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The $25,000 alternative to climbing Mount Everest

The 11-day trek through Nepal, which includes two tandem skydives, offers intimate exposure to the mountains

The free fall is followed by a parachute ride that lasts for about 5 minutes
The free fall is followed by a parachute ride that lasts for about 5 minutes

Most traffic jams are just annoying, but when they happen near the summit of Mount Everest’s 29,029ft peak, they can be deadly. Eleven people died during the 2019 season after a mix of erratic weather, a record-breaking number of permits and widespread inexperience caused an hours-long queue at the “top of the world". But what if there were an alternative way to experience the world’s tallest mountain?

Every November, the Everest Skydive expedition offers one of the highest commercial freefall experiences in the world. Starting at $25,000 (around 17.8 lakh), guests are guided on an 11-day trek through Nepal that wraps with two tandem skydives from more than 23,000ft above sea level (AMSL). “The exhilaration of jumping into the Himalayas is unrivalled," says Tom Noonan, executive director of Everest Skydive. The freefall is matched only by the parachute ride that flies you past the natural wonder as only bar-headed geese on a Himalayan migration can.

The Skydiving Surge

Skydiving has seen a boost in popularity, the sport reaching the masses with the advent of the tandem parachute system in the early 1980s. It received a push from the 1991 film Point Break, and then had a breakthrough in the age of social media. Mountaineering experienced a similar trajectory in growth. The allure of conquering the least hospitable reaches of nature led to the commercialization of Everest in the 1990s. The following decades brought an influx of people making the trophy-hunting pilgrimage. With the rise of the local low-cost operators came many unseasoned climbers.

Of the 381 permits Nepal issued in 2019, “about 50% shouldn’t have been on the mountain," says Alan Arnette, a mountaineer and Everest chronicler.

This year, the median price for the two-month climb was around $45,000, though some outfits offered treks for as little as $28,000. In August, as a response to the deadly bottlenecks, Nepal proposed a plan to cut down on permits by placing a $35,000 minimum charge on operators. Climbers must now also submit proof of having summited at least one 21,300ft peak before attempting Everest.

Everest Skydive
Everest Skydive


Everest Skydive is in its 12th year of operation and Noonan estimates that he’s made nearly 200 jumps in Nepal. For the former retirement planner turned skydiving industry guru, those are just a small fraction of his 8,000-plus jump logbook. His team consists of several world-record-holding skydivers and aims to allocate one staff member to each guest.

How It Works

Guests arrive in Kathmandu and start their trip with sightseeing tours that double as acclimatizing days. Then they board a puddle-jumping flight to one of the world’s most dangerous landing strips: Lukla Airport. At over 9,300ft AMSL, Lukla’s 1,729-foot runway sits between a mountain-sized rock and the abyss. “These pilots are some of the best I’ve ever met," says Noonan, a pilot himself. The lead-up to the jumps involves further trekking and acclimatization as they head to Namche Bazaar at 11,286ft AMSL. As part of the cost, the crew provides all the services and luxury accommodations along the trails through partnerships they have developed in the region. The biggest expense and logistical obstacle comes from transporting a functional skydiving drop zone to the Syangboche airport, a 1,200-foot dirt airstrip at 12,340ft AMSL, or the even higher Ama Dablam Base Camp, at 15,000ft. Nearly 2,000 pounds of equipment must be moved up the mountain. On jump day, guests and instructors board the AS350 B3 helicopter and start the 15-minute ascent up the Himalayas.

The flight offers an intimate exposure to the mountains with rock faces a mere 100ft away at times. Then there’s the jump. Freefall lasts 40 seconds; descent slows at approximately 19,000ft AMSL, once the parachute deploys overhead. The loud blast of air in freefall is exchanged for a serene canopy ride that lasts about 5 minutes before touchdown at the drop zone. Some guests opt for a $3,000 addition that extends the trip to Everest Base Camp. The six-day walk finishes with views of the Khumbu Icefalls and the mountain’s South Col, followed by a 15-minute helicopter ride back to Lukla.

Not everyone is convinced. “Call me old fashioned, but these sorts of stunts are disingenuous to the spirit of the mountain," says Arnette. “What makes this different than the low-cost mercenaries commercializing the mountain?" To Noonan, the difference lies in the relationships he has cultivated with the people of the region. “The community tells us how thrilled they are to see parachutes over Namche Bazaar," he says. “We go back year after year, not in celebration of ourselves and our own accomplishments, but in celebration of the mountain, the people, the culture, and ultimately, the friendships we have made."

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