Record number of climbers summit Mount Everest from Nepali side despite overcrowding concerns
A record 274 climbers reached the summit of Mount Everest from the Nepali side in a single day this week, surpassing the previous record of 223 set in 2019. This surge occurred as Nepal issued 494 climbing permits this season, with climbers paying $15,000 each.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedA record 274 climbers reached the summit of Mount Everest from the Nepali side in a single day this week, surpassing the previous record of 223 set in 2019. This surge occurred as Nepal issued 494 climbing permits this season, with climbers paying $15,000 each. Expeditions are exclusively from the Nepal side this year, as China reportedly did not issue permits from the Tibetan side. Critics warn that the overcrowding poses life-threatening risks in the "death zone" due to dangerous bottlenecks and low oxygen levels. While Nepal has implemented stricter rules and higher fees, some expedition leaders argue that sufficient oxygen supplies mitigate the risks, comparing the numbers to crowded peaks in the Alps.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedIf teams carry enough oxygen, overcrowding is not a big problem, comparable to mountains in the Alps.
Nepal has issued 494 Everest climbing permits this season, each costing $15,000.
A record 274 climbers summited Mount Everest from the Nepali side in a single day this week.
Overcrowding on Everest can create life-threatening bottlenecks in the 'death zone' where oxygen levels are dangerously low.
Climbers are ascending only from the Nepal side because China reportedly did not issue permits from the Tibetan side.