I recently arranged a carer for my mother in Nepal through Aashirbad Care and I am extremely grateful for their support and professionalism.
During my mother's recovery from illness, they provided excellent care, especially with night-time support when it was most needed. The carers were attentive, compassionate, and genuinely caring in their approach.
What impressed me the most was their communication. Being away from my mother, it was very important for me to stay updated, and the team at Aashirbad maintained clear, timely, and reassuring communication throughout. They truly empathised with my situation and gave me peace of mind during a very stressful time.
I would highly recommend Aashirbad to anyone looking for reliable and compassionate home care services in Nepal.
Real families. Real stories.
For families trusting us with the care of someone they love, peace of mind matters most. Here's what our clients have to say.
Both my wife and I work full-time in Kathmandu, and looking after my parents at home was becoming harder than we wanted to admit. We felt guilty leaving for the office every morning, never sure if Buwa had taken his medicine on time or if Aama had eaten properly.
Since we started with Aashirbad Care, that worry is gone. The carer they sent is patient, respectful, and treats my parents like her own family. The daily updates from the team, small notes about meals, walks, doctor visits, mean we can actually focus at work instead of constantly calling home.
Even from my desk in the office, I know exactly how my parents' day is going. That peace of mind is something we did not realise we needed until we had it. For any working family in Nepal trying to do right by their parents, I cannot recommend Aashirbad enough.
Being seven hours ahead of my parents in Bhaktapur, the hardest part was always the silence. I'd send messages and wait, and worry. After Buwa's mild stroke last year, I almost flew back permanently.
The Aashirbad team set up a nurse and a part-time caregiver within three days. The dashboard updates are timed to my evening, I open the App while making dinner and I can see Buwa's blood pressure for the day, his physio sessions, his meals. The night carer Sarita didi has been with him for four months now and Buwa says she remembers his routine better than he does.
The team also coordinated with his neurologist at Norvic for follow-ups, which I would never have managed from here. Worth every rupee.
After my knee replacement at Manipal, I was discharged with a long list of exercises and a wife who was already overwhelmed caring for me. We tried managing on our own for a week. It did not go well.
The physiotherapist from Aashirbad came home three times a week and the difference in my recovery was visible within a fortnight. He was firm when I tried to skip exercises, gentle when the pain was real, and patient with my wife so she did not have to play nurse alongside everything else.
I am walking without a cane now. The carer also helped with morning bathing during the first month, which spared my wife and gave me back some dignity. Aashirbad understood what I needed without me having to explain.
My mother has moderate dementia and lives alone in our family home in Lazimpat. Hiring random caregivers had become a nightmare, three changed in two months because they did not know how to handle her confusion or her sundowning episodes.
I work as a nurse in Doha, so I know what good dementia care looks like. The Aashirbad team actually trained their caregiver in routine-based care before sending her, and they followed up with weekly calls in the first month. She uses memory cues, keeps to the same daily structure, and has not raised her voice once even on Mom's hardest days.
Mom recently asked her, "Tapain pheri kahile aaunu hunchha?", when are you coming back? That is the first time in two years she's remembered someone enough to miss them. I cannot put a price on that.
When Buwa was diagnosed with stage IV lung cancer, my brothers and I had to decide quickly: hospital, hospice, or home. Buwa wanted to be at home in Patan. None of us live there anymore.
Aashirbad's palliative team made it possible. A nurse twice a day for medication and pain management, a caregiver overnight, and the doctor on call when things got harder near the end. They handled everything we could not, the morphine titration, the wound care, the conversations my mother could not bear to have.
In his last week, Buwa told me on the phone that the night carer would just sit and hold his hand when he could not sleep. He died at home, comfortable, with people he had grown to trust. Thank you is too small a word.
My husband travels for work and my own mother lives in Biratnagar, so when our daughter was born I was completely alone for the first six weeks. The hospital nurse from Aashirbad came home for postpartum care and stayed for the days I needed her most.
She helped with breastfeeding when my daughter was not latching, weighed her every few days to track her feeding, and even noticed early signs of jaundice that I had completely missed. She also kept gentle watch on me, postpartum is no joke and she was the first person to ask if I was sleeping.
I was prepared for the baby. I was not prepared for how lonely those first weeks would be. She made all the difference.
Buwa was admitted to Norvic for a cardiac procedure that turned into an eight-day stay. We are a small family and rotating shifts at the hospital was breaking us down by day three.
We hired a hospital companion from Aashirbad for the overnight shifts. She was professional, communicated clearly with the nursing staff, and sent us morning updates with vitals, sleep notes, and any concerns. We could finally sleep at home.
What I valued most: she knew when to push the call bell and when not to. That judgment is rare. We will use Aashirbad again the next time we need it.
Looking after my mother-in-law for the last three years has been my full-time job, and an unpaid one. I do not say this to complain, I love her, but I had stopped sleeping properly, and my own children were getting the leftovers of my attention.
We started Aashirbad's premium package six months ago. Just a few hours of structured help a day completely changed our home. The caregiver handles bathing and morning medicine. The physio comes twice a week. The lab person collects samples at home so I do not have to load Aama into a taxi for every test.
I am not the only person responsible for her well-being anymore. That sentence took me three years to be able to write.
I am a physician myself and I admit I was the worst kind of customer, second-guessing every medication, every dosage, asking for daily logs. The Aashirbad team never made me feel like I was being difficult.
Their head nurse called me to walk through Aama's full medication chart before they took over, and we agreed on parameters for when to escalate vs. when to wait. Six months later we have not had a single avoidable hospital visit. The dashboard shows me her vitals trends and I can see the BP creeping up before it becomes a problem.
This is what good home care actually looks like, clinical when it needs to be, human the rest of the time.
Tore my ACL on a trek last year. Surgery went well, but the rehab is everything for someone in my line of work, if I cannot trek, I cannot earn.
The Aashirbad physiotherapist came to my flat in Thamel for eight weeks. He brought equipment, kept the sessions focused, and was honest with me about what I could and could not push. He even called my orthopaedic surgeon when we needed to adjust the plan.
I am back guiding short treks now. The home physio saved me three months of recovery time and a lot of taxi fares to clinics.