We work hard to keep this guide accurate. If you spot outdated info, email updates to contact@desinri.com.
Short Description: A complete, practical guide to Nepal’s Non-Tourist Visa: who qualifies, documents, extensions, work/study limits, family rules, fees, and official sources.
Last Verified On: 2026-04-05
Visa Snapshot
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Country | Nepal |
| Visa name | Non-Tourist Visa |
| Visa short name | Non-tourist |
| Category | Non-tourist / special-purpose temporary stay visa |
| Main purpose | Long-stay or special-purpose stay in Nepal for persons who do not fit the tourist category |
| Typical applicant | Family members of Nepali citizens or residents, persons coming for study/research/training, some business/investment-related applicants, and other approved special categories |
| Validity | Varies by purpose and approval |
| Stay duration | Varies; commonly issued/extended for the approved purpose and supporting documents |
| Entries allowed | Varies; check visa sticker/approval and Department of Immigration rules |
| Extension possible? | Yes, in many cases, if the underlying purpose continues and documentary support remains valid |
| Work allowed? | Limited/explain: a Non-Tourist Visa itself is not a general work authorization; separate labor/work approval may be required depending on the activity |
| Study allowed? | Limited/explain: yes for approved study/training/research situations, subject to supporting institution documents and immigration approval |
| Family allowed? | Yes, in some streams, especially spouse/dependent-type cases, subject to proof |
| PR path? | No clear general permanent residence route through this visa alone |
| Citizenship path? | Indirect only in narrow cases, mainly through separate citizenship laws such as marriage/family routes where eligible |
Nepal’s Non-Tourist Visa is a special visa category used for people who need to stay in Nepal for reasons other than ordinary tourism but who do not fall under a standard tourist stay alone.
In practice, this visa is used as a flexible administrative category within Nepal’s immigration system for approved special cases, including some:
- family-based stays
- study or research-related stays
- training
- long-term special-purpose residence
- certain business/investment-linked situations
- other categories specifically recognized by the Department of Immigration
It exists because not everyone entering Nepal is a tourist, diplomat, employee, or transit passenger. Nepal therefore maintains a catch-all category for legitimate non-tourism stays that still require immigration control.
How it fits into Nepal’s immigration system
Nepal issues several broad visa categories, including:
- Tourist Visa
- Non-Tourist Visa
- Business Visa
- Student Visa
- Residential Visa
- Transit Visa
- Gratis/Diplomatic/Official categories
The difficulty is that public official information is sometimes fragmented, and certain purposes may overlap across categories. For example:
- A student may sometimes be guided toward a Student Visa
- An investor may be guided toward a Business Visa
- A spouse/dependent may receive a Non-Tourist Visa
- Some long-stay special cases may be processed under Non-Tourist rather than Tourist
So the Non-Tourist Visa is best understood as an official visa class for approved non-tourism purposes that are not purely visitor tourism and that may not fit another simpler category.
Is it a visa, permit, or residence status?
It is primarily a visa/status granted by Nepal immigration authorities, usually evidenced through:
- a visa endorsement/sticker or extension record
- immigration approval in Nepal
- linked underlying supporting purpose documents
It is not the same thing as permanent residence.
Alternate names
Official English usage commonly includes:
- Non-Tourist Visa
- sometimes described on immigration pages simply under “Non Tourist Visa”
No universally used subclass code is publicly emphasized on the main official pages reviewed.
Important caution
Warning: Nepal’s public visa pages do not always explain every sub-stream in one place. Some categories are handled partly by the Department of Immigration, partly by embassies, and partly by sponsoring ministries/institutions. Where the official rule is unclear, this guide says so rather than guessing.
2. Who should apply for this visa?
The Non-Tourist Visa is appropriate mainly for people who have a real, documentable non-tourism reason to stay in Nepal and who do not fit better under another dedicated Nepal visa category.
Ideal applicants
Spouses/partners of Nepali citizens
Often one of the clearest use cases.
Children/dependents
Dependent children of qualifying persons may be able to use this route where immigration accepts the relationship and purpose.
Researchers
Where the stay is for approved research, academic cooperation, or related institutional activity and a different category is not specifically used.
Students or trainees
In some cases, although many formal students should check whether a Student Visa is the more precise category.
Religious workers
Potentially, where the stay is tied to recognized institutions and immigration approval.
Medical or special-care long-stay applicants
Where a tourist stay is not suitable and there is supporting documentation.
Founders/entrepreneurs/investors
Only in limited cases. Many should instead consider a Business Visa or another specific business route.
Family members of foreign workers/residents
Possible in some dependent situations if supported by the principal applicant’s lawful status.
Who should usually not use this visa?
Tourists
Use a Tourist Visa.
Short-term business visitors
If the trip is only for meetings or commercial visits, check whether business entry under the proper category is more appropriate.
Employees with a Nepali job
Usually need the correct employment/work authorization structure, often involving: – labor approval – relevant ministry approval – immigration visa status aligned to employment
A Non-Tourist Visa alone is not a substitute for lawful work permission.
Degree-seeking students
Usually should confirm whether Student Visa is the proper route.
Transit passengers
Use a Transit Visa if required.
Diplomats/official delegations
Use the relevant diplomatic/official visa class.
