7,000m Expedition

Baruntse Expedition

7,129m — Southeast Ridge — 26 Days — $10,500

A remote 7,000m expedition built around a Mera Peak summit as the acclimatization phase — the most logical bridge between technical 6,000m peaks and a first 8,000m objective.

Is this expedition right for you?

If you’re considering Baruntse, you’re looking at a remote 7,000m peak deep in the Hinku and Barun valleys — a place where the gap between “the company we hired” and “the people actually with us on the mountain” can become very wide, very fast. There are accounts of climbers arriving at the agreed meeting point and finding no guide. Two days late, no message, no apology. The booking company never once checked whether the guide had actually shown up or whether the clients were safe. The team ended up buying WiFi at a teahouse just to find out what was going on. We run Baruntse as a single, integrated operation: Chatur knows where every team is on every day of the expedition, our guides are direct employees rather than freelancers booked through a chain of middlemen, and you have continuous radio communication from the moment you leave Lukla. But operational reliability only matters once you know the climb itself is the right next step for you, so let’s start there.

Good fit

Baruntse makes sense if you’ve already climbed at least one technical 6,000m peak — ideally something like Ama Dablam, Island Peak, or a comparable objective — and you’re comfortable on steep snow up to 50 degrees, fixed ropes, jumar ascents, and crevassed glacier terrain. You should be at ease wearing crampons for long days at altitude and capable of operating efficiently under fatigue.

Beyond the technical baseline, you’re physically prepared for a 26-day expedition with two summit objectives back-to-back: Mera Peak (6,476m) as the structured acclimatization phase, then Baruntse (7,129m) as the main climb. You treat preparation as something that begins months before departure, and you understand that this expedition is most often used as a deliberate step toward an 8,000m objective.

Not the right fit

If you haven’t yet climbed above 6,000m, the combination of altitude, technical terrain, and 26-day expedition logistics will be too large a step. We’d recommend building through our Mera Peak or Island Peak programs first, and then Ama Dablam for technical experience, before stepping up to Baruntse.

This also isn’t the right choice if you need road access, reliable connectivity, or quick evacuation options. The Baruntse approach crosses one of the most isolated regions in eastern Nepal — once you leave Khare, helicopter is the only fast way out, and weather can ground that for days. Honest self-assessment of your tolerance for genuine remoteness is part of the decision.

What you’re getting into.

Overview

Mount Baruntse rises to 7,129 meters in the Mahalangur Range of eastern Nepal, sitting at the meeting point of three of the most dramatic valleys in the Himalaya: the Hinku, the Barun, and the Imja. From its summit you look directly across at Everest, Lhotse, and Makalu — three of the world’s six highest peaks — while the Hunku and Barun glaciers fall away on either side. Despite this position at the heart of Nepal’s most famous mountaineering region, Baruntse remains uncrowded and quiet, visited by a fraction of the climbers who attempt the bigger peaks around it.

First climbed on May 30, 1954 by a New Zealand team that included Colin Todd and Geoff Harrow, Baruntse has since become one of the most respected stepping-stone peaks for climbers preparing for 8,000-meter expeditions. Its symmetrical profile, sustained snow and ice climbing, and genuine expedition-style logistics make it a more honest test of readiness than peaks where the route is heavily fixed and the camps are crowded with commercial teams. Climbers who succeed on Baruntse arrive at their first 8,000m objective with a realistic understanding of what high-altitude expedition climbing actually demands.

The Route

Our expedition follows the Southeast Ridge — the standard line on the mountain — approached via the Mera Peak route through the Hinku Valley. The structure is deliberate: rather than trekking straight to Baruntse Base Camp, we summit Mera Peak (6,476m) first as the acclimatization phase. By the time you arrive at Baruntse Base Camp at 5,300m, you’ve already stood on a 6,400m+ summit, which is the most reliable way to prepare your body for the climbing that follows.

