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KidSchoolerनेपाली
7 min readBy KidSchooler editorial

Nepal News: How and Where to Follow It (2026 Guide)

A practical Nepal news guide: the best English and Nepali outlets, TV, radio and apps, and how to stay updated reliably from inside Nepal or abroad.

Following Nepal news well is less about finding one perfect website and more about reading two or three reliable outlets side by side.
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The painted Buddha eyes on the golden tower of Boudhanath Stupa in Kathmandu
Royonx via Wikimedia Commons (CC0)

If you want to follow Nepal news reliably — whether you are planning a trip, living in the country, or keeping up from the diaspora — the good news is that Nepal has a busy, competitive and largely free media scene with strong English-language coverage. The challenge is not finding news; it is knowing which outlets are established, how to read them side by side, and where to turn for official, travel-relevant updates. This evergreen guide maps the landscape so you can build a simple, trustworthy reading habit that works from anywhere.

This is a how-and-where guide, not a feed of headlines. It points you to the outlets, apps and broadcasters that consistently cover Nepal, and explains how to stay updated without being misled by rumour. For one specific recent event that still shapes search interest, see our factual account of the 2025 social media ban and the wider September 2025 protests.

Key takeaways

  • Nepal news is well covered in both English and Nepali; you do not need to read Nepali to stay informed.
  • Established English dailies include The Kathmandu Post, the Himalayan Times, Online Khabar English, myRepublica and the weekly Nepali Times.
  • The largest Nepali-language daily is Kantipur; popular web portals include Online Khabar, Setopati and Ratopati.
  • For television, Kantipur TV and the state broadcaster Nepal Television stream online; the BBC runs a Nepali-language service.
  • The single best habit is to cross-check two or three established outlets rather than trust one headline or social post.
  • For travel decisions, pair Nepali outlets with your own government's official advisory, not social media alone.

English-language news outlets

If English is your main language, several long-running outlets give you near-complete daily coverage of Nepali politics, economy, culture and sport.

  • The Kathmandu Post is one of Nepal's best-known English dailies, published by the Kantipur Media Group. It carries breaking news, opinion and analysis across politics, business, the arts, sport and travel.
  • The Himalayan Times is another major English daily out of Kathmandu, covering national and world news, business, sport and entertainment.
  • Online Khabar English is the English edition of one of Nepal's most-read independent online portals, established in 2006, with strong national and business coverage.
  • myRepublica (Nagarik Network) is a widely read English portal and a New York Times partner, covering politics, business and society.
  • Nepali Times is an English-language weekly known for in-depth reporting and commentary on politics, society, travel and the environment.
  • The Rising Nepal is the English daily of the state-owned Gorkhapatra Corporation, useful for official statements and government-side framing.

Reading one independent outlet (such as the Kathmandu Post or Online Khabar) alongside a state outlet (The Rising Nepal) is a simple way to see both the reporting and the official line on any given story.

Nepali-language newspapers and portals

Nepali-language media is larger still, and many of these outlets break stories first. Even if you read mainly in English, it helps to know the major names, because English summaries often trace back to them.

  • Kantipur is Nepal's largest daily newspaper and a reference point for national news.
  • Nagarik, published by Nepal Republic Media, is another leading broadsheet (its sister English title is Republica/myRepublica).
  • Annapurna Post is a major Nepali daily, with an English weekly counterpart, the Annapurna Express.
  • Gorkhapatra is the long-running state newspaper.

On the web, three portals stand out for round-the-clock updates: Online Khabar, Setopati and Ratopati. All publish heavily in Nepali, and Online Khabar and Ratopati also run English editions, so they are useful even if your Nepali is limited. If you are learning the language, our languages of Nepal overview explains where Nepali fits among the country's many tongues.

Television and radio

For broadcast news, several national channels stream online and post bulletins to YouTube:

  • Kantipur TV is a popular private channel offering live streaming and news programming.
  • Nepal Television (NTV) is the state broadcaster, useful for official ceremonies, parliamentary coverage and government announcements.
  • Radio Nepal, the state radio service, has nationwide reach and a long history, which matters in rural areas where internet access is thinner.

Radio remains genuinely important in Nepal. During natural disasters or power and network disruptions — the kind of events covered in our load-shedding explainer — radio is often the most resilient way news travels across the hills and mountains.

International coverage of Nepal

For an outside-in perspective, or when a Nepal story goes global, a few international services are worth knowing:

  • The BBC runs a dedicated Nepali-language service with online news and radio bulletins, widely trusted across the region.
  • Major wires and broadcasters — Reuters, Associated Press, Al Jazeera and CNN — cover big Nepali stories such as elections, disasters and the 2025 protests, often with helpful context for non-Nepali readers.
  • Encyclopaedia Britannica and Wikipedia are useful for background and timelines once an event has settled, though they are reference works rather than breaking-news sources.