Digital nomads
Nepal does not currently publish a mainstream dedicated digital nomad visa. A Non-Tourist Visa should not be assumed to permit foreign remote work unless immigration clearly authorizes the underlying status.
Quick fit table
| Applicant type | Usually suitable for Non-Tourist? | Better alternative if applicable |
|---|---|---|
| Tourist | No | Tourist Visa |
| Spouse of Nepali citizen | Often yes | Non-Tourist may be correct |
| Foreign employee in Nepal | Sometimes, but only with proper work basis | Employment/work-linked route |
| Student | Sometimes | Student Visa often better |
| Investor | Sometimes | Business Visa often better |
| Transit passenger | No | Transit Visa |
| Diplomat | No | Diplomatic/Official Visa |
| Remote worker without Nepali sponsor | Unclear/high risk | No clearly published dedicated route |
3. What is this visa used for?
Common permitted uses
Depending on approval and documentation, the Non-Tourist Visa may be used for:
- family reunion or family stay
- spouse stay
- dependent stay
- long-term stay for approved special purpose
- some study/training/research activities
- some religious or institutional activities
- some medical/supportive stay cases
- other purposes expressly accepted by Nepal immigration
Purposes that may require a different visa or extra approval
- Employment: may require labor and immigration approval beyond the visa itself
- Business operation/investment: often better aligned to Business Visa rules
- Formal degree study: often better aligned to Student Visa rules
- Residential long-term retirement-style stay: may fit Residential Visa if eligible
- Diplomatic work: separate diplomatic category
Prohibited or risky uses
Unless specifically authorized, applicants should not assume the Non-Tourist Visa permits:
- ordinary tourism as the true main purpose
- unapproved paid employment
- freelancing for local clients
- hidden remote work
- journalism without proper authorization
- paid performance or commercial artistic work without permission
- unauthorized volunteering
- business setup beyond the scope of approval
- overstaying after the approved purpose ends
Grey areas and misunderstandings
Remote work
Nepal’s official public materials do not clearly state a broad right for Non-Tourist Visa holders to perform foreign remote work from Nepal. That means this is a grey area and should not be treated as automatically permitted.
Volunteering
Even unpaid work can be immigration-sensitive if it resembles labor or organizational service. If volunteering is the real purpose, confirm with immigration first.
Internship
If the activity resembles work or structured training, supporting letters from the host institution and immigration approval are important.
Common Mistake: People assume “non-tourist” means “anything other than tourism is allowed.” That is not how immigration law works. The visa must match the actual purpose.
4. Official visa classification and naming
Official program name
Non-Tourist Visa
Short name
Non-Tourist
Long name
Non-Tourist Visa
Internal streams
Nepal’s official public pages do not always publish a fully itemized stream-by-stream list under one page. In practice, the category may cover multiple special-purpose cases depending on sponsorship and purpose.
Related permit names people confuse it with
- Tourist Visa
- Student Visa
- Business Visa
- Residential Visa
- Transit Visa
Old vs current naming
No major public rebranding was clearly identified in the official pages reviewed. The English label remains Non-Tourist Visa.
5. Eligibility criteria
Because Nepal’s official guidance can be category-specific and sponsor-specific, eligibility depends heavily on why you want the visa.
Core eligibility factors
1) Genuine non-tourism purpose
You must show a legitimate reason to stay in Nepal that is not ordinary tourism.
2) Supporting institution or relationship
You may need one or more of the following:
- marriage certificate
- birth certificate
- sponsorship letter
- admission letter
- recommendation letter from ministry/institution
- employer or organization support
- proof of principal visa holder’s status
3) Valid passport
A valid passport is required. Exact minimum remaining validity can vary by mission/practice; applicants should keep at least 6 months validity where possible, unless official instructions say otherwise.
4) Lawful immigration history
Past overstays, deportations, visa misuse, or fraudulent records may affect eligibility.
5) Financial ability
You may need to show: – self-funding – sponsor support – institutional support – scholarship or employer coverage
6) Documentary proof of accommodation or host details
Depending on subcategory.
7) Character/security acceptability
Police or security concerns may lead to refusal or delays.
8) Health-related documentation
If requested, especially in long-stay or institution-linked cases.
Nationality rules
Nepal’s visa rules can differ by nationality in practice, particularly regarding:
- visa-on-arrival availability
- consular processing preferences
- additional scrutiny
- document legalization expectations
The official Non-Tourist pages do not always provide one public nationality matrix. Applicants from countries subject to additional screening should confirm with the relevant Nepali mission.
Age
No single universal age rule applies to the category as a whole. Age matters mostly for:
- minors/dependents
- students
- dependent child classification
Education, language, work experience
These are not universal Non-Tourist Visa requirements. They may matter only in specific sub-streams, such as study, research, or employment-linked cases.
Sponsorship/invitation
Often very important. The sponsor may be:
- Nepali spouse
- parent
- educational institution
- recognized organization
- employer
- principal visa holder
Job offer
Not always required. Required only where the underlying purpose is work-linked.
Points requirement
Not applicable for this visa.
Relationship proof
Required for spouse/dependent cases.
Admission letter
Required for study/training cases.
Business/investment thresholds
Not generally a Non-Tourist standard rule. If your case is mainly investment/business, check Business Visa rules.