From Base Camp the route ascends through three high camps: Camp I at approximately 6,100m on the lower glacier, Camp II at 6,400m on the snow ridge, and Camp III at 6,800m as the summit camp. The climbing involves sustained snow and ice slopes between 40 and 50 degrees, fixed-rope sections through steeper steps, glacier travel with crevasse exposure, and an exposed summit ridge above Camp III. The character changes from straightforward glacier walking on the lower mountain to genuine mountaineering above Camp II.

The Risks — Stated Plainly

Altitude is the most significant hazard. Above 7,000m the risk of HACE, HAPE, and severe AMS is real, and individual physiology varies regardless of preparation. The pairing with Mera Peak is built specifically to put you on the mountain in the best possible shape, but our guides monitor saturation and symptoms daily and will turn climbers back without negotiation if the warning signs appear.

The route involves crevassed glacier terrain on the approach to Camp I and exposed ridge sections above Camp II where a fall would be serious. The Baruntse region is known for strong winds, sudden snowstorms, and summit-window temperatures well below –25°C. The remoteness compounds every other risk — there is no village to walk to from Base Camp, and helicopter evacuation depends on weather windows that don’t always cooperate. This is part of why we build the schedule with weather buffer days rather than tight summit windows.

If you’re proceeding with full awareness of what this mountain asks, we’ll do everything in our power to give you the best preparation, the most experienced guidance, and the strongest chance of reaching the summit and returning safely.

Exactly what’s covered — and what isn’t.

We list everything because you should never be surprised by a cost at Base Camp — and you should never have to buy WiFi at a teahouse to find out what your expedition is doing.

What’s Included

Permits & Fees

  • Baruntse climbing permit — Nepal Department of Tourism
  • Mera Peak climbing permit (acclimatization phase)
  • Makalu-Barun National Park entry permit
  • Garbage management and environmental fees
  • Payment for official route services and government charges

Transport & Transfers

  • Airport pickup and drop-off in Kathmandu
  • All ground transfers per the itinerary
  • Round-trip domestic flights: Kathmandu to Lukla (25 kg baggage allowance)

Accommodation & Meals

  • 3 nights hotel in Kathmandu (twin-sharing, breakfast included)
  • Lodge accommodation through the trekking phase to Khare
  • Tent accommodation at Khamedingma, Seto Pokhari, and Baruntse Base Camp
  • Full board meals (breakfast, lunch, dinner) during all camping and climbing phases
  • Meals at Mera Peak high camp, Baruntse Base Camp, and all Baruntse high camps

Climbing Support & Staff

  • 1 dedicated high-altitude climbing guide per climber (1:1 ratio)
  • Experienced cook and kitchen team at Base Camp
  • All staff wages, insurance, food, accommodation, and equipment
  • Summit bonus for your assigned climbing guide
  • Government-appointed liaison officer (fully covered)

High-Altitude Logistics & Equipment

  • Full setup of Baruntse Base Camp with dining, kitchen, and communication infrastructure
  • Tents and equipment for Camps I, II, and III (shared between climbing pairs)
  • Mera Peak summit camp tents and equipment
  • Group climbing gear: fixed ropes, anchors, snow stakes, ice screws
  • Fixed rope installation on both Mera Peak and Baruntse
  • Emergency oxygen, masks, and regulator (Base Camp standby)
  • Fully equipped expedition first aid kit

Trekking & Load Support

  • Company duffel bag for personal gear
  • Porters for personal luggage during the trek (up to 25 kg per climber)
  • All porter wages, insurance, food, and accommodation

Communication & Documentation

  • Walkie-talkie radios for expedition communication
  • Satellite phone for emergency use
  • Reliable weather forecasting for summit window planning
  • Official summit certificates for both Mera Peak and Baruntse (upon successful ascent)
  • Certificate of Appreciation from Everest2Elbrus

What’s Not Included

Your Responsibility Before Departure

  • International airfare to and from Nepal
  • Nepal entry visa fees
  • Personal travel, medical, evacuation, and high-altitude mountaineering insurance (mandatory — proof required before departure from Kathmandu)

