38 Best Sights in Laos

Laos Buffalo Dairy

Fodor's choice

Opened by a group of expats who complained that the cost of cheese in Luang Prabang was too high, this full-fledged water buffalo farm started as a social enterprise and also now welcomes visitors. Laos Buffalo Dairy helps local farmers by renting their pregnant buffaloes, taking care of them, and returning them healthier to their owners, who are also welcome to join a series of practical workshops. Guests can try their hand at farming and milk-making activities while learning about the challenges that local farmers face every day. Make sure to taste the delicious ricotta, feta cheeses, and cheesecakes on offer. Admission includes a cake of the day and tea.

Night Market

Fodor's choice

The night market is a hub of activity---full of colorful local souvenirs and cheap, delicious food---and also a meeting place for locals and tourists. Starting in the late afternoon, Sisavangvong Road is closed to vehicles from the tourist office down to the Royal Palace, and a tented area is set up, thronged with vendors selling lanterns, patterned cushion covers, Lao coffee and tea, hand-stitched bags, and many other local crafts. Side streets are lined with food stalls selling everything from fried chicken to Mekong seaweed and other treats at a fraction of the price you'll pay in a restaurant. It's worth strolling the market just for the atmosphere.

Pha That Luang

Fodor's choice

The city's most sacred monument, this massive, 147-foot-high, gold-painted stupa is also the nation's most important cultural symbol, representing the unity of the Lao people. King Setthathirat had it built in 1566 to guard a piece of the Buddha's breastbone and to represent Mt. Meru, the holy mountain of Hindu mythology, the center and axis of the world. Surrounding the lotus-shaped stupa are 30 pinnacles on the third level and a cloistered square on the ground with stone statues of the Buddha. Two brilliantly decorated temple halls, the survivors of four temples originally here, flank That Luang. On the avenue outside the west gate stands a bronze statue of King Setthathirat erected in the 1960s by a pious general. That Luang is the center of a major weeklong festival during November's full moon. The stupa is on the north end of town, a 10-minute tuk-tuk ride from the city center.

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Wat Phou

Fodor's choice

The ruins of this temple complex that predates Cambodia's Angkor Wat sit grandly on heights above the Mekong River, about 8 km (5 miles) south of Champasak. The strategic site was chosen by Khmer Hindus in the 6th century AD, probably because of a nearby spring of fresh water. Construction of the wat continued into the 13th century, at which point it finally became a Buddhist temple. Much of the original Hindu sculpture remains unchanged, including representations on the temple's lintels of the Hindu gods Vishnu, Shiva, and Kala. The staircase is particularly beautiful, its protective nagas (mystical serpents) decorated with plumeria, the national flower of Laos. Many of the temple's treasures, including pre-Angkor–era inscriptions, are preserved in an archaeology museum that is part of the complex. An impressive festival takes place at the temple each January.

Wat Phou Salao

Fodor's choice

Across the river on the way to Champasak, this hilltop temple was built in 2011 and has an impressive "Big Buddha" statue that dominates the peak. A long staircase flanked with nagas brings visitors to the top (allow 30 minutes for the climb) where there are great views of the river and the city, especially as they soak up the crimson sunsets. There is also a newer, concrete road to the top.

Wat Xieng Thong

Fodor's choice

Luang Prabang's most important and impressive temple complex is Wat Xieng Thong, a collection of ancient buildings near the tip of the peninsula where the Mekong and Nam Khan rivers meet. Erected in 1560, the main temple is one of the few structures to have survived centuries of marauding Vietnamese, Chinese, and Siamese armies, and it's one of the region's best-preserved examples of Buddhist art and architecture. The intricate golden facades, colorful murals, sparkling glass mosaics, and low, sweeping roofs of the entire ensemble of buildings (which overlap to make complex patterns) all combine to create a feeling of harmony and peace.

The interior of the main temple has decorated wooden columns and a ceiling covered with wheels of dharma, representing the Buddha's teaching. The exterior is just as impressive thanks to mosaics of colored glass that were added in the 1950s. Several small chapels at the sides of the main hall are also covered with mosaics and contain various images of the Buddha. The bronze 16th-century reclining Buddha in one chapel was displayed in the 1931 Paris Exhibition. The mosaic on the back wall of that chapel commemorates the 2,500th anniversary of the Lord Buddha's birth with a depiction of Lao village life. The funerary carriage house near the compound's east gate, with a gilded facade, contains the royal family's funeral statuary and urns, including a 40-foot-long wooden funeral carriage.

