Nepal's football story is one of steady grassroots growth in a country better known for its mountains than its pitches. The sport is administered through a tiered pyramid that spans the Nepal Super League and the Martyr's Memorial A-Division League at the top, down through B and C divisions, and further into seven provincial leagues covering regions from Koshi in the east to Sudurpashchim in the far west. That structural breadth reflects genuine national reach, with clubs anchored in Kathmandu as well as in cities like Pokhara, Birgunj, and Chitwan.
Among the clubs that have defined Nepalese football, Nepal Police Club stands out as the most decorated of the modern era. Founded under royal patronage as Mahendra Police Club — named after King Mahendra Bir Bikram Shah, the ninth monarch of Nepal — it was rebranded under its current name in 2008. The club claimed the A-Division League title four times, most notably securing three consecutive championships in 2010, 2011, and the 2011–12 season, a run that gave the club a dominant identity in domestic football. On the continental stage, Nepal Police Club reached the final of the AFC Presidents Cup in 2007 and participated in the Asian Club Championship — predecessor to the AFC Champions League — in the 1997–98 season, marking Nepal's early ambitions beyond its own borders.
The broader Nepalese club scene today features dozens of sides competing across national and provincial tiers, with communities abroad — in Hong Kong, the United Kingdom, and Japan — also fielding Nepalese football clubs, reflecting a large diaspora with deep ties to the game back home.