Personal Gear & Expenses

  • Personal climbing gear and technical equipment
  • Individual first-aid kit and personal medications
  • Hotel nights in Kathmandu beyond the included 3
  • Lunches and dinners in Kathmandu
  • Meals at trekking lodges between Lukla and Khare
  • Laundry, phone calls, internet, snacks, souvenirs
  • Alcoholic and soft drinks
  • Kathmandu sightseeing or optional activities

Tips (Mandatory Minimums)

  • Personal high-altitude climbing guide: $500
  • Base Camp staff (cook, kitchen team, manager): $200
  • Porters: $100

Additional Services (Available at Extra Cost)

  • Supplemental oxygen cylinder: $600 each (pre-expedition arrangement)
  • Additional climbing guide on the mountain: $1,500
  • Helicopter logistics, drop-off, or evacuation: from $1,000
  • Emergency logistics or rescue coordination: from $3,000
  • Any additional logistics due to unforeseen circumstances

26 days, day by day.

A two-summit expedition: Mera Peak first as structured acclimatization, then Baruntse as the main objective. The schedule is built around proper rest and weather buffer days — not marketing timelines.

Days 1–2 Arrive in Kathmandu, expedition briefing, gear check, and final preparation
Days 3–9 Fly to Lukla, trek through the Hinku Valley via Zatrwa La Pass to Khare (5,045m) with acclimatization day
Days 10–11 Mera High Camp (5,790m) and summit Mera Peak (6,476m) — structured acclimatization phase
Days 12–13 Cross the high glacial passes via Seto Pokhari to Baruntse Base Camp (5,300m)
Days 14–21 Baruntse climbing period — puja, training, acclimatization rotations to Camp I (6,100m) and Camp II (6,400m), and summit push (7,129m)
Days 22–25 Descend from Base Camp through Khamedingma, Thangnak, and Kote back to Lukla
Day 26 Fly Lukla to Kathmandu, departure (or weather buffer if needed)

Preparation that starts before you arrive.

Before the Expedition

When you book, preparation starts immediately. We’ll review your climbing history, your previous high-altitude experience, and your current fitness, and identify any gaps that need attention before departure. If your fixed-rope work needs polishing, or your endurance base needs more weeks under it, we’ll tell you directly and recommend specific steps. Booking does not mean we are simply waiting for you to show up at the airport — it means the readiness conversation begins now.

We provide a detailed equipment list well in advance. Gear decisions on a 7,000m peak matter more than people expect — the wrong sleeping system at Camp III, an inadequate boot for –25°C, or a harness that doesn’t fit over expedition layers will quietly end your climb. Our team advises on specific choices based on the conditions you’ll face on Baruntse’s Southeast Ridge in October.

Acclimatization Strategy: Why Mera First

The decision to summit Mera Peak before Baruntse is the central design choice of this expedition. Most operators send climbers straight to a 7,000m peak with rotation-only acclimatization. We pair Baruntse with Mera because standing on a 6,476m summit is the most reliable way to confirm your body can adapt to extreme altitude before the technical climbing begins on Baruntse itself.

The trek through the Hinku Valley provides graduated acclimatization in its own right — Zatrwa La Pass on Day 4 gives you an early 4,610m exposure, the rest day at Thangnak (4,350m) consolidates that, and the climbing-skills day at Khare (5,045m) repeats the cycle. By the time you summit Mera on Day 11, you’ve already spent eight nights above 3,000m. By the time you reach Baruntse Base Camp on Day 13, you’ve already touched 6,476m. The climbing rotations on Baruntse then extend your altitude window further before the summit push.

Technical Skills on the Mountain

Baruntse demands sustained technical skill in cold, oxygen-poor conditions. The route involves fixed-rope climbing on snow slopes between 40 and 50 degrees, ice axe and crampon work on harder ice steps, glacier travel with crevasse exposure, and ridge climbing with serious consequence. Two structured training days — one at Khare during the Mera phase, one at Baruntse Base Camp before the climbing rotations — cover the specific techniques and equipment you’ll use on the route. We use the rotation phase itself as practice under real conditions before the commitment of the summit push.

