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. 

Prison at Tuol Sleng

Tuol Sleng and the Killing Fields

Between 1975 and 1979, as many as two million Cambodians — a quarter of the country’s population — were persecuted and killed by the Khmer Rouge. While it’s tempting to turn away from such nightmares, grappling with them is the only real way to appreciate the incredible resilience, determination and drive of the Cambodian people. 

The genocide is commemorated at the Tuol Sleng Museum, a former school that served as a Khmer Rouge prison camp, and at the Killing Fields, where prisoners were taken to be executed. Visiting these sites is a profoundly chilling experience but, we think, an important one.

Irrawaddy dolphin spotting in Kratie

Irrawaddy dolphin spotting

Recognisable by their distinctive snub-noses and enigmatic smiles, the largest population of Irrawaddy dolphins in the world lives in the Mekong, where — if you’re lucky — you might spot their little dorsal fins dancing about above the water not far from the village of Kampi. 

With just 92 left in the wild, this may be your last chance to see them — though we certainly hope not. Thankfully, conservationists have teamed up with fishermen to run low-volume dolphin-spotting tours, which supplement local incomes and motivate the conservation of these critically endangered (and strikingly cute) creatures.

Ziplining in Angkor

Angkor zipline

Take a monkey’s-eye view of the jungle as you fly, climb and swing though the treetops on a mixture of ziplines, hanging bridges and platforms.

This conservation-friendly tour does not damage the trees in any way, using a clever rigging and counter-weighted system to keep the equipment in the canopy. Even better, a percentage of their profits go toward reforestation and primate rehabilitation, and you might even be lucky enough to spot a gibbon as you soar through their home! At the very least, your dedicated “Sky Ranger” will be able to tell you some fascinating facts about the surrounding jungle and wildlife.

Soksabike Tour in Battambang

Soksabike tour of Battambang

Soksabike is one of our absolute favourite partners in Cambodia. A local company with a wholehearted commitment to forging real connections between travellers and local people, they’re not interested in parading tourists through show villages. 

Instead, their cycle tours  get you involved in the daily life of the villages, farms and cottage industries of the Battambang countryside by introducing you to some of its most interesting people. Whether you’re making rice paper or trying the local cakes, this is exactly the kind of slow, explorative, and mutually beneficial travel that Cambodia is all about.

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!

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.