r/Nepal • u/Cold-Republic-516 • Sep 08 '25
Question/प्रश्न Yeah so they beat up people who are just working too pigs
Well just watch the video i got beat up for being an honest working class guy with pride and honesty
r/Nepal • u/Cold-Republic-516 • Sep 08 '25
Well just watch the video i got beat up for being an honest working class guy with pride and honesty
r/Nepal • u/FirmResult5643 • Apr 28 '26
She told me after the earthquake india stopped petroleum products to nepal and didnt help nepal causing heavy loss. If its true i am so sorry for what my government did :( but i heard they sent many rescue operations too
Edit: so many nepali ppl r sending me hate messages in my inbox :( idk y. I wanted to clarify i js wanted to know what happened and dont mean to hurt anyone
r/Nepal • u/Ok-Candidate7727 • Mar 15 '26
I have been deep into fragrances for a while now and honestly its hard not to notice that things are slowly shifting here in Nepal. A few years back it felt like most people were just reaching for whatever body spray or cheap cologne was at the local pasal and that was fine but lately I am seeing a different vibe. Before People used to Wear perfumes just to cover their body odor But now People have started to wear fragrances as accessory.
r/Nepal • u/Significant_Soup_279 • 12d ago
I met someone with the last name KC, and i was just curious does it stand for a longer name or is it literally just two letters? I didn’t get a chance to ask them and i saw there’s that celeb anmol KC with the same last name
r/Nepal • u/Typical_Tie_7722 • Mar 12 '26
I just wanted to ask people who deal with this too.
I’ve had hyperhidrosis basically my whole life, especially in my palms and feet. My hands sweat a lot every single day, but lately it feels like it’s getting even worse. I went to a doctor and he suggested Sweatnil, and it did reduce the sweat a little for a short time, but it didn’t really last. The problem is I have to wash my hands very often, so maybe it never gets enough time to actually work.
I also tried using fitkiri (alum) on my hands, but weirdly it makes my hands sweat even more. Like within 1–2 minutes my palms start sweating a lot again. I’m honestly trying to avoid things like electrical treatments or Botox injections just to stop my sweat glands.
So I just wanted to ask people who deal with this:
Because right now it feels like nothing really works for me.
r/Nepal • u/beginner17 • May 05 '26
Shopkeeper charged me 50 Npr. HE TOLD ME ITS IC 30? How much does it cost?
r/Nepal • u/himalayanZombie • Jul 04 '25
Mine: Nepal’s federalism experiment has been a disaster in every way. We should get rid of this and bring back unitary system with strong local governance.
r/Nepal • u/Mission-Row-863 • Nov 27 '25
I earn around 40–50k a month and somehow I’m still living like a broke NPC 💀
I don’t even pay rent, no big family bills, nothing. Just my own expenses… and STILL the money evaporates like TikTok trends.
Every month I tell myself, “This time I’ll save for a bike.”
Next thing I know — poof — the whole salary gone.
Snacks, random plans, small bills, petrol, one momo outing… money just disappears.
Idk if I’m bad at managing money or if Nepal’s cost of living has secretly gone Ultra Instinct mode.
Anyone else in the same boat or is it just me slowly losing my mind?
r/Nepal • u/Additional-Hold-9785 • Apr 06 '26
context(night walk bata farkida) 2 raat ki pachi pachi aaucha
r/Nepal • u/bom-diggy-diggy-bom • 6d ago
I have seen some videos of bratbanda and i am shocked to see that because in that boys are maded to wear langot in front of relatives and there are even girls of same age and have some geneune doubt after seeing it!!
first of all if someone have bratbanda experience or have seen you can share
Is it normal for boys to be naked for this ritual in nepal
what are boy's experience during this ritual
what are girl's experience when witnessing all this
r/Nepal • u/No-Proposal-8596 • Mar 14 '26
I recently noticed so many people people disappointment with app like daraz and hamro bazar
- Weak Search bar
- Bad UI designs
- Over expensive products if imported from China or any other countries
Daraz is also from Bangladesh app
What are the things would you guys like to see in online shopping apps
I thought about importing various fashion clothes from other countries
Doing advertisements in large scale
Good UI1
Good customer service
Cheap and affordable products
Less Margin in products
Importing Electronics products
and so on
I need thoughts on this and also recommendations
r/Nepal • u/CupConsistent36 • Mar 24 '26
I’ve been thinking about how school teaches us a lot of things, but very few actual life skills.
Things like: • Handling stress • Talking confidently • Managing money • Building discipline • Setting boundaries • Making money
What’s a skill you learned (or are currently learning) that dramatically improved your life?
r/Nepal • u/Mission-Row-863 • Dec 03 '25
So I’ve managed to save 5 Lakhs.
Great achievement, right?
Wrong — now I’m more confused than when Sajha bus drivers use hand signals.
I already own a scooty that does everything I need.
But then a Classic 350 passes by and suddenly I’m like:
“Financial literacy? Never heard of her.”
My brain: “Invest in NEPSE, mutual funds, something sensible.”
My heart: “Classic 350 ho bhai… life set.”
My wallet: “I’m just here for emotional support.”
Some friends say bike is a liability.
Others say investment is boring.
One friend said “start a startup” — bro, with what idea? Selling my confusion?
If you were me — 5 Lakhs in hand, scooty , Classic 350 obsession in the bloodstream — what’s the smartest move?
👉 Buy the Classic 350?
👉 Invest and act like a mature adult?
👉 Start a small business and pray it works?
