The airline is returning to China in a passenger-carrying capacity for the first time after the pandemic.

Passengers looking for a direct flight between Nepal and China can now book on Himalaya Airlines, which is connecting the two countries with a direct air link for the first time in two years. Many are hoping for this to be the start of other direct flights between the neighboring countries, with Air China also reportedly planning to restart services to Kathmandu soon.
Om May 31st, a Himalaya Airlines Airbus A320 took off from Kathmandu’s Tribhuvan International Airport (KTM) for Kunming Changshui International Airport (KMG), making it the first direct flight between the two countries in two years.
Chinese Ambassador to Nepal Hou Yanqi informed that Chinese authorities had eased the travel restrictions, paving the way to resume direct flights from Kathmandu to Kunming. The flight results from a meeting between the diplomats of the two nations, who discussed mutual relations between Nepal and China and exchange of cooperation between the two neighbors.
Flight H9784 is a once-a-week service on Tuesday with a scheduled departure of 09:00 and arrival of 14:15. The return flight H9785 departs Kunming at 16:15 and has a scheduled arrival in Kathmandu at 17:25. As of now, this is the only direct flight between the two countries, but some reports suggest that Air China is likely to fly to Kathmandu soon.
According to Khabarhub, passengers on this flight will first have to quarantine for five days in Nepali hotels and then quarantine for another 14 days after landing in China.
Tourism in Nepal is picking up gradually, with the Nepal Tourism Board counting more than 53,000 visitors in May 2022 alone. However, these numbers are still low compared to the 1.5 million tourists in 2019 who arrived by air.
Before COVID, China was the second-largest supplier of tourists to Nepal after India. While Indians have started coming back, people from China haven’t returned in any substantial numbers. Since January, a little more than 1,500 Chinese nationals have visited Nepal, compared to 1,69,543 arrivals in 2019.
Tourism in Nepal is picking up gradually, with the Nepal Tourism Board counting more than 53,000 visitors in May 2022 alone. However, these numbers are still low compared to the 1.5 million tourists in 2019 who arrived by air.
Before COVID, China was the second-largest supplier of tourists to Nepal after India. While Indians have started coming back, people from China haven’t returned in any substantial numbers. Since January, a little more than 1,500 Chinese nationals have visited Nepal, compared to 1,69,543 arrivals in 2019.

Established in 2014, Himalaya Airlines is a joint venture of Nepal and China, formed after an agreement between Tibet Aviation Development & Investment Company Ltd. (TADIC) from Tibet Autonomous Region of The People’s Republic of China and Yeti World Investment Pvt. Ltd. of Kathmandu, Nepal.