Rooms & Prices in Bandipur
What a room really costs on the ridge — typical rates by season and type, why online and agency prices run higher, and how to book direct for a fair price. Plus the honest word on hot water and heating.
Rooms in Bandipur can cost very different amounts depending on when you come and how you book. Here's an honest guide to what a room really costs on the ridge, and how to avoid paying a middleman more than you need to. Prices are indicative — always confirm with the guesthouse before you commit.
How much does a room cost in Bandipur?
It depends on the kind of place and the season. As a rough guide, from listings and travellers in 2025–2026:
• A simple guesthouse room or a homestay: roughly NPR 1,200–2,500 a night (about US$10–19).
• A mid-range or heritage hotel in a restored bazaar building: roughly NPR 7,000–8,000 a night (about US$55–60).
• A few higher-end places cost more than that.
These are typical ranges, not fixed prices — the same room can be cheaper in the monsoon and dearer at festival time. Bandipur has around 90 places to stay, from family homestays to heritage hotels, so there is usually a choice at your budget.
Why is the price online or through an agent higher than at the door?
Online travel sites and tour agents add their own commission on top of the room price — often somewhere between 10% and 30%. That money goes to the booking company, not the guesthouse. A tour package that bundles the room with transport and meals adds a further markup.
None of this is a scam — it's how the middle of the travel business works everywhere. But it does mean the price you see online, or the price an agent quotes, is usually higher than what the guesthouse would charge you directly.
How do I get a fair price?
A few things that genuinely help:
• Call or message the guesthouse directly and ask their room rate. Many places on the bazaar answer the phone and will quote you a price with no commission on top.
• Outside the busy season, you can often just walk in and ask. Seeing the room first also tells you whether the hot water and heating actually work.
• It's normal to ask politely whether that's the best price, especially for two or more nights or in a quiet month — there is usually some room to talk.
• Compare a couple of places. On a 200-metre bazaar you can check three or four in ten minutes.
When is it cheapest, and when is it most expensive?
The monsoon months, roughly June to September, are the quietest and cheapest — the views are often clouded and the road up from Dumre can be affected by landslides, but rooms are at their lowest and you can bargain.
The clear-sky autumn, especially October and November, is the busiest and dearest, and it overlaps the big festivals of Dashain and Tihar when Nepali families travel too. Spring (around March–April) is also popular. If you come in peak season or over a festival, expect higher prices and book ahead.
Should I book ahead or just turn up?
In the busy autumn season, over the Dashain and Tihar festivals, and on weekends, it's worth booking a night or two ahead so you're not walking the bazaar with a bag looking for space.
In the quiet months you can usually just arrive and choose in person — which often gets you a better price and lets you check the room before you pay.
Will the hot water and heating work?
Ask before you pay — this is worth checking. Bandipur sits high on a ridge with a limited water supply, and many guesthouses heat water with solar panels or a single gas cylinder. That means hot water can be plentiful on a sunny afternoon and scarce on a cold, cloudy morning or when a place is full.
In the cooler months (roughly November to February) it's also worth asking how the room is heated — a blanket and a hot-water bottle are common, and a heater is not a given. None of this is unusual for a hill town; it just helps to know before you choose a room.