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. 

Boat on Kinabatangan River

Wildlife safari on the Kinabatangan River

A riverboat safari on the Kinabatangan River just might be the best wildlife experience in the world. One of the most ecologically diverse regions on the planet, this “corridor of life” is a cornucopia of species – so much so that it can feel like playing animal bingo.

Orangutans, pygmy elephants, gibbons, crocodiles, hornbills, pythons – you name it, the Kinabatangan’s probably got it. Head out at dawn and you’ll see a whole different show from in the afternoon, and after dark it’s a new cast again. For animal sightings, we’ve never been anywhere to match it. 

Diving in Gaya Island

Gaya Island marine sports

Borneo is a firm contender for top marine destination on the planet, and there are few natural environments more magical than the coral reefs around Gaya Island.

This is a vivid, alien world of rippling anemones, spiky sea urchins, luminous butterflyfish and huge shoals of squid – expect every snorkelling trip or dive to feel like an episode of Blue Planet. And if you like to eat seafood as well as look at it, we can charter you a trip to Mengalum Island to land yourself a wahoo, dorado, or giant trevally. However you want to experience Gaya’s underwater world, we’ve got you covered. 

Canopy walkway in Danum Valley - Claire Allison

Exploring Danum Valley

Exploring the Danum Valley is an experience we’ll never forget. Miles upon miles from anywhere, surrounded by rainforest that’s never been logged, settled, or interfered with in any way, this is one of the richest natural wonderlands on Earth.

Wander through the treetops on a canopy walk 25 metres above the ground. Tube downriver looking out for gibbons and orangutans. Work up a sweat as you trek between towering tropical trees to catacomb-like caves, then head out at dusk to meet the forest inhabitants who only emerge under cover of darkness. Getting here may not be fast, cheap or easy, but what else would you expect from one of the world’s last true wildernesses?

Traditional Iban longhouse in Batang Ai

Meeting the Iban people

Borneo’s Iban people may have abandoned their former practice of headhunting, but thankfully their traditional culture survives in many other forms.

Iban live in longhouses with up to 30 families under one roof, and in the evenings, these houses are filled with drinking, dancing and general merriment. Spend the night and be prepared to be plied with tuak rice wine and roped into a dance or two, to the inevitable amusement of your hosts! The Iban way of life may not have all the mod cons (or privacy) you’re used to, but it affords a sense of community that’s long faded from Western culture, and for us it’s one of the highlights of a trip to Borneo.