| Kangbachen | 
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| Elevation | 7,903 m (25,928 ft) | 
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| Parent peak | Kangchenjunga | 
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| Listing | Mountains of Nepal | 
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| Coordinates | 27°43′00″N 88°06′38″E / 27.7166°N 88.1105°E / 27.7166; 88.1105 | 
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| 16km9.9miles
 
 Bhutan 
 Nepal 
 
 
 Pakistan 
 India 
 China 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The major peaks (not mountains) above 7,500 m (24,600 ft) height in Himalayas , rank identified in Himalayas alone (not the world).
 
1:Mount Everest
2:Kangchenjunga 
3:Lhotse
4:Yalung Kang, Kanchenjunga West
5:Makalu
6:Kangchenjunga South
7:Kangchenjunga Central
8:Cho Oyu
9:Dhaulagiri
10:Manaslu (Kutang)
11:Nanga Parbat (Diamer) 
12:Annapurna
13:Shishapangma (Shishasbangma, Xixiabangma) 
14:Manaslu East
15:Annapurna East Peak
16: Gyachung Kang
17:Annapurna II 
18:Tenzing Peak (Ngojumba Kang, Ngozumpa Kang, Ngojumba Ri) 
19:Kangbachen
20:Himalchuli (Himal Chuli)
21:Ngadi Chuli (Peak 29, Dakura, Dakum, Dunapurna)
22:Nuptse (Nubtse) 
23:Nanda Devi
24:Chomo Lonzo (Chomolonzo, Chomolönzo, Chomo Lönzo, Jomolönzo, Lhamalangcho)
25:Namcha Barwa (Namchabarwa)
26:Zemu Kang (Zemu Gap Peak)
27:Kamet
28:Dhaulagiri II
29:Ngojumba Kang II
30:Dhaulagiri III 
31:Kumbhakarna Mountain (Mount Kumbhakarna, Jannu) 
32:Gurla Mandhata (Naimona'nyi, Namu Nan)  
33:Hillary Peak (Ngojumba Kang III)
34:Molamenqing (Phola Gangchen)
35:Dhaulagiri IV
36:Annapurna Fang 
37:Silver Crag
38:Kangbachen Southwest
39:Gangkhar Puensum (Gangkar Punsum)
40:Annapurna III
41:Himalchuli West
42:Annapurna IV 
43:Kula Kangri
44:Liankang Kangri (Gangkhar Puensum North, Liangkang Kangri) 
45:Ngadi Chuli South 
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| Parent range | Himalayas | 
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| First ascent | 1974 | 
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Kangbachen is a subsidiary peak of Kangchenjunga in the Nepalese part of the Himalayas. The Kangchenjunga massif's local name translates to "Five treasures of the high snow" in reference to its five peaks, one being Kangbachen.
Kangbachen lies on the west ridge of the  Kangchenjunga range, in Nepal. It is the smallest of Kangchenjunga's five peaks and the only one less than eight thousand meters (7,903 m). It is also the only one of Kangchenjunga's peaks entirely in Nepal.
Kangbachen has rarely been climbed compared to other mountains on the range. It has only had ten recorded expeditions since 1930, and only two successful summits, according to the Himalayan Database.
It was first summitted on May 26, 1974, via the southwest ridge by a Polish expedition team, composed of Kazimierz Olech, Wiesław Kłaput, Marek Malatyński, Zbigniew Rubinowski and Wojciech Brański. The second successful summit, by a Yugoslavian team, took place just over four months later, on September 29, 1974.
As of 2024, the East, and South faces of Kangbachen are unclimbed.