Maintenance funds
No single publicly prominent universal figure was found for all Non-Tourist cases. Immigration or mission practice may ask for proof of living expenses.
Onward travel
May be requested, especially where the duration is limited or the case is not open-ended.
Insurance
Not clearly published as a universal mandatory requirement for every Non-Tourist applicant, but it may still be prudent and may be requested in some cases.
Biometrics
Mission-specific or process-specific. Nepal does not publish a single global biometrics rule on the main Non-Tourist pages reviewed.
Intent requirements
You must show your stay matches the requested category. If the real purpose is work, study, or settlement, documents should clearly support that.
Local registration
May apply after arrival or extension, especially for long stays. Applicants should confirm with the Department of Immigration.
Quotas/caps/ballots
Not publicly indicated for this visa.
Embassy-specific rules
Yes, possible. Some embassies/consulates may require: – local residence proof – additional forms – pre-approval – document legalization – in-person submission
Special exemptions
These are not clearly set out in one public Non-Tourist master page. Some exemptions may depend on bilateral or status-based treatment.
6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers
You may be refused if:
- your purpose is vague or unsupported
- you apply for Non-Tourist when another visa is clearly correct
- your relationship documents are weak or inconsistent
- your sponsor cannot be verified
- your passport is damaged or near expiry
- you have overstayed in Nepal before
- you submit altered or unverifiable documents
- your financial support appears inadequate
- your timeline does not make sense
- your institution letter is missing key details
- your marriage certificate or birth certificate is not acceptable
- you have criminal/security concerns
- medical admissibility concerns arise where relevant
- your documents are not translated properly
- your story changes between form, letter, and interview
Common red flags
- entering as a “family visitor” but carrying employment documents
- claiming study without an admission/endorsement letter
- large unexplained recent bank deposits
- sponsor letters without ID/contact details
- fake or unregistered organizations
- marriage certificates that do not match passport names
- applying from a third country without lawful residence there, where mission rules require local residence
Warning: Nepal immigration authorities have broad discretion to question whether the requested category matches the real purpose.
7. Benefits of this visa
If granted for the correct purpose, the Non-Tourist Visa can offer:
- lawful stay in Nepal beyond ordinary tourist permission
- a more suitable status for family-based or special-purpose residence
- ability to extend in-country in many cases
- legal recognition of your underlying purpose
- potential access to dependent stay arrangements
- a cleaner immigration record than trying to remain on repeated tourist extensions
- better alignment with school, institution, spouse, or sponsor records
Family benefits
Possible benefits include:
- spouse/dependent co-residence
- longer lawful stay than tourism
- easier local formalities if your status matches your purpose
Travel flexibility
May vary by entry type and endorsement. Some holders may need to pay attention to re-entry issues and visa validity before leaving Nepal.
Conversion/renewal
In some situations, yes. Nepal does allow in-country extension/regularization for certain lawful categories through the Department of Immigration.
8. Limitations and restrictions
The Non-Tourist Visa is not a free-form residence right.
Key restrictions
- not a blanket work permit
- not automatic permission for local employment
- not automatic permission for remote work
- not guaranteed to lead to permanent residence
- validity tied to the approved purpose
- extension usually depends on continued proof
- may require reporting or periodic renewal
- can be canceled if purpose ends or documents become invalid
Sponsor dependence
If your visa is based on:
- spouse
- school
- institution
- employer
- principal foreign resident
then your status may depend on that relationship continuing.
Re-entry limitations
If the visa is single-entry or expires while you are abroad, re-entry may be affected.
Compliance duties
You may need to maintain: – updated passport – current supporting letters – local address records – timely extension applications
9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules
These rules vary by purpose and approval.
Validity
The visa validity may be issued for the approved period supported by your documents. Some applicants receive shorter initial periods and then extend in Nepal.
Stay duration
The allowed stay normally corresponds to:
- the approved family relationship period
- the academic or training period
- the sponsor’s visa period
- another specifically approved duration
Entries
Entry type can vary:
- single entry
- multiple entry
- re-entry implications depending on endorsement
Always check the actual visa sticker or immigration approval.
When the clock starts
Usually from issuance or entry, depending on the visa structure and notation. Check the printed endorsement carefully.
Grace periods
No universal grace period was clearly published for this category. Do not rely on unofficial assumptions.
Overstay consequences
Overstaying in Nepal can lead to:
- fines
- administrative complications
- future visa problems
- possible removal issues
Renewal timing
Apply for extension before expiry. Do not wait until the last day if avoidable.
10. Complete document checklist
Because the Non-Tourist Visa is purpose-specific, the document list varies. Below is the most complete practical structure.
A. Core documents
| Document | What it is | Why needed | Common mistakes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Completed visa application form | Official form | Starts the request | Wrong category selected, missing signatures |
| Purpose letter / cover letter | Applicant explanation | Clarifies why Non-Tourist fits | Vague purpose, inconsistent dates |
| Supporting category letter | From spouse, school, host, employer, or institution | Proves basis for visa | Generic letters without contact details |
B. Identity/travel documents
- Passport
- Passport biodata page copy
- Previous Nepal visa copies, if any
- Recent passport-size photos
Why needed: identity, nationality, travel history, and visa placement.
