Our favourite Borneo tours and excursions

From multi-day rainforest treks to tribal longhouse stays, Borneo offers some of the most unforgettable travel experiences on the planet. 

Orangutan at Sepilok

Sepilok Orangutan Rehabilitation Centre

Established in 1964, this sanctuary (the first of its kind in Borneo) rescues baby orangutans orphaned by logging or the illegal pet trade and rehabilitates them so that they can be released back into the wild.

It’s a process that can take up to seven years, and at the SORC you can see them at every stage of development – from youngsters being cared for in indoor nurseries through to adolescence and release. After release, the orangutans might still come back to the centre for bananas and sugarcane (although the meal is kept monotonous to encourage them to find their own food), so keep your eyes peeled to see them playing in the branches and swinging down from the trees.

Looking up from Mulu's caves

Exploring Mulu's caves

Mulu National Park is home to some of the most impressive subterranean landscapes you’ll ever see.

In Lang Cave, swallows and swiftlets flit between stalactites and stalagmites, while at gargantuan Deer Cave, a towering side-profile of Abraham Lincoln watches the nightly exodus of over two million bats. In Wind Cave, dripping flowstones appear like frozen waterfalls and spiky helictites give the impression of having formed in zero gravity. With two days in the park, you can trek from cave to cave, taking dips in cold springs and spotting wildlife from canopy walks in between.

8km mark on Mount Kinabalu

Mount Kinabalu climb

Watching sunrise from the top of the highest mountain in Southeast Asia is an unforgettable experience.

It’s an 8.8 km steep trail to the summit, taking you from lush and humid lowlands to misty forests of tea and eucalyptus trees thick with moss, where you’ll stop at a shelter for the night. Rising at 2am the next day, you’ll continue for the final stretch through cooler granite boulder forest and treeless subalpine scrub to Low’s Peak, to be rewarded with views as far as the Philippines in the distance. Be warned: the ascent is steep, the summit is cold, and altitude sickness can strike anyone – but the rewards really are spectacular.

Waterfall in Maliau Basin

Trekking in Borneo's 'Lost World'

So remote and isolated that half of it has never been explored, the Maliau Basin is a tantalising prospect for anyone with a remotely adventurous bent. Where else in the world can you trek through some of the world’s oldest rainforest, on trails that only a handful of humans have ever trodden?

On this two-day trek, you’ll hike up mountainsides beneath fat-trunked Agathis trees, sleep in forest encampments surrounded by the hoots of gibbons, and trek to the seven-tiered Maliau Falls, which earned this region its indigenous name: “Land of the Giant Staircase”. There really aren’t many trekking destinations in the world to compete with this.

Orangutan in the trees at Semenggoh Orangutan Sanctuary

Semenggoh Orangutan Sanctuary

Just south of Kuching, the Semenggoh Wildlife Reserve has provided a sanctuary for rescued orangutans since 1975.

They spend most of their time roaming the forest, but they visit the feeding platform twice a day for a free meal of coconut, banana, and hard-boiled eggs. At these times, you can see adult orangutans swinging through the trees, babies playing, and mothers teaching their young to climb as they follow the ranger to the feeding platform. Though sightings are likely, do be aware that when fruit is particularly abundant in the rainforest, the orangutans won’t always turn up for their free meal.

Kayaking in the rainforest near Kuching

Rainforest kayaking

On this tour, your guide will take you out of Kuching, through rice fields, rubber plantations and pepper farms, to the ancestral heartland of the Bidayuh: the second-largest minority group in Borneo.

Jumping in a kayak, you’ll paddle along a shallow stretch of river overhung by trees and overshadowed by looming limestone mountains. If you’ve had enough of trekking, this is a refreshingly different way to immerse yourself in the jungle, as you float over gentle rapids, beneath trailing vines, and stop at Bidayuh villages along the way to meet the locals and experience traditional life in the forest.