Is life in Nepal
actually getting better?
That is the question behind K Cha Sarkar? — not political speeches, not party slogans, not press conference claims.
Just one simple question that matters to every citizen in Nepal:
"Is my daily life improving or not?"
What people are asking
Are the roads better?
Is garbage being collected?
Is traffic management improving?
Is water supply more reliable?
Is electricity stable?
Are government offices faster and less corrupt?
Are hospitals serving people properly?
Is police response better?
Is business registration easier?
Is public service delivery in Nepal finally improving?
Why we built this
This platform was built because people are tired of being told that everything is improving when their everyday experience says otherwise.
K Cha Sarkar? is Nepal's public scorecard.
A place where citizens can rate and report what life actually feels like in their city, ward, and community. Not based on propaganda — based on experience. Not based on promises — based on delivery. Not based on what leaders say — based on what people in Nepal live through every day.
Where accountability actually lives
For too long, accountability in Nepal has stayed trapped inside politics, media soundbites, and official statements. But the real truth lives somewhere else:
In the ward where roads are still broken.
In the neighborhood where garbage sits for days.
In the office where people still face delays, confusion, and bribe requests.
In the hospital where service depends on luck.
In the business counter where one simple registration becomes a long struggle.
In the lives of ordinary Nepalis who just want fairness, dignity, and systems that work.
That is why K Cha Sarkar? exists.
This is NOT
- ✕A platform to blindly praise the government.
- ✕A platform to attack the government.
- ✕Political commentary or propaganda.
This IS
- ✓A place for citizen feedback in Nepal.
- ✓A measure of government performance through real public experience.
- ✓A space to compare wards, cities, and services based on ground truth.
How accountability begins
A ward that is improving
deserves recognition
A city that is failing
deserves attention
A ministry that is delivering
should be seen
A public office not working
should not hide behind silence
K Cha Sarkar? gives people in Nepal a voice, a score, and a shared public mirror.
This is for
The commuter stuck in daily traffic.
The family surrounded by unmanaged waste.
The patient waiting for treatment.
The student trying to get government documents.
The entrepreneur trying to register a business.
The citizen who is tired of excuses and wants results.
Progress should not just be announced.
It should be felt. On the street.
In the office. In the hospital.
In the ward. In everyday life.
Our Belief
If government performance in Nepal is real, citizens should be able to feel it.
If citizens can feel it, they should be able to measure it.
And if they can measure it, the country can no longer ignore it.
Welcome
K Cha Sarkar?
Nepal's public scorecard for roads, traffic, garbage, hospitals, corruption, public offices, and everyday life.
Not to speak for the people — but to let the people speak for themselves.