the few countries globally offering a third gender passport marker since 2007/2015, based on self-identification. This is among the most progressive policies anywhere, though it was designed primarily for the metis/transgender community. Western nonbinary identities do not map directly onto Nepali cultural categories but are not without precedent. The Blue Diamond Society includes nonbinary advocacy. In Kathmandu's tourist and progressive circles, awareness of nonbinary identities is growing. Androgynous presentation in tourist areas is unlikely to cause issues. The third gender option on documents may facilitate travel logistics for nonbinary travelers.