International outlets are excellent for major moments but thin on day-to-day detail. For routine national news, Nepali outlets will always be ahead.

Following Nepal news from the diaspora

A large share of Nepal's news audience lives abroad, and the Nepali diaspora is well served. Beyond the main outlets above — almost all of which publish free online editions — there are dedicated diaspora publications serving Nepali communities in the United States, the United Kingdom, Japan, Australia and the Gulf. These cover both Nepal itself and community affairs overseas, from visa changes to remittance and labour news.

A practical setup for keeping up from afar:

  1. Bookmark two English outlets (for example, the Kathmandu Post and Online Khabar English).
  2. Add one international source for big-picture context (such as the BBC Nepali service).
  3. Follow the official channels or apps of one or two outlets for alerts, rather than relying on a crowded social feed.

If you will be travelling rather than reading from home, a reliable connection helps; our guides to the best SIM card for Nepal and Wi-Fi in Nepal cover staying online once you land.

Apps, alerts and aggregators

Beyond bookmarking websites, a few formats make it easier to keep up consistently:

  • News apps. Most large outlets — the Kathmandu Post, Online Khabar, Setopati and Kantipur among them — offer free mobile apps with push notifications. Turning on alerts from one or two trusted outlets is more reliable than relying on whatever surfaces in a social feed.
  • YouTube channels. Kantipur TV, Nepal Television and many newspapers maintain active YouTube channels, which are a convenient way to catch daily bulletins and interviews on demand, especially from abroad.
  • Aggregators and directories. Listings such as those on Feedspot and Wikipedia's media overview are handy for discovering outlets and comparing them, though they are starting points rather than news sources in themselves.

A sensible rule of thumb is to let alerts come from a small, trusted set, and use aggregators only when you are actively exploring or want to widen your view. That keeps notifications meaningful instead of overwhelming.

How to stay updated without being misled

Nepal's media is plural and competitive, which is a strength — but it also means the same event can be framed differently across outlets, and social media can run ahead of confirmed facts. A few habits keep you on solid ground:

  • Cross-check before you share. If a claim only appears on one site or one social post, treat it as unconfirmed until an established outlet reports it.
  • Separate news from opinion. Several outlets clearly label commentary; read it as analysis, not fact.
  • Watch the dateline. Old photos and stories often recirculate during crises. Check the publication date before drawing conclusions.
  • For travel and safety, go official. Pair Nepali news with your own government's live travel advice — our Nepal travel advisory explainer shows how to read those tiers, and is Nepal safe to travel now gives a current, dated snapshot.

If you ever want to step back from the constant feed altogether, Nepal is also a place people come to switch off; our digital detox in Nepal piece is a gentle counterpoint to doomscrolling the news.

The bottom line

There is no single "best" place to follow Nepal news — and that is precisely the point. The most reliable approach is to read a couple of established English outlets, glance at a Nepali portal or two, keep one international source for context, and reserve official advisories for travel decisions. Build that small, balanced habit and you will stay genuinely informed about Nepal, whether you are in Kathmandu, trekking in the hills, or following from the other side of the world.

Sources

Frequently asked questions

What is the best English-language news site for Nepal?
There is no single best site, but The Kathmandu Post, the Himalayan Times, Online Khabar English, myRepublica and Nepali Times are all widely read, established English outlets that cover politics, business and society.
What are the main Nepali-language news outlets?
Kantipur is the largest daily, alongside Nagarik, Annapurna Post and the state-owned Gorkhapatra. Popular Nepali web portals include Online Khabar, Setopati and Ratopati, and many also publish English editions.
How can I follow Nepal news from abroad?
Most major Nepali outlets publish free online editions in English, and the BBC offers a Nepali-language service. Following two or three sites, plus diaspora outlets, gives a balanced picture from anywhere in the world.
Is there a Nepali television channel I can watch online?
Yes. Kantipur TV and several other national broadcasters stream live online, and the state broadcaster Nepal Television also operates. Many channels post clips and bulletins to YouTube as well.
How do I check official travel-related news for Nepal?
For travel and safety updates, read your own government's official travel advisory alongside Nepali news outlets, rather than relying on social media headlines or single unverified posts.
Why do different Nepali outlets report the same story differently?
Nepal has a lively, competitive media scene with varied ownership and editorial lines. Cross-checking two or three established outlets is the simplest way to separate confirmed facts from early or partisan framing.