Common mistakes: – damaged passport – too little validity remaining – name mismatch across documents
C. Financial documents
- bank statements
- sponsor bank statements
- salary slips
- scholarship letter
- maintenance undertaking
Why needed: to show you can support yourself or will be supported.
Common mistakes: – unexplained deposits – screenshots instead of proper statements – statements too old
D. Employment/business documents
If applicable:
- employment letter
- work approval or recommendation
- company registration documents
- tax or registration proof of employer/sponsor entity
E. Education documents
If applicable:
- admission letter
- enrollment certificate
- training confirmation
- research approval
- student ID or institutional support
F. Relationship/family documents
If applicable:
- marriage certificate
- birth certificate
- family relationship certificate
- custody papers for minors
- consent letter from non-traveling parent
- passport/ID of spouse or parent in Nepal
G. Accommodation/travel documents
If applicable:
- address in Nepal
- host accommodation proof
- tenancy/ownership proof
- onward/return ticket where relevant
H. Sponsor/invitation documents
- invitation letter
- sponsor ID/passport copy
- proof of lawful status in Nepal
- contact details
- financial support undertaking if applicable
I. Health/insurance documents
- medical reports, if requested
- health insurance, if required by mission or sponsor
- treatment letter for medical cases
J. Country-specific extras
Some missions may require:
- local residence permit in country of application
- legalized civil documents
- police clearance
- embassy-specific declaration forms
K. Minor/dependent-specific documents
- full birth certificate
- parental consent
- custody order
- school record if relevant
- passports of both parents where requested
L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs
If your documents are not in English or Nepali, certified translation may be required.
Some documents may need: – notarization – legalization – apostille, where accepted and relevant – embassy attestation in some cases
Because mission practice varies, confirm with the relevant Nepali embassy or the Department of Immigration.
M. Photo specifications
Use recent passport-style photos meeting the relevant embassy/immigration size rules. If not clearly published, use standard recent visa photos and confirm exact specifications before submission.
11. Financial requirements
Is there a fixed minimum?
For the Non-Tourist Visa as a whole, a single universal public minimum fund rule is not clearly published across all subcategories.
That means your financial requirement usually depends on:
- your purpose
- your sponsor
- your institution
- your duration of stay
- whether accommodation is provided
- whether the principal applicant is funding dependents
Acceptable proof
- official bank statements
- salary slips
- employer support letter
- scholarship or grant letter
- spouse/sponsor support proof
- institutional maintenance commitment
Who can sponsor?
Potentially:
- Nepali spouse
- parent
- educational institution
- host organization
- employer
- principal visa holder
Proof strength tips
A strong financial pack usually includes:
- 3–6 months bank statements
- explanation for large recent deposits
- sponsor ID and relationship proof
- income evidence matching the support promise
Hidden costs
Even when no large minimum fund is published, applicants often face:
- translations
- notarization/legalization
- travel to embassy/immigration office
- local accommodation deposits
- extension fees
- document courier costs
12. Fees and total cost
Official Nepal visa fees can change and may vary by category, duration, nationality, and place of issue.
Check the latest official fee page before applying.
Cost categories
| Cost item | Typical situation |
|---|---|
| Visa application fee | Usually payable based on category/duration |
| Extension fee | Payable for in-country extensions where granted |
| Biometrics fee | Not always separately listed |
| Police certificate cost | Paid to issuing country authority, if required |
| Medical exam cost | If requested |
| Translation/notary/legalization cost | Common for family/civil documents |
| Courier/travel cost | If applying through a mission away from home |
| Insurance cost | If required or prudent |
| Dependent fee | May apply separately per applicant |
Because the official Non-Tourist fee schedule is not always clearly isolated in one public page, applicants should verify directly with:
- Department of Immigration Nepal
- the relevant Nepali embassy/consulate
Warning: Visa fees are often non-refundable after processing starts, even if refused.
13. Step-by-step application process
1. Confirm the correct visa
Check whether your purpose truly fits Non-Tourist rather than Tourist, Student, Business, or another category.
2. Gather purpose-specific documents
Collect the documents that prove: – who you are – why you need the visa – who supports you – how long you will stay – where you will stay
3. Check where to apply
Depending on your nationality and location, you may need to apply:
- at a Nepali embassy/consulate before travel
- after entry in Nepal for extension/conversion where legally permitted
- through the Department of Immigration in Kathmandu
4. Complete the form
Use the official visa application process required by the mission or immigration office.
5. Pay the fee
Pay the relevant fee as instructed.
6. Submit supporting documents
Submit originals/copies as required.
7. Attend interview or in-person verification if requested
Not all applicants are interviewed, but some may be.
8. Provide any medical/police or extra documents if asked
This often happens in long-stay or family cases.
9. Wait for decision
Processing times vary significantly.
10. Receive visa or approval
Check: – name spelling – passport number – visa category – validity dates – entry count
11. Travel to Nepal
Carry your supporting documents in hand luggage.
12. Complete arrival formalities
Immigration officers may ask about: – purpose – host – address – support documents
13. Apply for extension or in-country regularization if needed
Usually through the Department of Immigration before expiry.
14. Processing time
Official standard times
A single universal official processing time for all Non-Tourist cases was not clearly published in one place.
