In the Book of Mormon, the land of Lehi-Nephi (/ˈliː.haɪ ˈniː.faɪ/; also referred to as the land of Nephi) is the homeland of the Nephites in the early times of the Book of Mormon. The land is later conquered by the Lamanites and the remaining Nephites flee to the land of Zarahemla, home of the Mulekites. In later years, an expedition under Zeniff returns to Lehi-Nephi to re-colonize the area, and at first the Lamanites allow them to settle. Zeniff, his son Noah, and Noah's son Limhi rule as kings over their people in the land of Lehi-Nephi. Ultimately the Nephite settlers depart the land of Nephi due to Lamanite oppression. They are led by Ammon, the leader of a party sent by king Mosiah son of king Benjamin to learn the fate of Zeniff's group. They return to Zarahemla as refugees.
According to the Book of Mormon, the land of Nephi situates south and at higher elevation relative to Zarahemla. A strip of wilderness, running east and west divides the land of Nephi from the land of Zarahemla. In the first century B.C., the lands of Nephi and Zarahemla were bordered on the east and on the west by bodies of water called respectively “the east sea” and “the west sea”. There is no unequivocal indication in the Book of Mormon that these seas were intended to represent oceans. The term “lake” is never used in the Book of Mormon to describe an inland body of water, and a parallel is seen between the American Promised Land of the Book of Mormon, and the Biblical Promised Land bordered by inland seas. The book of Mosiah in the Book of Mormon tells of a search party sent out from the land of Nephi to find the land of Zarahemla. Traveling northward in “a land among many waters”, in the general vicinity of the Book of Mormon land Cumorah, the search party mistakenly supposes that they have found the land of Zarahemla.