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Trek into the Annapurna Sanctuary to Base Camp at 4130 m. Honest pacing on the hardest day, meals included, three tiers, same safety.
A direct walk into the glacial amphitheatre below Annapurna I, to Base Camp at 4130 m. We are honest about which sections you drive, which you walk, and why the Base Camp day deserves respect.
The Base Camp day. Deurali up through Machhapuchhre Base Camp to Annapurna Base Camp at 4130 m, close to 900 m of gain in one push, then a long descent the next morning. Six to seven hours, the defining day of the trek.
This is a short trek that still reaches 4130 m. The climb to Base Camp is faster than standard acclimatisation guidance prefers, so pacing and the Machhapuchhre Base Camp approach matter. The Transformation adds a second night for more margin. Altitude affects everyone regardless of fitness.
The road now reaches Siwai and Jhinu, so the lower valley can be driven. Every tier jeeps in and out at the trailhead; you walk the Sanctuary itself. We state exactly which sections are road and which are trail.
The Dovan to Deurali to Machhapuchhre Base Camp stretch can carry avalanche and landslide risk in heavy snow or after rain. Timing and guide judgement manage this. It is a real seasonal factor, not a brochure detail.
Rooms improve in the lower villages on the upgraded tiers. At Deurali, Machhapuchhre Base Camp and Annapurna Base Camp, accommodation is basic for everyone regardless of tier. We do not pretend otherwise.
Walkers comfortable with several consecutive days on steep stone staircases and one high day. No technical climbing. A reasonable first Himalayan trek on the right tier, with honest pacing.
Swap the long descent for a flight out from the Sanctuary, available on any tier. A time-saver or a knee-saver, offered honestly as an option, never as the point of the trek.
Weather-dependent and not guaranteed. Mountain flights cancel or delay for cloud and wind, so a road descent must stay possible as the fallback.
Pick a tier, set your group size, and choose a preferred departure. The number you see here is the number we receive.
2 included · 3 not included
It is a moderate trek with a few genuinely demanding parts, not a technical climb. The hardest single day is the climb from Deurali through Machhapuchhre Base Camp to Annapurna Base Camp at 4130 m, close to 900 m of gain in one push. The other tester is the long stone staircase below Chhomrong, thousands of steps down and back up. You do not need climbing skills, but you should be comfortable walking five to seven hours a day on steep steps for several days in a row. Trekking poles help, especially on the long descent.
Base Camp is 4130 m, lower than the big pass treks, but the climb to it is fast, so altitude still has to be respected. The gain from Deurali to Base Camp is close to 900 m in a day, which is quicker than the standard guidance of around 500 m of sleeping-altitude gain. We manage this with deliberate pacing, the Machhapuchhre Base Camp stop, and watching everyone for symptoms. The Transformation tier adds a second acclimatisation night for more margin. Altitude affects people regardless of fitness, so tell your guide how you feel and be willing to slow down. If symptoms are serious, the correct response is to descend, and descent here is straightforward.
Yes. Since 2023 a licensed guide is required to trek in Nepal's national parks and conservation areas, including the Annapurna region, and this is enforced in 2026. You book through a registered agency rather than hiring privately. Beyond the rule, a guide matters on this route for the avalanche-aware timing of the Dovan to Deurali stretch, for altitude judgement on the Base Camp day, and for lodge coordination in the busy season. We include a licensed, insured guide on every tier.
It depends on how much of the lower route you walk versus drive, and whether you add anything. Our Trail is a 7-day trip door to door, Pokhara based, with around 5 to 6 active trekking days, jeeping in and out at the trailhead. The Journey is 10 days door to door with 7 active trekking days, including the Kathmandu to Pokhara travel. The Transformation is 12 days, adding a Ghorepani and Poon Hill start and a second acclimatisation night. We list both the door-to-door length, so you can book flights, and the active trekking days, so you know what you are actually walking.