What affects timing
- nationality
- place of application
- completeness of file
- need for ministry/institution approval
- family relationship verification
- security checks
- public holidays and peak seasons
Practical expectation
Simple, well-documented family cases may move faster than cases involving:
- institutional approval
- research activity
- work-linked activity
- unclear sponsor documents
- third-country applications
Pro Tip: Build extra time for civil document verification and translations. Those delays are common.
15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks
Biometrics
No clear universal public rule was found that every Non-Tourist applicant must provide biometrics. This may depend on the mission or current practice.
Interview
Possible, especially if: – purpose is unclear – relationship evidence is weak – the mission wants clarification
Typical interview questions
- Why are you going to Nepal?
- Who is receiving you?
- How long will you stay?
- Who pays for your stay?
- What is your relationship to the sponsor?
- Why is this not a tourist visit?
Medical
Not uniformly required for all Non-Tourist cases. May arise in: – long-stay cases – medical purpose cases – institutional requirements
Police clearance
Not universally published for every case, but may be requested depending on the purpose, duration, or mission practice.
16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality
Official public approval-rate data for Nepal’s Non-Tourist Visa was not clearly found in the official sources reviewed.
So instead of inventing percentages, here is the practical reality:
Common refusal patterns
- wrong visa category chosen
- weak relationship proof
- insufficient sponsor evidence
- lack of institutional letter
- inconsistent forms and cover letter
- unverifiable documents
- previous Nepal immigration violations
- applying from a country where the mission questions your residence status
17. How to strengthen the application legally
1. Write a clear cover letter
State: – exact purpose – exact legal basis – intended duration – host/sponsor details – why Non-Tourist is the correct category
2. Match every claim with evidence
If you say: – “I am joining my spouse,” include marriage certificate and spouse ID/status. – “I am studying,” include admission/enrollment proof. – “I am dependent,” include principal applicant’s visa/status.
3. Explain unusual facts
Examples: – recent name change – late marriage registration – gap between relationship and application – large bank deposit – prior refusal
4. Keep documents consistent
Dates, names, passport numbers, and addresses should match across: – form – letter – invitation – bank statement – civil documents
5. Use certified translations
Poor translations create avoidable refusals.
6. Show legal residence in the country where you apply
If applying from a third country, include your visa/residence proof there if relevant.
7. Apply early
Especially if a ministry, school, or immigration office must verify documents.
18. Insider tips, practical hacks, and smart applicant strategies
Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies
Organize by purpose, not by document type alone
For example, for a spouse case: 1. application form 2. cover letter 3. marriage proof 4. spouse ID and status 5. accommodation proof 6. sponsor finances 7. applicant passport
This helps officers understand the case quickly.
Explain large bank deposits honestly
If a family member transferred money, include: – transfer proof – gift/support letter – ID of sender if appropriate
Use a short document index
A one-page index can reduce confusion.
Don’t overload the file with irrelevant papers
Strong, relevant evidence is better than a huge messy bundle.
Families should align timelines
Marriage date, address history, sponsor status, and intended residence should all make sense together.
Contact the embassy only when the issue is specific
Good reasons: – category uncertainty – country-specific document legalization – third-country application rules
Poor reasons: – asking for daily updates before the normal timeframe has passed
If previously refused, disclose honestly
Then explain what has changed and attach improved evidence.
19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance
When needed
Strongly recommended for almost all Non-Tourist cases.
What to include
- who you are
- your nationality and passport number
- exact visa requested
- purpose of stay
- duration requested
- sponsor/host details
- financial support details
- list of attached evidence
- commitment to comply with visa rules
What not to say
- vague statements like “for personal reasons”
- tourist language if the real purpose is family/study/work
- unsupported claims
- emotional arguments without documents
Sample outline
- Introduction and visa request
- Purpose of stay
- Relationship/institution background
- Funding and accommodation
- Duration and compliance statement
- Attached documents list
20. Sponsor / inviter guidance
Who can sponsor?
Depending on the case:
- Nepali spouse
- parent/family member
- educational institution
- employer/organization
- principal visa holder
- host institution
Invitation letter structure
A strong invitation letter should include:
- sponsor full name
- date of birth and ID/passport details
- address and phone number
- immigration status in Nepal
- relationship to applicant
- exact purpose of applicant’s stay
- duration of support/accommodation
- financial support statement if applicable
- signature and date
Required sponsor documents
May include:
- citizenship certificate or passport
- visa/residence proof in Nepal if foreign sponsor
- proof of address
- bank statements or income proof
- relationship proof
Sponsor mistakes
- unsigned letters
- no ID attached
- no address/contact details
- vague promises without financial proof
- mismatch with applicant’s story
21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children
Are dependents allowed?
Yes, often in family-based cases.
Who qualifies?
Potentially:
- spouse
- minor child
- dependent child
- family members linked to a lawful principal status
Exact definitions may depend on the underlying purpose and immigration discretion.
Proof required
- marriage certificate
- birth certificate
- school documents for children if relevant
- principal applicant’s visa/status
- financial support evidence
- custody/consent documents for minors
Work/study rights of dependents
Not automatic. A dependent or spouse on a Non-Tourist Visa should not assume they may work in Nepal without separate authorization.
