
You’ll see them everywhere in the mountains: colourful flags dancing in the wind, tied to passes, rooftops and remote temples. But what do they really mean? Here are 5 things you should know about prayer flags, including a few facts that might surprise you.
1. Bon origins, Buddhist meaning
Prayer flags originally came from Bon, a pre-Buddhist religion in Tibet. Shamans used them in healing and protective rituals. Later, Tibetan Buddhism added mantras and sacred symbols. That’s how the modern prayer flag was born.
2. 5 colours = 5 elements
The flags always follow the same colour order: blue, white, red, green, yellow. Each colour represents an element:
- Blue: sky
- White: air
- Red: fire
- Green: water
- Yellow: earth
Together, they bring harmony to body, mind and environment.
3. Wind carries the blessing, for others
The mantras on the flags aren’t for personal gain. They’re meant to spread goodwill and compassion. For all beings.
👉 Prayer flags aren’t wish flags. They’re about giving, not getting.
4. Don’t remove old flags. Add new ones!
Worn-out flags aren’t thrown away. They’ve done their work. You simply tie new ones next to them — as a new layer of hope on the same line.
5. Intention is everything
Prayer flags only carry meaning if you hang them with the right mindset. No intention = just fabric.
👉 Wish for peace, healing or kindness — not for more likes or better wifi. 😉
✨ How to hang your own prayer flags?
- Choose a windy spot: balcony, tree, mountain pass.
- Use the correct order: blue, white, red, green, yellow.
- Let them fade and fray — that’s part of the magic.
In Nepal, prayer flags are everywhere. They bring colour to the trail, peace to your path, and a reminder: happiness grows when it’s shared.

