4 Best Sights in Siem Reap, Cambodia

Background Illustration for Sights

Siem Reap is the base to use for exploring the temples at Angkor, but it has more to offer than that. It has its own great places to see, and there is something seductive about this city that makes visitors want to linger. You can wander around the contemporary Angkor National Museum, take a cooking class, visit a rural village, explore myriad art galleries, try a gourmet restaurant, or take a stroll down the central Pub Street. There’s plenty to keep the temple-weary traveler occupied for two or three days, or even a week or more.

Angkor Archaeological Park

Fodor's Choice

Angkor Archaeological Park near Siem Reap is one of this planet's greatest archaeological sites. It's home to the magnificent temple-city of Angkor Wat, the world's largest religious structure and star attraction of this vast temple complex. Combined with more remote, lesser-visited temple-cities and ruins outside the park, this collection of archaeological sites is Southeast Asia's most impressive.

The massive structures are often compared to Central America's Mayan ruins, but far exceed them in size. And Angkor Wat is just one temple in a complex of hundreds: In all, there are some 300 monuments reflecting Hindu and Buddhist influence scattered throughout the countryside, but only the most significant have been fully restored, and in some cases reconstructed.

The major temple-cities of Angkor Wat and Angor Thom lie within a few miles of each other and can be seen in one day. Most travelers spend two or three days viewing the best-preserved temples, while archaeological enthusiasts will take a week or two to thoroughly explore the entire park, and do day-trips and overnight stays out to more remote temple ruins.

The best strategy for tackling the temples is to set out before sunrise each day, return to Siem Reap for lunch, swims, and massages, then return to Angkor Park in the late afternoon. Start your first day with sunrise at Angkor Wat, which for many travelers becomes one of the most memorable experiences of their lives. The site only gets busy during the short high season (December to March), but it is so enormous that it's easy to escape the crowds. After exploring the stupendous temple, move onto the neighboring temple city of Angkor Thom, where the highlights are the temples of Baphuon and Bayon, with its vivid bas-reliefs of scenes from epic battles and everyday life.

Start your second day at Ta Prohm. The temple is often referred to as the "Angelina Jolie temple" for its role in the movie Tomb Raider, and is best known for the tree roots that picturesquely appear to strangle the temple walls and galleries. Nearby Banteay Kdei, opposite the royal baths of Sra Srang, is more dilapidated, atmospheric, and shaded by trees. There are many small temples in this area that get very few visitors but are worth a look, such as Ta Keo and Thommanon.

On your third morning, head to the exquisite pink sandstone temple of Banteay Srei. The drive takes you through some of Cambodia's most gorgeous countryside, which is at its greenest during the monsoon season. On the way back, you can climb the pyramid temple of Pre Rup. With so many archaeological sites to see, the choice is yours. Discuss your preferences and how you like to travel with your guide, and if you prefer to get off the beaten track, ask the guide to create an itinerary to lesser-visited temples.

The entrance to the complex is 4 km (2½ miles) north of Siem Reap. Most independent travelers hire a tuk-tuk driver for a half-day or full-day ($20 to $35). Renting bicycles ($2 to $5) or electric bikes ($6 to $12) is also an option if you’re up for the exertion in the heat. Tourists cannot hire motorbikes and vehicles in Siem Reap, but you can hire a driver with car. Hiring a tour guide is a must, at least for the first day. Good hotels can recommend guides and drivers.

Angkor Archaeological Park is open from 5:30 am to 6 pm, although some temples open later than others and close earlier. See the official Angkor Enterprise website for times. You can buy tickets online or at the Angkor Ticket Office. Don't lose your ticket as you need to show it at the entrance to each site and to access restrooms (free-of-charge) in the Park. If you buy your ticket at 5 pm, you'll be admitted for the remaining open hour, in time to see the sunset setting the temples aglow. Your ticket will also count for the following day. Make sure to wear a hat and sunscreen and take plenty of water. There are cafes and clean restrooms near Angkor Wat, and vendors selling drinks, fruit, and street food throughout the park.

Angkor National Museum

Khom Svaydangum Fodor's Choice

This compelling modern museum, which opened in 2008, guides you through the rise and fall of the Angkorian empire, covering the religions, kings, and geopolitics that drove the Khmer to create monumental cities and highly developed urban societies with hospitals, universities, and a sophisticated hydraulic system. With more than 1,300 artifacts on display, complemented by interactive multimedia installations, this museum experience helps demystify much of the material culture that visitors encounter at the archaeological parks and sites. The atmosphere is set in the impressive gallery of a thousand Buddhas, which plunges you into the serene spirituality that still dominates the region. Seven consequent galleries, set up chronologically, highlight the Funan and Chenia pre-Angkorian epochs, followed by the golden age of the Angkorian period led by the likes of King Soryavarman II, who built Angkor Wat. The final two galleries showcase some of the stone inscriptions that enabled scholars to make sense of the period, and statues of Apsaras, shedding light on the cult and fashions of these celestial dancers considered messengers of the gods. The audio tour is excellent and well worth the extra cost ($5).

Angkor Night Market

Old Market

Here at this lively flea market, you can practice your bargaining skills and get lost in a maze that includes a food hall, massage stands, bars, and an enormous variety of clothes, accessories, souvenirs, food and cosmetic products, jewelry, and more.

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Cambodia Land Mine Museum

Be sure to visit this museum, established by Aki Ra, a former child soldier who first fought for the Khmer Rouge, then the Vietnamese, and finally the Cambodian Army. Now he dedicates his life to removing the land mines he and thousands of others laid across Cambodia. His museum is a must-see, a sociopolitical eye-opener that portrays a different picture of Cambodia from the glorious temples and five-star hotels. Your entry ticket helps land-mine victims go to school.

As the museum is a decent distance from Siem Reap, it's best to combine this with a visit to the Banteay Srei Temple nearby.