Children may usually study if otherwise lawfully resident, but school/institution requirements still apply.
Unmarried partners
Official public guidance does not clearly confirm a broad unmarried-partner framework equivalent to marriage. Marriage-based proof is stronger and more clearly recognized.
Same-sex spouses/partners
Nepal has progressive legal recognition in some areas, but visa practice may still depend on documentary recognition of the relationship. Applicants in same-sex relationships should verify current consular and immigration treatment directly.
22. Work rights, study rights, and business activity rules
Work rights
A Non-Tourist Visa is not a general open work visa.
Usually allowed
- only the activity specifically approved by immigration, if any
Usually not automatically allowed
- local employment
- self-employment
- freelancing for local clients
- side jobs
- paid performance
- internships resembling work
Study rights
Possible where the visa is granted for study/training/research or where the holder is a lawful dependent attending school.
Business activity
Ordinary commercial meetings may be possible only if they match the approved status. If your primary purpose is business or investment, check the Business Visa.
Passive income
Receiving passive income from abroad is different from performing work in Nepal, but tax and immigration treatment can still be complex.
Remote work
No clear broad official permission found. Treat as uncertain unless directly approved.
23. Travel rules and border entry issues
Visa is not final admission
Even with a visa, final admission is decided by Nepal border/immigration officers.
Documents to carry
Bring copies of:
- passport
- visa approval
- sponsor letter
- relationship or admission proof
- return/onward ticket if relevant
- accommodation details
- contact number in Nepal
Onward/return ticket
May be requested, especially where the stay is time-limited or not clearly open-ended.
Immigration interview at arrival
Officers may ask: – Why are you here? – Who is meeting you? – How long will you stay? – Where will you stay?
Re-entry after travel
Check whether your visa remains valid and whether multiple entry is allowed.
New passport with old visa
If you renew your passport, carry both passports unless immigration instructs otherwise.
24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion
Can it be extended?
Often yes, if the reason for stay continues and the documents remain valid.
Where?
Usually with the Department of Immigration, Nepal.
Inside-country or outside-country?
Extensions are commonly handled in Nepal, but pre-entry issuance may still depend on embassies for initial travel in some cases.
Switching
Switching from one visa class to another may be possible in some cases, but Nepal does not publish a simple universal switching rule for all categories.
Examples that may arise: – Tourist to Non-Tourist in justified cases – Non-Tourist to Business/Student where the proper basis later exists
Whether allowed depends on current immigration practice and supporting ministry/institution documents.
Risks
- waiting too long before expiry
- trying to change purpose without proof
- assuming automatic conversion
25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway
Does this visa lead to PR?
Generally, no direct broad PR path is publicly established through the Non-Tourist Visa alone.
Can it help indirectly?
Yes, in narrow ways:
- if you are married to a Nepali citizen, your immigration history may support lawful residence while you pursue any separate legal options available under Nepal’s citizenship laws
- if you later qualify for a different long-term residence status, lawful stay helps
Citizenship
Citizenship in Nepal is governed by separate nationality laws, not by the Non-Tourist Visa itself.
So the path is: – not automatic – not points-based – not based simply on years spent on this visa
26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations
Tax residence risk
Long stays in Nepal may create tax residence questions. Immigration permission and tax residence are not the same thing.
Registration obligations
You may need to comply with: – immigration extension rules – local address reporting if required – institution reporting – employer reporting where applicable
Work compliance
If doing any work-related activity, ensure: – proper work authorization – proper labor compliance – correct tax treatment
Overstay consequences
Overstays can affect: – fines – future visas – sponsor credibility – departure clearance
27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions
Nepal’s visa treatment can vary by nationality, but the official Non-Tourist pages do not publish a complete one-page exception list for all applicants.
Possible variation areas:
- whether you can obtain entry visa on arrival first and then regularize
- whether you must apply in advance through an embassy
- whether extra security checks apply
- whether document legalization requirements differ
Applicants from countries with restricted visa-on-arrival access or extra screening should verify directly with a Nepali mission.
28. Special cases and edge cases
Minors
Need: – birth certificate – parental consent – custody documents if one parent is absent
Divorced/separated parents
Expect closer scrutiny of custody and travel consent.
Adopted children
Adoption documents may need legalization/translation and may require special review.
Same-sex spouses/partners
Documentary recognition remains critical; verify current practice directly.
Stateless persons/refugees
May face special documentation issues. Pre-clearance with the embassy/immigration is advisable.
Dual nationals
Travel on one passport consistently. If civil documents use another nationality/passport, explain clearly.
Prior refusals
Disclose honestly and attach explanation.
Overstays or prior deportation
These can seriously affect approval. Legal advice may be wise.
Applying from a third country
Some embassies prefer or require applicants to be resident in the country of application.
Name change / gender marker mismatch
Include legal change documents and a short explanation letter.
