ABC completion certificate

Annapurna Base Camp Trek Completion Certificate

The Annapurna Base Camp Trek moves from lower valley settlements into the enclosed mountain sanctuary, often through stepped villages, forest, river crossings, and changing high-altitude conditions. It may be recorded as one return route or as a sequence of daily activities with rest, weather, or charging gaps. Strong submissions combine route files with dated photographs at recognisable settlements and sanctuary viewpoints, supported where useful by permits, accommodation records, or guide confirmation. Explain the approach used, any side route, and whether transport changed the walking boundary. The certificate background draws on the amphitheatre of Himalayan peaks so the document retains a clear memory of the landscape. GPS coordinates, original photographs, permit details, and guide messages stay private; the public record shows only safe certificate metadata.

Independent certificate disclaimer

This is an independent evidence-reviewed Verified Hikes certificate. It is not an official trail authority certificate unless explicitly marked as partner-confirmed or authority-confirmed.

Annapurna Base Camp Trek landscape certificate route preview in Nepal
Annapurna Base Camp, Ghandruk, Nepal
Annapurna Base Camp Trek place-specific certificate preview
Image source and licence
Annapurna Base Camp, Ghandruk, Nepal by Rosan Harmens, CC0 1.0; cropped and colour-treated.
Region
Nepal
Country
Nepal
Distance
Distance varies by route option
Typical duration
12 days
Difficulty
Strenuous
Founder price
€9.99
Verification
Evidence reviewed

Currently invite-only

We open verification places gradually so every certificate receives careful evidence review.

Join waitlist

Why get this certificate?

Record a completion of Annapurna Base Camp Trek in Nepal with private evidence review and a premium QR-verifiable certificate.

Your certificate includes a premium PDF, a permanent QR verification page, registry-signed metadata, and privacy-aware public display settings.

Accepted evidence

Route-matched proof examples

  • Daily GPS tracks for the approach, sanctuary, and return
  • Dated photographs at villages, river crossings, or base-camp surroundings
  • Permit or lodge records consistent with the completion dates
  • Guide confirmation or itinerary context where a group record was used
Proof readiness before payment

Best evidence: GPX/FIT/TCX files, a trusted activity link, dated trail photos, stamps, permits, or guide/partner confirmation. Photos alone may need supporting context. Screenshots without route or date detail are usually not enough.

Expected review level: evidence_reviewed. Most beta reviews target 2-3 working days after payment and private proof upload.

Privacy promise: raw GPS, photos, permits, contact details, and reviewer notes stay private. Public verification shows only safe certificate metadata, a short evidence summary, QR link, signature status, and PDF fingerprint.

Refund/clarification summary: if proof is incomplete, reviewers may request clarification before approval. Refund eligibility follows the refund policy and depends on review state.

This is an evidence-reviewed Verified Hikes certificate. It is not an official trail authority certificate unless explicitly marked as partner or authority confirmed.

Trail proof checklist

  • GPS track file or activity link where available
  • Photos at recognisable route landmarks
  • Date range and completion narrative
  • Permit, stamp, guide, club, or organiser confirmation where relevant

Distance and route variants are reviewed conservatively. Public pages never publish raw GPS points or private proof files.

Private review layer

Your proof is not your public profile.

Reviewers may see

GPS and activity files, uploaded photos, permits, stamps, guide confirmations, completion narrative, and clarification replies.

The public may see

Certificate status, trail, privacy-controlled display name, dates, verification level, issue date, fingerprint, and registry signature state.

Privacy for hikers

Supported route variants

Identify the approach and return path, side trips, rest days, and any vehicle transfer. The review follows the route described in your evidence rather than assuming every hiker used the same itinerary.

Distance is shown only when reviewed; otherwise the page uses safe variable-distance wording.

Prepare your proof

Verification levels available

Evidence Reviewed, GPS Evidence Reviewed, Photo + GPS Reviewed, and Partner Confirmed when a verified organisation is attached.

Verification levels

Evidence Reviewed Human review of private proof against trail, date, and plausibility signals.

GPS Supported Route evidence includes a GPS/activity record strong enough to support the certificate.

Partner or Authority Confirmed Used only when an approved partner or trail authority workflow explicitly supports that wording.

How the process works

Start verification

Create a paid application for this trail.

Upload proof

Add GPS, activity links, photos, stamps, permits, or confirmation documents privately.

Registry review

A reviewer checks evidence, dates, privacy, and verification level.

Certificate issued

Receive your premium PDF and QR-verifiable public record.

FAQ

What does the QR code prove?

It opens a safe registry page showing certificate metadata, signature status, evidence summary, and PDF fingerprint.

Will my GPS or photos be public?

No. Raw proof is private by default and available only to authorised reviewers.

Request correction

See outdated trail facts? Send a correction request so the registry team can review the route record before publication changes.

Request correction/update
Annapurna Base Camp Trek place-specific certificate preview
Image source and licence
Annapurna Base Camp, Ghandruk, Nepal by Rosan Harmens, CC0 1.0; cropped and colour-treated.

Start verification

Verified Hikes is currently opening verified certificate applications by invitation while we validate review quality, privacy controls, and partner workflows.

Verified Hikes reviews evidence for a trail completion record. This is not an official trail authority certificate unless the final record is explicitly Partner Confirmed or Authority Confirmed.

Certificate name preview: this is the name reviewers will use for the PDF and the privacy-controlled public verification page.

Use the full completion date range. Multi-day treks should include the first and final walking days.