Our favourite Cambodia tours and excursions

Get an insider’s perspective on daily life in Cambodia with our hand-picked, hands-on experiences, each one designed to get you beneath the surface of the local culture. 

Elephants in Mondulkiri

Walking with elephants in Mondulkiri

Gargantuan and yet surprisingly sensitive, an elephant can crack a peanut shell without breaking the seed and react to the touch of a feather on their leathery hides. 

The Mondulkiri Project rescues these highly intelligent animals from exploitation in logging and tourism,and provides them with a safe and happy retirement while educating the local community on elephant welfare. One thing you definitely won’t be doing is riding them – which is good. You can appreciate something without trying to ride it. You will be able to walk with them through the forest: a profoundly humbling experience.

Children taking part in Angkor Thom scavenger hunt

Angkor Thom scavenger hunt

If you like exploration with a purpose, it’s time to channel your inner Indiana Jones and unlock the secrets of Angkor Thom. 

Armed with nothing but a map, some clues, and your camera, you’ll start at the South Gate, where remarkable statues depicting mythological demons and gods line the fifty-metre walkway. As you solve each riddle, you’ll be drawn into the heart of this ancient Khmer city, uncovering the stories behind the Terrace of the Leper King and the enigmatic faces of the 54 Bayon towers as you go. Once you’ve captured eleven photos, it’s time to meet up with your guide to find out if you completed your quest!
 

Phare Circus

Phare, The Cambodian Circus

When it comes to Phare, “circus” barely begins to cover it. This is world-class performance art — telling the stories of Cambodian legend and history through ambitious choreography, spine-tingling live music, and almost terrifying acrobatics that’ll have you gripping the edge of your seat.

As if that weren’t enough, it’s also a social enterprise that provides a vocation for disadvantaged young people, helping to fuel a Cambodian cultural renaissance in the wake of the Khmer Rouge. We know circus might not be high on your Cambodia bucket list but trust us: just go!

Sambor Prei Kuk Temple

Sambor Prei Kuk

Imagine stumbling upon a crumbling brick tower half-devoured by the roots of a strangler fig, accompanied by nothing but the whoops and chirps of the rainforest.

This isn’t Angkor — this is Sambor Prei Kuk, an ancient city much older, more mysterious, and (for some of us) more lovely than the more famous temples to the west. Constructed around 1,200 years ago by the Hindu civilisation of Chenla, it was recently named Cambodia’s third World Heritage Site. What’s most amazing is how many people unknowingly zoom past on the highway instead of stopping, meaning you can have these tumbledown ruins almost to yourself.

Battambang temple art

Insider Experience: Contemporary art tour of Battambang

We already loved Battambang for its sleepy, colonial-era town centre and charming rural surrounds, but did you know that it’s also the beating heart of Cambodian contemporary art? 

This tour will take you inside the country's post-Khmer Rouge cultural revival, introducing you to the local artists and curators who are driving it forward. In one art café, you’ll sip award-winning coffee at a screening of short films. Later, you’ll visit a local artist’s studio for a one-to-one discussion of his work. For us, Battambang’s wealth of little galleries, studios and quirky exhibition spaces make it one of the most exciting destinations in the country.
 

Buffalo cart in village near Siem Reap

Villages of Siem Reap

Today, Siem Reap is a buzzing tourism hub packed with hotels, hostels, bars and shops, so it’s difficult to imagine that just a few years ago it was little more than a rural backwater. 

That is, until you head a few minutes out of town and suddenly find yourself among farmers planting rice, weaving thatch, harvesting vegetables, and transporting fresh produce to market by oxcart. This countryside tour is a chance to immerse yourself in the rural activity of Siem Reap, and a window into a way of life that can feel as though it hasn’t changed since Angkor was built.