29. Common myths and mistakes
Myth vs Fact
| Myth | Fact |
|---|---|
| “Non-Tourist means I can do any non-tourism activity.” | False. The visa must match the specific approved purpose. |
| “If I marry a Nepali citizen, work rights are automatic.” | False. Immigration status and work permission are separate issues. |
| “I can just enter on a tourist visa and sort it out later.” | Sometimes possible for certain regularization scenarios, but never assume. Confirm first. |
| “A sponsor letter alone is enough.” | False. Supporting ID, status, finances, and purpose proof are usually needed. |
| “Remote work is always fine because the employer is abroad.” | Not clearly published. Treat as uncertain unless officially confirmed. |
| “Overstaying a few days does not matter.” | False. Overstay can cause fines and future immigration trouble. |
30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication
What happens after refusal?
You should receive a refusal or non-approval outcome, though the level of detail may vary.
Appeal rights
A clearly published universal formal appeal framework for all Non-Tourist refusals was not identified in the official sources reviewed.
That means many applicants may need to:
- correct the issues
- gather stronger evidence
- reapply
Administrative review or reconsideration
This may exist in practice in limited situations, but applicants should verify directly with the deciding mission or the Department of Immigration.
Refund
Usually, visa processing fees are not refunded after processing begins.
When to reapply
Reapply only after fixing the actual refusal reasons, such as: – wrong category – missing documents – weak relationship proof – financial gaps – translation problems
31. Arrival in Nepal: what happens next?
At immigration control
You may be asked for:
- passport
- visa
- address in Nepal
- sponsor/host details
- proof of onward plans if relevant
After arrival
Depending on your case, you may need to:
- complete extension or registration formalities
- report to your school/institution/employer
- keep copies of your visa endorsements
- monitor expiry dates carefully
First 30 days
Good practice includes: – confirming your lawful stay period – collecting local contact/address records – scheduling any needed immigration extension before expiry – ensuring your sponsor/institution can support renewal paperwork
32. Real-world timeline examples
Scenario 1: Spouse of Nepali citizen
- Week 1–2: gather passport, marriage certificate, spouse ID, address proof
- Week 2–4: apply through mission or confirm in-country immigration route
- Week 4–8: decision or request for more documents
- Arrival: carry marriage proof and spouse contact details
- Before expiry: apply for extension in Nepal if needed
Scenario 2: Student/trainee
- Week 1–3: secure admission/training letter
- Week 2–4: collect financial documents and passport copies
- Week 4–7: submit application
- Week 6–10: decision
- Arrival: maintain enrollment for later extension
Scenario 3: Dependent child
- Week 1–2: collect birth certificate, parent visa/status, consent documents
- Week 2–5: legalization/translation if needed
- Week 5–8: application processing
- Arrival: keep school and address records ready
Scenario 4: Research/institutional applicant
- Week 1–4: obtain institution and ministry-level letters if required
- Week 4–6: complete application
- Week 6–12+: possible longer review depending on approvals
33. Ideal document pack structure
Recommended order
- Document index
- Application form
- Cover letter
- Passport copy
- Photo
- Purpose-specific core evidence
- Sponsor/inviter documents
- Financial proof
- Accommodation proof
- Prior Nepal visa/travel history
- Translations and legalization pages
Naming convention
Use clear file names such as:
01_Application_Form.pdf02_Cover_Letter.pdf03_Passport_Biodata.pdf04_Marriage_Certificate.pdf05_Sponsor_Citizenship_and_ID.pdf
Scan tips
- color scans where possible
- complete edges visible
- no blur
- one PDF per section if upload system allows
34. Exact checklists
Pre-application checklist
- Confirm Non-Tourist is the correct category
- Check official mission/immigration instructions
- Gather all civil documents
- Translate non-English/Nepali documents
- Confirm sponsor documents are current
- Check passport validity
- Prepare cover letter
- Prepare funds evidence
Submission-day checklist
- Correct form completed
- Fees ready
- Photos ready
- Originals and copies ready
- Sponsor contact reachable
- File order clean and indexed
Biometrics/interview-day checklist
- Passport
- Appointment confirmation if any
- Full copy set
- Cover letter
- Calm and consistent explanation
Arrival checklist
- Passport and visa
- Sponsor contact details
- Address in Nepal
- Core supporting documents in hand luggage
- Check visa validity on arrival
Extension/renewal checklist
- Current passport
- Current visa copy
- Updated sponsor/institution letter
- Updated finances if needed
- Accommodation/address proof
- Apply before expiry
Refusal recovery checklist
- Read refusal reasons carefully
- Identify missing/inconsistent evidence
- Correct translations/legalization
- Add explanation letter
- Reapply only when fixed
35. FAQs
1. Is Nepal’s Non-Tourist Visa the same as a long-term tourist visa?
No. It is for non-tourism purposes supported by specific documents.
2. Can I work in Nepal on a Non-Tourist Visa?
Not automatically. Separate permission may be required.
3. Can I study on this visa?
Sometimes, depending on the approved purpose. Many formal students should check the Student Visa.
4. Is this visa mainly for spouses of Nepali citizens?
That is one common use, but not the only one.
5. Can unmarried partners apply?
Possibly difficult unless the relationship is officially recognized and accepted. Marriage-based cases are clearer.
6. Can children be included in the same application?
Usually each person needs their own application, though family files can be linked.
7. Is there a fixed bank balance requirement?
No single universal public figure applies to all Non-Tourist cases.
8. Can a Nepali citizen sponsor me?
Yes, often in spouse/family cases.