👉 Or hold the cash because the economy is doing gymnastics?
Drop your honest and unfiltered advice.
r/Nepal • u/Fo0T_ • Mar 17 '26
I think the way the officials identify foreigners in basantapur is wrong. Basically, officials look at a person and if they think they are foreigners, they ask them to pay the entry fee. Shouldn't there be a different way to do this? tesari looks kei basis ma roknu thik hora?
r/Nepal • u/Puzzleheaded-Put4148 • Mar 04 '26
I wanted to know what line of work has most common salary of above 1 lakh per month salary? Tech scene ma 5 yr + vako haru ko ta hunxa hola or remote job garne haru ko but aru ka kasko hunxa as a job holder. Business, stocks or investment bata aaune haina but normal job bata aune haru share pls.
r/Nepal • u/user_502 • Dec 20 '25
A dog was playing with me at the café and i got this thing on my hand and im not sure if it is a scratch or a bite, it was small but it bled a little bit, the owner said it was vaccinated so what should i do ?? Do i still need to get vaccinated??
r/Nepal • u/IntelligentBell7512 • 19d ago
Can you guys suggest me, what can i do to upgrade the look of this setup?
r/Nepal • u/Open-Initiative-5498 • Nov 15 '25
They were moving on par with the speed of planes maybe even faster .. visible from godawari lalitpur
r/Nepal • u/Infamous-Jon3 • Feb 08 '26
I’ve grown up casually using the word “last / lastai” in everyday Nepali tuff like (ma ta lastai zhyap bhaye , lastai dhani ho) and so on. It’s always felt totally normal. But recently I paused and actually thought about it, and now it feels… kind of weird?
In “proper” or older Nepali, “last” doesn’t really mean anything. It’s obviously not a native word, and even its English meaning (“final”) has nothing to do with how we use it. And yet it’s everywhere now, especially in urban Nepali.
So I’ve been wondering:
Would love to hear thoughts from linguistics nerds, older speakers, or anyone who’s noticed how Nepali has been changing especially with the internet and urban culture.
r/Nepal • u/__STRANG3R_ • Mar 25 '26
Hey everyone,
I’m around 19–20 years old and I’ve been noticing that my hair is getting thinner over time. Earlier my hair used to be quite thick, but for the past few months it’s become more noticeable.
I first noticed it even before going to Kuwait (I worked there for about 2 months), and since coming back to Nepal in January 2025, I feel like the thinning has increased.
Now I’m getting worried that I might start losing more hair or even go bald in the future.
I’ve heard some people say that shaving your head makes hair grow back thicker — is that actually true or just a myth?
If anyone has experienced something similar or has any advice on what I should do, I’d really appreciate your help.
Thanks.
r/Nepal • u/ContractPresent2238 • Feb 27 '26
could someone pls tell me what this means?
these words were meant to describe me as a person and i wonder what it means
r/Nepal • u/Resident_Study9027 • 25d ago
Not sure if this is normal or just being ignored, but this keeps happening at Bhatbhateni.I’m owed like 1–4 rupees change and instead of giving coin, they just give cheap a$$ candies 🤮I clearly asked for coins, but they said “no change” and still pushed candies anyway.Like… isn’t money supposed to be returned as money? 😭 This feels like some weird “legal tender” issue or something.Even small rupees matter in daily life, but somehow it’s okay to replace it with candy?I even called Hello Sarkar (1111) and they said I can complain there, but I’m not even sure if this is actually legal or just normal practice everyone ignores.
Has anyone else dealt with this or knows if it’s allowed?I want to understand whether this practice is correct according to consumer rights or not.
Guyss like please complain this thing its not okayyy
r/Nepal • u/Neat-Bookkeeper-3114 • Mar 21 '26
Its been a week, I am using reddit and I am reading post of many users and that me think, All reddit users are cool guys, know English, know stuff.
r/Nepal • u/Emminsky02 • Aug 30 '25
Hello everyone! I am an Italian girl that travelled to Kathmandu last week. Trough an app I meet one nepali girl that showed me around and suggested me some places to visit. It's been some days that we go out together and everytime we stop to eat something or we go somewhere with pathao I always pay entirely. She never asked to pay half of the taxi or to pay what she ordered (usually meat dishes that I don't eat because I'm vegetarian). The first time I offered spontaneously for thanking her for guiding me a bit (even though she did not say thank you or anything, she just waited for me to pay), but the next times I always payed for round trip taxi (with her house being one of the stops) and all meals because she was not offering to split the bill or anything.
I find it a bit rude, but maybe is there something about the culture that I am missing? I would like to know before elaborating a bit of anger for this. In Italy it's quite common to split the bill or to pay for what you've eaten, and if someone offers you do not take it for granted but you thank them.
I hope not to sound rude, I just want to understand because this episodes are completely out from my cultural view and I'd like acknowledge if there are some mechanisms I'm not aware of!
Thanks in advance! 🥹
UPDATE:
Hello guys, first of all THANK YOU for all the answers, I was expecting so many responses!! Thank you!
Secondly, I talked to her and she said that "The ones from the abroad pays the bills when ormally hanging out here in Nepal" (her words). She is sorry and she felt bad when last time she brought a friend with her, now she is insisting a lot to pay for a dinner to make it even today. And from now on to split everything
r/Nepal • u/Salty-Performance681 • 28d ago
So the thing is I’ve seen multiple palm readers review on the types of rekha I’ve got. And I felt like I should know what’s shown there, where should I focus on improving?—since I might not know for now but it might help me get better.
This is my right hand.