Our favorite 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. 

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 snorkeling trip or dove 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. 

Cycling in Kota Kinabalu

Rural Sabah by bike

Leave the urban sprawl of Kota Kinabalu behind and journey through fruit orchards and paddy fields on a guided cycle trip into rural Sabah. 

Whether a half-day ride or a multi-day exploration, you’ll pedal through fields of pineapple and ginger, learn to “tap” latex at a rubber plantation, cross wood-plank suspension bridges over rushing rivers, and stop at minority villages to chat to the locals and try some traditional snacks. It may not be as dramatic as the rainforest, but exploring the subtler charms of the Sabahan countryside is wonderful in its own way – and it’s the best way to connect with the people who call this island home.

Hiking trails in Bako National Park

Hiking Bako National Park

Don’t be fooled by its petite dimensions: at just 27 square kilometers, Bako may be one of Borneo’s smallest national parks, but with seven different ecosystems it packs a massive punch when it comes to diversity.

In fact, this is the only park where you’re (almost) guaranteed a mammal sighting, whether it’s a famous, big-nosed proboscis monkey, silvered langur, or long-tailed macaque. What’s more, with well-marked hiking trails of various lengths and strenuousness, leading through the forest to beaches dotted with wave-carved pinnacles, we’ll tailor the day’s exploration to your fitness and energy levels.

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 meters 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?

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 tantalizing 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.

Wildlife trekking in Tabin

Trekking in Tabin Wildlife Reserve

Malaysia’s largest wildlife reserve covers well over 1,000 sq km in the far east of Borneo yet is home to just one wildlife resort. 

To really appreciate the range of wildlife that calls Tabin home, you need to experience it at every time of day – so the best way to uncover its secrets is with a series of short hikes with an expert nature guide. Hike to a continuously erupting mud volcano to look for animal tracks and spot pygmy elephants making the most of the salt lick. After dark, go in search of sambar deer, bearded pigs, and tembadau (wild cattle). At dawn, ascend a birdwatching tower to spot spidercatchers, bristleheads and flowerpeckers.This is what Borneo is all about.