The lower valley is a road now, and we are honest about it. A jeep takes you from Pokhara in to the trailhead at Siwai or Jhinu, and brings you back the same way, which replaces what used to be a day or more of lower walking. Everything from the trailhead up into the Sanctuary, through Chhomrong, Bamboo, Deurali and on to Base Camp, is walked on every tier; there is no road into the Sanctuary itself. We tell you exactly which sections are road and which are trail so there are no surprises at the trailhead.
You need the Annapurna Conservation Area Permit, the ACAP, which costs 3000 Nepalese rupees for foreign trekkers, roughly 25 US dollars, and we arrange it for you on every tier. It is the main document checked at trail checkpoints like Chhomrong. The TIMS card is not currently required or checked on the Annapurna Base Camp trail, even though it still appears in some older guides, so we do not charge you for one. Nepal's permit rules have changed before, so we confirm the current position at the start of each season. NEEDS VERIFICATION: reconfirm the ACAP fee and any change in TIMS status with operations before publishing exact figures each season.
Spring, from March to May, and autumn, from September to November, are the two main seasons. Autumn gives the clearest, most stable mountain weather and is the most popular. Spring brings rhododendron blooms on the forested sections lower down. Winter is possible but cold, with real avalanche risk on the approach to the Sanctuary after snow. The summer monsoon, June to August, brings rain, cloud, leeches in the forest and landslide risk on the roads, so we do not recommend it. The Dovan to Deurali stretch is the part most affected by snow and rain conditions, which is why timing and guide judgement matter on those days.
It depends on the tier, and we are clear about it because some operators quote a low headline price and leave food out. The Trail includes breakfast and dinner, with lunch on your own for flexibility on driving and walking days. The Journey and The Transformation include full board, all three meals. Food on the trail is simple teahouse cooking: the Nepali staple dal bhat of lentils, rice and vegetables, plus noodles, soups, momos, eggs and pancakes. Prices on the menus rise as you climb, because everything is carried up by porter, but on our included tiers that is already covered.
It can, on the right tier and with honest preparation. Base Camp at 4130 m is high but well below the big pass treks, the trek is relatively short, and the trail is well supported with teahouses, which makes it a popular first Himalayan trek. The main things to respect are the steep stone staircases, which are hard on legs not used to them, and the fast climb on the Base Camp day. A first-timer is well suited to The Journey, paced properly, or The Transformation with its extra acclimatisation night. Train by walking consecutive days with some hills beforehand, and on the trek itself, pace honestly and tell your guide how you feel.
Yes, a helicopter return from the Base Camp area down to Pokhara can be added on any tier, and it is a genuine option rather than the point of the trek. People choose it to save the two descent days or to spare tired knees. It is weather-dependent and shares with other passengers to keep the cost reasonable, so it is never guaranteed on a given day; mountain flights delay or cancel for cloud and wind, and a road descent has to stay possible as the fallback. Tell us at planning if you are interested and we will explain the current cost and how it works. NEEDS VERIFICATION: confirm the shared-heli price with the operator before quoting a figure.
Follow the trail from start to finish — every day is a new adventure.
The Journey is the canonical 10-day itinerary below. The Trail compresses it to a 7-day Pokhara-based trip by dropping the Kathmandu bookend days and tightening the lower-trail rest stops; it includes breakfast and dinner, with an optional porter. The Transformation extends it to 12 days by adding a Ghorepani and Poon Hill start, a second acclimatisation night before the Base Camp day, an assistant guide, and the best available lower-village rooms, run privately. Safety, the licensed guide, the Base Camp-day pacing and the descent protocol are identical on every tier.

The drive or flight west into the Annapurna foothills

The honest jeep ride to the Siwai trailhead

The first long stone staircases of the route

The long stone staircase below Chhomrong

The narrowing gorge above Dovan with its waterfalls

Machhapuchhre Base Camp at around 3700 m on the way in

Sunrise on Annapurna I from Base Camp

The climb back over to Chhomrong

The final walk down to the Siwai road

The return drive or flight to Kathmandu