Report damage to an archaeological or heritage site in Nepal
A plain-language Nepal guide for residents, visitors and custodians noticing collapse, fire, vandalism or disaster damage who need to submit a precise heritage-damage report, with evidence, submission, safety, and official-source checks.
Independent guide, not an official website
Nepal Docs Guide is not affiliated with the Government of Nepal. This guide helps you prepare, but official portals and offices control final rules, fees, forms, and timelines.
Quick answer
To submit a precise heritage-damage report, prepare site name and exact location, date and cause if known, safe photographs, witness and immediate danger details, confirm the current process with the Department of Archaeology and responsible local heritage authority, complete the official application, and keep the receipt or reference for follow-up.
Eligibility
- Residents, visitors and custodians noticing collapse, fire, vandalism or disaster damage
- Applicants who need to submit a precise heritage-damage report using matching and genuine records
- An authorized representative only when the responsible authority accepts representation
Required documents checklist
- □ Citizenship, passport, institution or lawful owner identity
- □ site name and exact location
- □ date and cause if known
- □ safe photographs
- □ witness and immediate danger details
- □ Official Department of Archaeology application, recommendation or incident reference
- □ Official heritage inspection, permit or service receipt when applicable
- □ Any correction, consent, authorization, or supporting record required for your specific case
Step-by-step process
- Confirm that the Department of Archaeology and responsible local heritage authority is the correct authority for this request.
- Compare names, dates, addresses, registration numbers, account numbers, and other identifiers across site name and exact location, date and cause if known, safe photographs, witness and immediate danger details.
- Keep people away from unstable areas, notify emergency and heritage authorities, avoid moving fragments, and provide before-and-after evidence if available.
- Submit through the official portal or office and pay only through the approved channel.
- Save the application number, receipt, uploaded-file copies, and any written instruction for follow-up.
Fees and timelines
- Do not rely on an old fee screenshot or an agent's estimate. Check the latest official notice, citizen charter, portal, or responsible office before paying.
- Processing time depends on document matching, office workload, inspection, examination, technical review, or approval level. Keep the receipt and follow-up reference.
Common mistakes
- Using an old form, notice, fee, or unofficial link
- Submitting incomplete or mismatched site name and exact location, date and cause if known, safe photographs, witness and immediate danger details
- Paying an unofficial person or personal account without an official receipt
- Ignoring the difference between a new application, renewal, correction, duplicate, verification, or transfer
- Collecting fallen pieces as souvenirs destroys evidence and may be illegal.
Confirm the current heritage law, protected-zone status and Department of Archaeology instruction
This is an independent preparation guide, not an official notice, legal opinion, professional licence, approval, or guarantee. Requirements can change. Confirm the current form, fee, deadline, jurisdiction, and eligibility with the responsible authority before submitting.
To submit a precise heritage-damage report, prepare site name and exact location, date and cause if known, safe photographs, witness and immediate danger details, confirm the current process with the Department of Archaeology and responsible local heritage authority, complete the official application, and keep the receipt or reference for follow-up.
Who this guide helps
Residents, visitors and custodians noticing collapse, fire, vandalism or disaster damage Applicants who need to submit a precise heritage-damage report using matching and genuine records An authorized representative only when the responsible authority accepts representation
Why this document or approval matters
Collecting fallen pieces as souvenirs destroys evidence and may be illegal.
Evidence to prepare
- Citizenship, passport, institution or lawful owner identity
- site name and exact location
- date and cause if known
- safe photographs
- witness and immediate danger details
- Official Department of Archaeology application, recommendation or incident reference
- Official heritage inspection, permit or service receipt when applicable
- Any correction, consent, authorization, or supporting record required for your specific case
A safe step-by-step process
- 1Confirm that the Department of Archaeology and responsible local heritage authority is the correct authority for this request.
- 2Compare names, dates, addresses, registration numbers, account numbers, and other identifiers across site name and exact location, date and cause if known, safe photographs, witness and immediate danger details.
- 3Keep people away from unstable areas, notify emergency and heritage authorities, avoid moving fragments, and provide before-and-after evidence if available.
- 4Submit through the official portal or office and pay only through the approved channel.
- 5Save the application number, receipt, uploaded-file copies, and any written instruction for follow-up.
The decision point most applicants miss
Confirm structural collapse, vandalism, theft, flood, earthquake, fire, construction impact or ordinary deterioration.
After submitting
- Check the spelling and reference number on the acknowledgement or receipt.
- Track the application only through the official portal, SMS, email, or office contact.
- Respond to a deficiency notice with the requested evidence rather than creating a duplicate application.
- Keep the final certificate, licence, approval, account update, or rejection reason with the supporting records.
Avoid document and payment shortcuts
Do not alter certificates, hide mismatches, upload another person's records, share passwords or OTPs, pay an unofficial personal account, or accept a promise of guaranteed approval. Use the official portal and keep payment and submission evidence.
What was verified from the official source
The official department publishes heritage laws, protected monument information, curio check-pass services, recommendations for repair and reconstruction inside protected monument zones, archaeological guidance, notices and citizen-charter services. Check Department of Archaeology Nepal for the newest notice, form, service link, fee, and final instruction.
Office and portal links
Printable checklist
Report damage to an archaeological or heritage site in Nepal
- Citizenship, passport, institution or lawful owner identity
- site name and exact location
- date and cause if known
- safe photographs
- Official Department of Archaeology application, recommendation or incident reference
- Official heritage inspection, permit or service receipt when applicable
- Official source checked on the submission date
FAQ
Official sources
Use these references for final confirmation before applying. Nepal Docs Guide is independent and does not replace official instructions.
- Department of Archaeology Nepal
Government of Nepal · last accessed Jul 12, 2026
The official department publishes heritage laws, protected monument information, curio check-pass services, recommendations for repair and reconstruction inside protected monument zones, archaeological guidance, notices and citizen-charter services. Time-sensitive requirements must still be rechecked before submission.
Need official confirmation?
If your case involves corrections, deadlines, legal use, foreign submission, or a rejected application, contact the relevant official office before paying fees or submitting documents.
Author
Nepal Docs Guide Editorial Desk
Citizen services research team
Our editorial desk turns official notices, portal instructions, and field-tested document workflows into plain-language guides. Every guide is independently written and points readers back to official sources for final confirmation.
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