Jetstream Update
Meteorologist Chris Tomer of Tomer Weather Solutions told me on Monday, May 18, 2026:
The jet stream remains partially over Everest’s summit through May 24, creating erratic wind conditions with no perfect summit days. Â May 19th offers the best conditions, but still expects 30-35 mph gusts. Â No-oxygen climbers and speed record attempts will likely need to wait until May 26-27 or later for fully calm conditions.Â
Weather Forecast Details
- Wind patterns: Jet stream causes fluctuating winds—high in the afternoons, calmer late night/early morning
- Safe threshold: 30 mph; winds will exceed this periodically over the next 5 days
- Wind chill: Minus 50°F/C when winds exceed 30 mph
- Temperature: Currently minus 20°F lows, minus 10°F highs; modest warming expected
- Stratified conditions: Different weather at different camps (e.g., Camp 2 is calm while Camp 4 experiences high winds)
Critical Issues Identified
- Mountain-forecast.com is inadequate: Many teams use this service, which does not account for jet stream dynamics critical for Everest and K2
- May 14th and 17th attempts: Teams summited in dangerous conditions with likely frostbite cases, though unreported
- Crowd compression risk: With 600+ people remaining and a narrowing weather window, potential for 2019-style traffic jam (3-day window scenario)
- No-oxygen climbers must wait for a completely calm summit after the crowds clear
- Speed record attempts delayed to May 26-27 or later to avoid crowds and await ideal conditions
Monsoon and Season Timeline
- Jet stream departure: Once the jet fully leaves (around May 26-27), temperatures will warm rapidly, and monsoon moisture can move north
- Monsoon mechanism: Wind shift allows moisture from the Bay of Bengal/Indian Ocean to feed north when the jet no longer blocks it
- Season hard stop: Icefall doctors remove ladders when temperatures cause the Khumbu Icefall to become unstable from melting
- Current monsoon outlook: No major signs yet; typically arrives around June 1st
Monday Summits:
- 14 Peaks – all-Chinese team with 8 members, supported by 11 Sherpas for 19 summits
- 14 Peaks – International team with 2 members, supported by 3 Sherpas for 5 summits
- Seven Summits Treks – 9 members with 13 Sherpas for 22 summits
- 8K – 3 members with 3 Sherpas for 6 summits
- Climbing the Seven Summits – 7 members with 3 US guides and 14 Sherpas for 24 summits
With CTSS was Pa Dawa Sherpa, who summited for the 30th time.
With at least 76 summits on Monday, that brings the season total to at least 162 – 97 Sherpas, 3 Western guides and 61 clients.
More to Come
By my count, I’m predicting 800 total summit attempts, so with 162 completed, that leaves another 638 to go. Look fop more from: Climbing the Seven Summits, Seven Summits Treks, Elite, Madison Mountaineering, Â Adventure Consultants, AAI, 8K and many of the smaller Nepali teams.
Nepal Permit Update
As of May 8, 2026, Nepal has issued 1,134 climbing permits to 135 teams across 30 peaks, bringing in $8.3 million US dollars in permit fees, with Everest accounting for $7.2 million. Everest climbers are from 55 countries. China has the most climbers at 109, followed by the U.S. at 76, India at 61 and the UK at 32. There are 101 female climbers on Everest this season. This is the current tally for the 8000ers.Â
| 8000er | Teams | Â Male Clients | Female Clients | Total |
| Annapurna I | 4 | 19 | 8 | 27 |
| Dhaulagiri | 4 | 18 | 12 | 30 |
| Everest | 50 | 387 | 105 | 492 |
| Kanchenjunga | 4 | 23 | 13 | 36 |
| Lhotse | 10 | 85 | 35 | 120 |
| Makalu | 11 | 51 | 21 | 72 |
| Manaslu | 1 | 2 | 0 | 2 |
| TOTALS | 84 | 585 | 194 | 779 |
Here’s to a safe season for everyone on all the peaks.
Climb On!
Alan
Memories are Everything
The Podcast on alanarnette.com
Here’s the Podcast of the Weekend Update
You can listen to #everest2026 podcasts on Spotify, Apple, Breaker, Pocket Casts, Anchor, and more. Just search for “alan arnette” on your favorite podcast platform.
Previous Everest 2026 Season Coverage Posts
- Everest 2026: May 17 Weekend Update – Climbers to the Summit
- Everest 2026: Ropes to Summit, Time to Wait
- Everest 2026: May 10 Weekend Update – Ropes to South Col, Everest Death
- Everest 2026: May 3 Weekend Update – Climbing!
- Everest 2026: Route In – With Risks
- Everest 2026: April 27 Weekend Update – Icefall Route In?
- Everest 2026: April 19 Weekend Update – 8000er Summits
- Everest 2026: April 12 Weekend Update – The Khumbu is Alive!
- Everest 2026: Are Everest Climbers Being Poisoned?
- Everest 2026: Climber Rescue Alert
- Everest 2026: Climbers to Watch this Season
- Everest 2026: North Side Closed, New Rules in Effect: Everest 2026 Season Update
- Everest 2026: Icefall Doctors Launched
- Everest 2026: Rumor Fire Season
- Welcome to Everest 2026 Coverage – An overview of what to expect during the Spring 2026 climbing season
Background
- Everest by the Numbers: 2026 Edition – A deep dive into Everest statistics as compiled by the Himalayan Database
- Comparing the Routes of Everest: 2026 Edition – A detailed look at Everest’s routes, commercial, standard, and non-standard
- How Much Does it Cost to Climb Everest: 2026 Edition – My annual analysis of Everest climbing costs, from solo and unsupported to fully guided