On the Mountain

Your 1:1 climbing guide ratio means continuous monitoring of your acclimatization, energy, hydration, sleep quality, and decision-making throughout the expedition. Oxygen saturation checks happen daily. If someone isn’t adapting well, we adjust — additional rest, modified rotation, descent for recovery, or an honest conversation about whether to continue. The summit window decisions are made by experienced eyes on the actual mountain, not by a calendar in Kathmandu. We’d rather have a hard conversation at Camp II than a dangerous situation above Camp III.

2026 dates and pricing.

One autumn departure, timed to the most reliable summit window on Baruntse.

Autumn 2026 October 7 – November 1
$10,500 per person · 26 days · 1:1 Climbing Guide Ratio · Includes Mera Peak
Maximum 15 climbers per season. One departure per year.
Talk to a Guide About This Expedition

What your $10,500 actually covers.

Here is where the cost goes, broken down so you can see how it distributes across a 26-day two-summit expedition with a dedicated 1:1 climbing guide:

Baruntse and Mera Peak climbing permits Two royalty fees set by Nepal’s government — the largest combined line item
1 dedicated climbing guide per climber (1:1 ratio) Full salary, insurance, gear, summit bonus, food, and accommodation for 26 days — stays with you on both summits
Baruntse high camp infrastructure Tents, fixed ropes, anchors, kitchen and cooking equipment at Camps I, II, and III
Baruntse Base Camp operations Full setup, dining and kitchen tents, cook and kitchen team, full board meals, communication infrastructure for the entire climbing phase
Mera Peak summit logistics High camp tents, summit-day support, fixed rope installation — an entire 6,000m summit included as the acclimatization phase
Khamedingma and Seto Pokhari camps Full tent setup, meals, and crew support for the high glacial crossing between Mera and Baruntse Base Camp
Domestic flights and porter support Round-trip Kathmandu–Lukla flights with 25 kg allowance, plus porters from Lukla to Khare carrying personal gear
National park entry, environmental fees, and liaison officer Makalu-Barun National Park permits, garbage management, and the government-appointed liaison officer fully covered
Communication and safety infrastructure Walkie-talkies, satellite phone, weather forecasting, expedition first aid kit, emergency oxygen at Base Camp
Kathmandu hotel, ground transfers, summit certificates 3 hotel nights, airport transfers, and official Department of Tourism certificates for both Mera Peak and Baruntse on summit

When you add up two government climbing permits, a dedicated 1:1 guide for 26 days, full Base Camp and high-camp infrastructure on Baruntse, an entire Mera Peak summit included as the acclimatization phase, the camp logistics across the high glacial crossing, and the communication and safety systems that hold the whole operation together, $10,500 is a transparent price for what is structurally a two-summit expedition. Cheaper Baruntse options exist — and there are reasons they’re cheaper. We’d rather show you exactly where every dollar goes.

Where additional costs may arise.

We want to be upfront about where you might spend more. None of these are surprises — they’re documented here before you book.

Tips for guides and staff

Tips for your personal climbing guide ($500 minimum), Base Camp staff ($200 minimum), and porters ($100 minimum) are customary and expected. Not included in the expedition fee. Guidance on appropriate amounts is provided in pre-departure information.

International flights, visa, and insurance

These are your responsibility. High-altitude mountaineering insurance with helicopter evacuation coverage to 7,500m is mandatory and proof must be submitted before departure from Kathmandu. We can advise on suitable providers, but the cost is separate.

Supplemental oxygen (optional)

Baruntse at 7,129m is climbed without supplemental oxygen by most parties, but a cylinder can be arranged for $600 each as a pre-expedition request. Some climbers carry one as a safety reserve rather than for routine use.

Helicopter logistics (if required)

Helicopter transfer, drop-off, or evacuation starts at $1,000. We do not pressure clients into unnecessary helicopter rides — this is a real industry problem in Nepal, and we will only recommend a helicopter when it is the right call medically or operationally. If your insurance covers evacuation, we coordinate directly with them.

