


2026-03-18
18 min read
Trekking to Everest Base Camp is the kind of adventure that gets under your skin. The Sherpa villages, the prayer flags snapping in the wind, the moment Everest finally appears above the ridge at Tengboche, it's genuinely one of the most special trails on the planet.
But if you're managing Type 1 diabetes, the idea of pushing yourself to 5,364 metres can feel pretty daunting.
Altitude messes with your body in ways that make blood sugar control a lot more unpredictable. Add in cold nights, long hiking days, a suppressed appetite, and the fact that you're a very long way from the nearest hospital, and yeah, it's a lot to think about.
But here's the thing: loads of people with Type 1 diabetes have done the Everest Base Camp trek, and many have gone on to tackle even bigger Himalayan challenges after that.
The difference between a safe, successful trek and a stressful one usually comes down to preparation. Not fitness. Not luck. Just knowing what you're getting into and planning for it properly.
Before diving in, here's what this guide will help you navigate: how altitude affects your blood sugar, insulin storage in the cold, CGM accuracy issues, the right pace for your itinerary, and the warning signs that mean it's time to head down.

Yes, absolutely. However, it's not something you want to undertake without being honest with yourself first.
The biggest factor isn't how fit you are or how motivated you are. It's how well you manage your diabetes day to day. Before you start planning your flights to Kathmandu, ask yourself a few tough questions:
Everest Base Camp is not the place to figure things out as you go. It's remote, the altitude is serious, and a small problem can turn into a big one very fast.
For people who've been recently diagnosed or are still working to get things stable, a lower-altitude trek like Langtang or Annapurna Base Camp might actually be a smarter starting point. Build your experience, then take on EBC.
High altitude is a game-changer when it comes to managing your diabetes, even if you're experienced and well-prepared. Above 3,000 metres, your body is under physical stress even when you feel perfectly fine. Here's what that actually means in practice:
The result is that your blood sugar can swing in ways you've never experienced before. Frequent monitoring isn't optional here; it's the thing that keeps you safe.
The cold is its own problem on top of all that. At places like Dingboche and Gorak Shep, nighttime temperatures can drop well below freezing. That's bad news for your kit:
The golden rule: never leave your insulin in your pack overnight. It goes inside your sleeping bag, near you, every single night without exception.
Before anything else, you need to get clearance from your medical team. This isn't about being overly cautious; it's just good sense for a trek at this altitude with Type 1 diabetes.
The people you want on your side before you leave:
Don't walk out of that appointment with just a thumbs-up. Push for specific guidance on:
A lot of people skip this and then regret it. Most travel insurance providers require you to disclose Type 1 diabetes as a pre-existing condition. Having written clearance from your doctor can make a big difference when you're trying to get a claim approved, especially for helicopter evacuation, which can cost thousands of dollars in Nepal without proper coverage.
Sort this out before you leave. It's a lot harder to argue with an insurance company from a teahouse at 4,400 metres.
If you've never trekked at altitude with Type 1 diabetes before, EBC is not the place to start.
Even if you're fit, your body may not be ready for:
Multi-day treks between 3000m and 4,500 metres are a great way to learn how your glucose behaves in trekking conditions without pushing into extreme altitude. Options like the Langtang Valley trek or Annapurna Base Camp give you real experience without the same level of risk.
What you want to figure out before EBC:
Knowing all this going into EBC makes a massive difference. You're not experimenting in a remote environment; you're applying a system you've already tested.
Managing your glucose on the trail is about being consistent, not being perfect. Things will go sideways occasionally; that's just altitude. The goal is to have a system that catches problems early before they become serious.
Most T1D trekkers on EBC aim to run slightly higher glucose targets than usual, which gives a buffer against hypos during long walking days. Just make sure you've always got fast-acting sugar on your person, not buried in your pack.
This is the one thing you really can't mess up. Insulin is destroyed below 0°C – and at Dingboche, Lobuche, and Gorak Shep, nighttime temperatures regularly drop to −10°C or lower.
The problem with frozen insulin is that it looks perfectly fine. You can't tell by looking at it. You only find out it's been damaged when your blood sugar stops responding to corrections, by which point you've already dosed incorrectly.
How much to bring: Work out your total daily dose, multiply by your trek days, then add at least 50–100% on top as a reserve. There are no pharmacies above Namche Bazaar. This is not a calculation to be conservative about.
Your CGM Gets Unreliable Above 4,000 Metres
Your CGM, whether it's a Dexcom, Libre, or Medtronic, is really valuable on the trail. But above 4,000 metres, you can't trust it the way you do at home. Three things cause problems:
The practical upshot: always carry a calibrated blood glucose meter as a backup, and never make a significant dosing decision above 4,000 metres based on your CGM alone without a finger-prick confirmation.
This is a question we get a lot, and the honest answer is that for most T1D trekkers, MDI (multiple daily injections) is the simpler, lower-risk approach on EBC.
Pumps have real advantages where you can adjust basal rates by the hour, which is genuinely useful when altitude and exertion are both pulling your glucose in different directions. But they also come with cold-related risks: tubing can freeze, batteries drain faster, and a pump failure at 4,500 metres is a much bigger problem than a frozen pen.
If you use a pump and want to keep using it on EBC, that's absolutely fine. Just make sure you carry a complete MDI backup system regardless. And keep the pump insulated against your body at all times.

