Nepal is increasing the permit fee for climbing Mount Everest by 36%, officials from the country confirmed on Wednesday.
The rate for foreign climbers traversing the South Col route during the spring season — first climbed by New Zealander Sir Edmund Hillary and Sherpa Tenzing Norgay in 1953 — will rise from $11K to $15K starting September this year.
The cost for the fall climbing season will meanwhile rise from $5.5K to $7.5K, with the fee for climbing in the winter and monsoon months increasing from $2.75K to $3.75K.
While this is a steep hike in prices, the move has been anticipated since last year and will likely do little to dissuade those wanting to climb the world's highest peak, which was already a prohibitively expensive endeavor before this development.
Amid reports that climbing Mount Everest is becoming too congested, and with litter becoming an increasing issue on the mountain, this move by the Nepalese government is a pragmatic way of both enriching the nation (which has long catered to Western tourism), and making the issues associated with popular hiking regions more manageable.