Kathmandu personal expenses

Beyond the included 3 hotel nights and breakfasts, any additional nights, meals, shopping, or sightseeing in Kathmandu are on you. Lunches and dinners on the trekking lodges between Lukla and Khare are also separate — budget approximately $20–30 per day for trail meals.

How we handle the “what ifs.”

Baruntse is not a product with a money-back guarantee — the costs are real, consumed, and non-recoverable once the expedition begins. But we handle uncertainty in ways that protect your investment:

Readiness assessment before you commit. We evaluate your altitude history, technical experience, and current preparation before accepting your booking. If we don’t think you’re ready for a 7,000m peak, we’ll say so — and recommend what to do first. We’d rather lose a sale than take your money for an expedition you’re not prepared for.

Mera Peak as built-in acclimatization insurance. Pairing Mera with Baruntse is itself a form of risk reduction. By the time you’re on the Baruntse climbing rotations, your body has already proven it can handle 6,400m+ altitude. You arrive at Base Camp with data, not hope.

Weather flexibility built into the schedule. The Baruntse climbing period (Days 14–21) includes rest, training, rotation, and weather monitoring days. We don’t build tight schedules that force summit attempts in bad windows. The summit decision belongs to the guide on the mountain, not the calendar in Kathmandu.

Priority rebooking if the mountain says no. If weather or conditions prevent any summit attempt on Baruntse, we work with you on priority placement for the next season — because the preparation and acclimatization you’ve done don’t expire.

Staged payment structure. Your deposit secures your spot. Final payment isn’t due until 90 days before departure, giving you time to assess your preparation progress and make an informed decision.

Questions we hear most.

What altitude experience do I actually need?

You should have verifiable experience above 6,000m on at least one previous expedition — ideally on a technical peak like Ama Dablam, Island Peak, or a comparable objective. You also need real comfort with crampons, fixed ropes, jumar use, and steep snow climbing (40–50 degrees). If you’re unsure where you stand, talk to us. We’ll give you an honest assessment, and if Baruntse is the wrong next step, we’ll tell you what would be the right one.

Why does the expedition include Mera Peak?

Because it is the most reliable way to acclimatize for a 7,000m climb. Standing on a 6,476m summit is fundamentally different from rotating to that altitude and descending — it tells your body, and your guide, that you can actually handle the height. By the time you reach Baruntse Base Camp, you’ve already touched 6,476m and spent eight nights above 3,000m. The Mera summit is also a real climbing objective in its own right, not a throwaway warm-up — many climbers consider it one of the most rewarding 6,000m peaks in Nepal.

Is Baruntse good preparation for an 8,000m peak?

Yes — it is one of the most respected stepping-stone peaks for exactly this reason. The combination of altitude above 7,000m, sustained technical climbing, expedition-style logistics, and remote operating environment is the closest analog to an 8,000m experience that you can get on a smaller mountain. Climbers who succeed on Baruntse often progress to Manaslu, Lhotse, or Everest with realistic confidence in their readiness.

Is supplemental oxygen used on Baruntse?

Most parties climb Baruntse without supplemental oxygen, and our standard expedition is structured that way. Cylinders can be added as a pre-expedition arrangement at $600 each — some climbers carry one as a safety reserve rather than for routine breathing. We carry emergency oxygen at Base Camp regardless, as a medical safety measure for HACE or HAPE response.

What is the 1:1 guide ratio, and why does it matter on Baruntse?

Every climber is paired with a dedicated high-altitude guide for the entire 26-day expedition — the same guide on Mera, on the high glacial crossing, and on Baruntse. On a remote 7,000m peak, this is the difference between being on a rope with someone who knows your specific acclimatization pattern, technical strengths, and decision-making style, and being one of several climbers a single guide is trying to track. Your guide knows when to push, when to rest, and when to turn around.

How remote is Baruntse really?

