Get involved
Three ways to move Nepal forward.
Volunteer your time, partner your organization, or fund a project — all with open reporting.
Volunteer
Give 2 hours a month, not just remittances
Wherever you are, there is a project that needs exactly what you already know.
In Nepal
- Ward volunteers — run segregation drives, cleanups and awareness events in your own ward.
- Youth clubs — lead river and trail cleanups, citizen-science data collection with students.
- Enumerators — join household baseline surveys like the Jumla municipal study.
From anywhere
- Diaspora mentoring — 2 hours a month by video call with a founder, teacher or youth group.
- Course review — improve e-learning courses in your professional field.
- Marketing help — tell hidden destinations' stories to the world.
A Nepali engineer in Sydney mentors a Ramechhap school lab by monthly video call.
The student
Joins a youth club, collects citizen-science data, builds a CV that means something.
The professional
Reviews one course or dashboard a month — expertise where it's scarcest.
The diaspora member
Mentors a founder back home — knowledge transfer at micro scale, NRNA-style.
Partner
A trusted local pipeline, ready to deliver
For NGOs, agencies and companies that need vetted community-level delivery in Nepal.
Vetted pipeline
Shovel-ready ward and municipal projects — each with a baseline and a reporting plan.
Community delivery capacity
Post-USAID, community-level delivery is the scarce asset. We are built for that layer.
Co-branded, public results
Example: co-brand a 5-school ICT lab rollout with quarterly public dashboards.
For local governments
- Co-funded pilots that fit annual ward/municipal plans and SDG codes.
- Open data and dashboards, ready for the red book.
- Example: a Jumla-style baseline study feeding directly into the municipal budget.
Fund
Small money, visible outcomes
Projects run NPR 600k–2.5M, each with before→after metrics and SDG-tagged reporting.
Udyami Didi cohort
NPR 1.56M
30 women, 12 months, published profit data — 26 businesses still running a year later.
Digital Shiksha Lab
NPR 1.85M
A solar-backed ICT lab for 640 students across 5 schools — computer exposure 9% → 88%.
Safa Ward Abhiyan
NPR 640k
A ward waste model in Itahari — households segregating waste went 4% → 71%.
Every rupee reported openly — budgets, baselines and endlines published on the impact page.
The bigger loop
Local action, global support
Funds, tools and encouragement flow in; action, results and stories flow back. That loop is the whole Impact Locals model — and Nepal is where it started.
Ready to move Nepal forward?
Tell us how you want to help — we'll reply with something concrete.