Nepal to India — International Repatriation

Air Ambulance Kathmandu to Delhi — Nepal to India

Goodmans Rescue coordinates medical repatriation from Kathmandu to India for Indian nationals and foreign nationals requiring specialist care in India. We handle both dedicated charter air ambulance and commercial airline stretcher transfers from Tribhuvan International Airport (KTM), managing all documentation, MEDIF forms, airline approvals, and ground ambulance at both ends.

Options: Charter vs. Commercial Stretcher

For stable patients, commercial airline stretcher via commercial stretcher on Buddha Air / Yeti Airlines / IndiGo, or dedicated charter is the most cost-effective option. We manage MEDIF documentation, airline liaison, oxygen arrangements on board, and a qualified medical escort. For critical or ventilated patients, a dedicated charter provides ICU-configured transport for the full 1 hour 10 minutes journey.

Documentation for Repatriation from Nepal

Repatriation from Nepal requires: patient's passport and visa documentation, detailed medical report from the treating facility, fitness-to-fly assessment, MEDIF form completed by the treating doctor, and (for commercial stretcher) written airline approval. We guide families through every document step.

Receiving Hospitals in India

Depending on the patient's condition, we coordinate admission at AIIMS, Medanta, Max, Fortis, Apollo, Tata Memorial, Manipal, Narayana Health, and other Indian specialist hospitals. Pre-admission liaison is part of our service.

Frequently Asked Questions

For commercial stretcher, airline approval takes 24-72 hours depending on the carrier and route. For charter, we can often position within 12-24 hours of clearance. We begin immediately on your first call.

Our medical team guides your family through required documentation. The treating hospital in Nepal must complete the MEDIF form and fitness-to-fly certificate. We liaise with the hospital on your behalf where possible.

Yes. We coordinate ALS road ambulance at the departure hospital in Nepal (through our international partner network) and our own ALS ambulance at the Indian airport for the final leg to the receiving hospital.