NRN Divorce: How to Get a Divorce in Nepal Without Traveling Back
Living abroad in the USA, Australia, the UK, or the Middle East? You do not have to put your life on hold or buy an expensive plane ticket to finalize your divorce in Nepal. Learn how the Adhikrit Wareshnama process allows you to dissolve your marriage legally from overseas.
Quick Answer: Can I divorce from abroad?
Yes, the Supreme Court of Nepal allows Non-Resident Nepalis (NRNs) to file for divorce via proxy. Here is how it works:
- Power of Attorney (Adhikrit Wareshnama): You must legally appoint someone in Nepal to represent you in court.
- Embassy Verification: You must sign this Power of Attorney document physically at a Nepali Embassy or Consulate in your current country.
- Mutual or Contested: This process works for both fast mutual consent divorces and complex contested divorces.
The Adhikrit Wareshnama Process
Getting an Embassy-attested Power of Attorney requires strict adherence to legal formatting. One mistake, and the court in Nepal will reject it.
Step 1: Contact Embassy
You must contact the nearest Nepali Embassy in your country of residence to understand their specific appointment schedule for legal attestations.
Step 2: Draft Wareshnama
Your lawyer in Nepal drafts the Adhikrit Wareshnama (Power of Attorney) and emails it to you. You print it and take it to the Embassy to sign in front of the Ambassador.
Step 3: Court Filing
You courier the original, embassy-stamped document back to Nepal. Your lawyer takes it to the District Court, and the judge allows your representative to fight the case.
Required Documents for the Embassy
When you visit the Nepali Embassy (for example, in Washington D.C., London, or Canberra), you must bring a specific set of documents. If you are missing anything, they will not stamp your Wareshnama.
The Drafted Wareshnama Document
This must be drafted by a licensed lawyer in Nepal in the Nepali language, printed on standard A4 paper. Do not sign it until you are standing in front of the consular officer.
Original Citizenship and Passport
You must bring your original Nepali citizenship certificate and your valid passport, along with photocopies of both.
Photographs
You need recent passport-sized photographs of yourself AND photographs of the person you are appointing in Nepal (your Waresh). The Embassy will attach these photos to the document and stamp over them.
Citizenship Copy of Your Representative
You must present a clear photocopy of the citizenship certificate of the person in Nepal who will act as your representative.
Critical Rules You Must Know
Courier Security
Once the Embassy stamps the document, you must send the physical original via a secure courier (DHL, FedEx) to Nepal. Scans or emails of the stamped document are not accepted by the court.
Contested Divorces from Abroad
If you file a contested divorce from abroad, the court must serve notice to your spouse in Nepal. If they fight the divorce, your representative will need to attend mediation on your behalf.
Both Spouses Abroad
If both the husband and wife live in the USA, they can BOTH issue Powers of Attorney to two different people in Nepal to process a mutual divorce in 2-3 days.
Who to Appoint
You can appoint a trusted family member (brother, father) or you can directly appoint your lawyer's assistant to act as your Waresh for maximum efficiency.