Tribhuvan International Airport (KTM) is Nepal's sole international airport and the gateway to the Himalayas and Mount Everest treks. Hotels in Kathmandu offer access to the Boudhanath and Swayambhunath stupas, the Pashupatinath temple, the trekking agencies of Thamel, and the world's most dramatic mountain scenery.
The single most important hotel in Nepal — a living museum of Newari architectural heritage created by Dwarika Das Shrestha, who spent his life rescuing carved wooden windows, doors, and pillars from demolished Kathmandu buildings and integrating them into a hotel of extraordinary cultural significance. Every doorway, every carved strut, every courtyard carries Kathmandu's history; the Krishnarpan restaurant serves a 22-course royal Newari feast that is one of Asia's great culinary experiences.
Set within 37 acres of garden adjacent to the Boudhanath Stupa, the Hyatt Regency Kathmandu is the valley's finest international luxury hotel — built in traditional Newari design with carved peacock windows, sunken gardens, and a spa drawing on the valley's Buddhist wellness traditions. The morning view of the stupa from the upper floors, and the access it provides to Boudhanath's circumambulation ceremony at dawn, are genuinely moving.
The original Kathmandu institution — open since 1968 and reportedly Nepal's first internationally oriented hotel, the Guest House provided the early Everest expeditions with their city base and retains a guestbook that reads like a who's who of Himalayan adventure. The garden courtyard, buzzing with departing expeditions and returning trekkers, is one of Kathmandu's great social spaces.
A converted Rana palace of considerable architectural drama — the Shanker's Neoclassical façade, ballroom-scale dining room, and formal gardens provide an extraordinarily grand backdrop for a hotel that remains relatively accessible in price. The swimming pool in the palace garden and the heritage rooms in the original building (as opposed to the modern annexe) are the two features worth specifying at booking.
The Dwarika's group's second property — a smaller, more meditative retreat in the foothills above the Kathmandu Valley with Himalayan views, a dedicated Ayurveda and yoga programme, and the same extraordinary attention to Newari architectural heritage that defines the original Dwarika's. Transfers from Kathmandu are included; the silence and mountain air justify the 30-minute journey entirely.
Hotel Mulberry is Thamel's finest boutique property — a converted merchant's house with 35 individually designed rooms, a garden courtyard café, and a rooftop with Himalayan views on clear days. The owners are deeply embedded in the Kathmandu cultural scene; their recommendations for temples, galleries, and restaurants are the city's most curated.