The itinerary you choose matters just as much as the gear you pack.
Most standard EBC itineraries are built for healthy trekkers who want to reach Base Camp in the shortest possible time, often 12 days or fewer. For someone managing insulin, blood sugar swings, cold exposure, and altitude stress all at once, that pace creates a lot of unnecessary risk.
Above 3,000 metres, your body is working hard even when you feel fine. Stack on top of that:
Rush all that, and your blood sugar goes haywire. Stress hormones spike harder with faster ascent. AMS risk goes up. And when AMS symptoms look identical to hypoglycaemia, you want as much clarity as possible - not more confusion.
The safer approach for T1D trekkers is to build in extra acclimatisation days and plan for 14–16 days total rather than trying to squeeze the trek into 12. Here's what that extra time actually buys you:
It's not about taking it easy - it's about giving yourself the best chance of getting to Base Camp and back safely. The trekkers who push through on fast schedules are often the ones who have to turn around at Dingboche.
This is not an area to cut corners. The rule of thumb for any T1D trekker is to bring 2-3 times more supplies than you think you'll need. Here's what that actually means:
There are no medical supplies available above Namche Bazaar. If you run out up there, you're in trouble. This isn't a place to travel light on your diabetes kit.
Power banks: teahouses higher up charge extra for electricity, and power cuts happen.n
Spare batteries: they drain much faster than normal in the cold
Keep all electronics in inner pockets overnight: same rule as insulin
Teahouse life on the EBC route is simpler than most people expect. Menus are limited but reliable, and once you know what to order, the carbohydrate management is actually pretty manageable.
Dal bhat (rice with lentil dal and vegetables) is available at almost every teahouse on the trail. It's a good option for T1D trekkers because most places offer unlimited refills. If you bolus for a full plate and get served less, you can ask for more rice to match your dose. That's more carbohydrate flexibility than you'd get at most restaurants back home.
Other reliable options: noodle soups, fried rice, eggs, and pancakes. Appetite drops as you go higher, so keep familiar snacks on hand - things you'll actually want to eat even when you're not hungry.
Dehydration concentrates your blood glucose and makes it a lot harder to control. Drink regularly throughout the day - hot tea, soups, purified water. Aim for 3-4 litres per day above 3,500 metres.
Always treat water with purification tablets or a filter. Stomach bugs at altitude with T1D are a serious complication, not just an inconvenience.
Solar charging is available in most teahouses, but it becomes more expensive and less reliable as you go higher. Bring a good-sized power bank and charge everything every night - don't assume you'll be able to top up when you need it.
For most T1D trekkers, yes, a guide is genuinely worth it, not just nice to have.
A good guide does a lot more than navigate the trail. They can help with:
A porter is also worth considering. Carrying a heavy pack is a significant source of physical stress, and reducing that stress means more stable blood sugar and a lot less fatigue. When you're managing an extra layer of medical complexity, having someone else carry the heavy load is a genuinely smart decision.
Brief your guide before you leave Kathmandu. Spend ten minutes explaining what hypoglycaemia looks like, where your emergency glucose is stored, and what you need from them if something goes wrong. A guide who understands your condition is one of the most valuable safety nets you have on the mountain.

This is honestly one of the trickiest parts of trekking EBC with Type 1 diabetes, and it's worth understanding really clearly before you go.
Hypoglycaemia and acute mountain sickness (AMS) share a frightening number of symptoms. Headache, nausea, fatigue, and confusion - they can all cause these. Getting this wrong has real consequences.
Here's the practical way to split them:
The rule we tell all our T1D trekkers: when in doubt, treat for a hypo first, then reassess. A bit of extra glucose when you actually have AMS won't hurt you. Missing a hypo because you thought it was AMS is a much bigger problem.
Every T1D trekker heading to EBC should have a written descent protocol agreed with their doctor before they leave. Not a vague sense of "I'll turn back if things get bad" - a specific list of conditions that trigger an immediate descent.
Here are the conditions that mean you need to go down:
Descending 300–500 metres resolves most altitude emergencies quickly. The mountain isn't going anywhere. Come back next season if you have to. Hesitating when your body is telling you to go down is the decision you don't want to make at 5,000 metres.
Your insurance needs to cover:
Helicopter rescues in Nepal can cost several thousand dollars without proper coverage. Don't start packing until you've sorted your insurance.
Trekking to Everest Base Camp with Type 1 diabetes is absolutely possible, but don't go in thinking it's business as usual. High altitude makes blood sugar genuinely harder to manage, and the remote nature of the Khumbu means you need to be a lot more prepared than you would be for most adventures.
The trekkers who do well aren't the ones who push through regardless. They're the ones who plan properly, carry reliable backup, monitor consistently, and are willing to make adjustments when their body is asking for them.
Everest isn't about proving anything. It's about trekking with a bit of sense, respecting what your body is dealing with in that environment, and giving it the support it needs to get you there and back safely.
With the right medical team behind you, a sensible itinerary, and the right attitude, this can genuinely be one of the most rewarding adventures of your life, Type 1 diabetes and all.
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