9. Can a foreign resident in Nepal sponsor dependents?
Often yes, depending on their lawful status and supporting documents.
10. Do I need a police certificate?
Not always, but it may be requested.
11. Do I need medical insurance?
Not clearly universal, but it may be prudent or required in specific cases.
12. Can I convert from tourist to non-tourist inside Nepal?
Sometimes, depending on the case and immigration approval. Verify before relying on this.
13. Can I apply from a country where I am only visiting?
Some embassies may prefer legal residents only. Check with that mission.
14. How long is the visa issued for?
Varies by purpose and approval.
15. Is multiple entry guaranteed?
No. Check the actual endorsement.
16. Can I leave Nepal and come back on the same visa?
Only if the visa remains valid and permits re-entry.
17. What if my marriage certificate is in another language?
Use a certified translation and confirm whether legalization is required.
18. What if my sponsor has low income but free accommodation?
Submit both accommodation proof and any other available financial support evidence.
19. Can I volunteer on a Non-Tourist Visa?
Not automatically. Volunteering may still require approval.
20. Can I do remote work for my overseas employer?
Official public guidance is unclear. Do not assume it is allowed.
21. What happens if I overstay?
Fines and future immigration problems are possible.
22. Is there an appeal after refusal?
A universal formal appeal path is not clearly published for all cases. Reapplication may be the main route.
23. Can this visa lead to permanent residence?
Not as a general direct route.
24. Can same-sex spouses apply?
Possibly, but documentary recognition and current practice should be verified directly.
25. Do I need to register my address in Nepal?
Possibly depending on your circumstances; confirm with immigration and your institution/sponsor.
26. Can I open a bank account in Nepal on this visa?
This depends on bank KYC rules and your immigration status; banks may request local address and valid visa evidence.
27. Can I stay as long as my spouse is in Nepal?
Not automatically; you must still maintain your own valid visa/extension.
28. Can I submit old bank statements?
Use recent statements unless the mission asks otherwise.
29. What if my passport expires soon?
Renew before applying if possible.
30. Should I use an agent?
Optional only. Many applicants can apply directly. Always rely on official instructions.
36. Official sources and verification
Below are official Nepal government sources relevant to visas, immigration, and this category. Because Nepal sometimes updates URL structures, verify navigation if a page moves.
-
Department of Immigration, Nepal
https://www.immigration.gov.np/ -
Department of Immigration – Visa Information
https://www.immigration.gov.np/page/visa-info -
Department of Immigration – Non-Tourist Visa
https://www.immigration.gov.np/page/non-tourist-visa -
Department of Immigration – Tourist Visa
https://www.immigration.gov.np/page/tourist-visa -
Department of Immigration – Business Visa
https://www.immigration.gov.np/page/business-visa -
Department of Immigration – Student Visa
https://www.immigration.gov.np/page/study-visa -
Department of Immigration – Residential Visa
https://www.immigration.gov.np/page/residential-visa -
Department of Immigration – Transit Visa
https://www.immigration.gov.np/page/transit-visa -
Ministry of Home Affairs, Nepal
https://moha.gov.np/ -
Nepal Law Commission
https://lawcommission.gov.np/ -
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Nepal
https://mofa.gov.np/ -
Department of Consular Services, Nepal
https://nepalconsular.gov.np/
Primary source notes
The Department of Immigration is the main practical source for: – visa categories – extensions – in-country immigration procedures
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Nepal embassies are important for: – overseas application practices – mission-specific requirements
The Nepal Law Commission is useful for: – underlying legislation and regulations
37. Final verdict
Nepal’s Non-Tourist Visa is best for people who have a real, provable reason to stay in Nepal that is not ordinary tourism, especially:
- spouses and family members
- dependents
- certain students, trainees, or researchers
- other special-category residents with institutional backing
Biggest benefits
- lawful long-stay option beyond tourism
- flexible category for special purposes
- often extendable in Nepal
- useful for family-based residence
Biggest risks
- confusion with Business, Student, or Tourist categories
- weak sponsor or relationship evidence
- assuming work rights that are not granted
- relying on unclear embassy practice without checking first
Top preparation advice
- Identify the exact legal basis for your stay.
- Match every claim with documents.
- Use a strong cover letter.
- Translate and legalize civil documents properly.
- Verify current rules with the Department of Immigration or relevant Nepali mission before applying.
When to consider another visa
Choose another route if your real purpose is clearly:
- tourism → Tourist Visa
- formal study → Student Visa
- investment/business → Business Visa
- retirement/residential stay → Residential Visa if eligible
- transit → Transit Visa
Information gaps or items to verify before applying
- Whether your nationality must apply in advance through an embassy or can regularize in Nepal
- Current official fee amounts for the exact Non-Tourist subcategory
- Whether your case should instead be filed as Student, Business, or Residential
- Whether multiple entry is available for your specific approval
- Whether police clearance or medical documentation is required for your nationality/purpose
- Whether your embassy requires legal residence in the country of application
- Whether your civil documents need notarization, apostille, or embassy legalization
- Whether same-sex spouse/partner documentation is currently accepted in your exact factual situation
- Whether remote work is permitted under your intended status
- Current extension rules and office procedures at the Department of Immigration
- Any recent changes to Nepal’s immigration website pages, forms, or documentation standards