Very. The route through the Hinku and Barun valleys is one of the least-visited regions in eastern Nepal. There are no roads, no ATMs after Lukla, very limited connectivity, and once you cross beyond Khare into the high glacial terrain you are committed to the route. Helicopter is the only fast way out, and weather can ground that for days. This is part of why it remains a quiet, authentic expedition rather than a commercial circus — but it’s also why preparation, equipment, and guide judgment matter more than they would on a more accessible peak.

Is mountaineering insurance mandatory?

Yes, without exception. You must carry personal travel, medical, evacuation, and high-altitude mountaineering insurance with helicopter coverage valid to at least 7,500m. Proof of valid insurance must be submitted before departure from Kathmandu — we cannot provide expedition services without it. Your insurance covers real emergencies. We will never pressure you into an unnecessary helicopter evacuation, which is a known scam pattern in parts of the Nepal trekking industry.

What’s the deposit and cancellation policy?

Your deposit secures your spot, with final payment due 90 days before departure. Contact us for the full deposit schedule and cancellation terms — we provide complete documentation before you commit to anything.

Before you go.

Everything you need before departure — download, review, and prepare so nothing is left to the last minute.

Equipment List

Baruntse requires full expedition gear scaled for a 7,000m peak. Key items include high-altitude double climbing boots with compatible crampons, ice axe, climbing harness, ascender (jumar), 4 locking and 2 non-locking carabiners, figure-8 or belay/rappel device, climbing helmet, expedition down suit, two sleeping bags (one for Base Camp, one rated to –40°C for high camps), insulated sleeping pad and closed-cell foam pad, 50–60 liter climbing backpack, Gore-Tex shell jacket and pants, heavy down jacket, mid-layer fleece, expedition mittens and lighter climbing gloves, ski goggles and glacier glasses, balaclava, thermal base layers, summit socks and trekking socks, trekking poles, headlamp with extra batteries, sunscreen (SPF 50+), lip balm, water bottles and thermos, and a personal first-aid kit. A full mountain-specific checklist is provided upon booking.

Required Documents

Before departure, you will need: a valid passport (6+ months remaining) and passport-sized photos, a Nepal tourist visa (90-day), a medical fitness certificate (issued within 30 days of departure by a government-approved institution), proof of high-altitude mountaineering insurance with helicopter evacuation coverage to 7,500m, a completed medical disclosure form, a signed liability waiver and assumption of risk, an emergency contact and next-of-kin form, and an insurance verification form. All forms are provided after booking confirmation.

We handle both climbing permits (Baruntse and Mera Peak), Makalu-Barun National Park fees, environmental fees, and the government-appointed liaison officer arrangements on your behalf. These are included in the expedition price.

Hinku & Barun Valleys — What to Expect

The Baruntse approach passes through the Solukhumbu and Sankhuwasabha districts, home to the Sherpa, Rai, and Tamang peoples. Buddhism is the dominant tradition — you’ll encounter monasteries, prayer flags, and mani stones along the trail. Always pass mani walls and prayer stones on the left, the traditional direction. The Puja ceremony at Baruntse Base Camp is a meaningful Buddhist blessing for safe passage, and participation is expected.

The expedition crosses into the Makalu-Barun National Park, a protected conservation area with rich biodiversity — snow leopard, red panda, and Himalayan monal habitats. Food on the trekking phase is basic Nepali, Tibetan, and simple Western options at lodges between Lukla and Khare; from Khamedingma onward, our cook prepares all meals at the camps. Carry cash in Nepali Rupees — ATMs are available in Kathmandu and very briefly in Lukla, but not beyond. WiFi exists at some lodges before Khare (paid, slow, unreliable) and effectively does not exist beyond. All E2E guides speak English.

Ready to talk about Baruntse?

If you’re seriously considering this expedition, the next step is a conversation. Not a sales call — a real discussion about your altitude history, your technical background, and whether the timing is right. We’ll answer your questions directly, and if we think you need a different next step first, we’ll tell you.

Average response time: 48 hours. You’ll hear from someone who has run expeditions in this region.

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