Our favourite Laos tours and excursions

If destinations and accommodation are the bread and butter of a great vacation, a hands-on cultural experience is the secret sauce that brings it all to life. 

Cruising on the Upper Mekong River

Cruising on the Upper Mekong

Where the Lower Mekong is broad, slow, and pulsing with life, the Upper Mekong is faster, narrower, and altogether more remote.

Until 2015, there weren’t any overnight river cruises at all, and even now you can sometimes sail for hours without seeing another boat. Cruising up here is an amazing way to see some of the most inaccessible parts of the country, scrambling up muddy banks or climbing steep bamboo staircases to tiny hamlets of tin-roofed houses. In between, there’s little to do but gaze at the steep-sided limestone mountains cloaked in green foliage – and that’s more than good enough for us. 

Elephants washing in the river

MandaLao Elephant Sanctuary

We’ve seen a lot of wildlife sanctuaries in our time, and this one might be the very best.

Looking after retired working elephants in conditions as close to their natural habitat as possible, the dedicated people at MandaLao have made it their mission to improve the lot of Laos’s dwindling elephant population through ecotourism. This is a chance to interact with one of the world’s most magnificent creatures in a way that makes a positive difference to their future – and we can’t recommend it enough. 

Buffalo on banks of Mekong

The hidden side of Luang Prabang

On this alternative tour, we’ll whisk you away from the boutique hotels and gilded wats of the town centre to a side of Luang Prabang few tourists get to see -- where tuk-tuks putter along dirt roads to quiet temples, and minority villages sprawl along the banks of the Mekong.

Here, you can climb to dilapidated hilltop temples with incredible panoramic views, visit a spiritual retreat once used by the kings of Lan Xang, and meet Hmong and Khmu people who live lives governed by ancestral traditions. Finally, you can return to the city by boat, arriving in royal style on the mighty Mekong.

Playing boules

Boules & Barbecue

What does Laos have in common with turn-of-the-century Provence? An abiding love of the boules, for one thing.

Join an amateur petanque league and you’ll soon find out that this is one of the best ways to get to know the locals. Over some drinks and snacks, your new teammates will show you how to toss a metal ball as close to the “jack” as possible, while trying to knock your opponents’ balls out of the way. Then, as the sun goes down, cross a bamboo bridge to a riverside restaurant for another quintessential Lao experience: Sin Dat Barbecue, where you grill your own food over a bucket of hot coals.

Wat Phou Temple

Wat Phou Temple

Back in its 11th-century heyday, the Khmer Empire covered over a million square kilometres – including much of what we now know as Laos. Wat Phou is a relic of that golden age, with bas-relief carvings, a sacred spring, and reservoirs surrounded by frangipani trees.

Your guide will be able to tell you about the history of the site, which built by the same people as Angkor, and explain how the temple’s design reflects Hindu religious principles. Then, climb to the top of the temple mountain to be rewarded with panoramic views over the Mekong Plain – and the chance to partake of the spring’s special powers.