Sisaleumsak Rd., Luang Prabang, Louangphabang, Laos
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Rate Includes: 20,000 kip

Ban Muang Ngoi

The village, populated by Lao Lum and surrounded by unusual limestone peaks, has become a popular traveler hangout, with friendly locals, gorgeous scenery, and plenty of treks and river-touring options. All-day electricity has only recently arrived in Muang Ngoi, but Wi-Fi is now available and several fancy restaurants line its one street. With these upgrades the village looks poised to roll into the future, but accommodations remain pretty basic and may lack amenities travelers desire.

There is no ATM here, so make sure to bring all the cash you need.

As of 2018, Lao Youth Travel is the only tour operator based in Muang Ngoi. They can organize hiking trips to nearby villages (210,000 kip per day/two persons) and kayaking expeditions (150,000 kip per person). Their office is near the boat landing

[email protected].

Bolaven Plateau Loop

Travel around the Bolaven Plateau is unique in Laos due to its high altitude and cooler climate, and the sights focus primarily on waterfalls and coffee. The typical way to see the area is via the so-called Small Loop (200 km or 124 miles) or the Large Loop (320 km or 199 miles). The small loop, described here, is quite nice if your time is short: After your initial 35 km (22 mile) climb on a well-paved tollway, you'll arrive at a spot with several waterfalls. Tad Fane is the one mentioned most often for its lovely view of twin waterfalls dropping over a high cliff and potential ziplining for the brave ( greendiscoverylaos.com/tours/fly-at-tad-fane  021/264528). Tad E-tu is also nearby and has some decent accommodation. Tad Yeuang is just a little farther and has a local market, a scenic restaurant, and some unique photo spots. Paksong is the largest town on the Bolaven Plateau with a few basic accommodation options and some lovely cafes.

Head northwest past several organic farms, including Yamamoto Farm ( fb.com/yamamotofarmlaos  030/957–5237) where visitors can pick (and eat) strawberries in the winter, then continue north to Sinouk Coffee Resort ( suansinouk.com  030/955–8960), probably the nicest (and priciest) hotel on the plateau. Farther north still is Captain Hook Homestay ( fb.com/hook.23  020/989–30406), where you can learn about the Katu ethnic group on day tours or stay overnight. Tad Lo is a series of three waterfalls with a village full of guesthouses.

Continuing southwest, Mr. Vieng Coffee & Homestay ( 020/998–37206) can give you a look at organic farming and a coffee tasting. The final waterfall on this route is Tad Pha Souam, stunning in its own right, before the route returns to Pakse.

Buddha Park (Xieng Khouan)

The bizarre creation of an ecumenical monk, Luang Pou Bounleua Soulilat, who dreamed of a world religion embracing all faiths, this park is "peopled" by enormous Buddhist and Hindu sculptures spread across an attractive landscape of trees, shrubs, and flower gardens. Keep an eye out for the remarkable 165-foot-long sleeping Buddha. The park was laid out by the monk's followers in 1958 on a strip of land along the Mekong, opposite the Thai town of Nong Khai. After the revolution, the monk escaped across the river, where he began building anew. Visit Xieng Khouan by taking B14 from the Talat Sao bus station.

Thadeua Rd., Vientiane, Vientiane, Laos
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Rate Includes: 5,000 kip, 15,000 kip for audio tour

Dinosaur Museum

Dinosaur fossils were discovered in one of the villages around here, back in the 1930s and this museum pays tribute; however, the signs are not in English and the glass cases of dusty bones are a bit lackluster.

Khanthabuli Rd. and Chaimeuang Rd., Savannakhet, Savannahkhét, Laos
041-212597
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Rate Includes: 10,000 kip

Don Daeng Island

In the middle of the Mekong, opposite Wat Phou, this 9-km (5½-miles) long island has gorgeous views of the river and surrounding countryside. An ecotourism program and a long sandy beach have made it popular with visitors to Wat Phou as an alternative to staying in Pakse or Champasak. Bicycles can be rented on the island, and the Provincial Tourist Office in Pakse can arrange homestays. The upscale hotel, La Folie Lodge is located here.

Champasak, Champasak, Laos

Don Khon Island

You can hike or bicycle to the beautiful Liphi waterfall on the island of Don Khon, though an even more stunning one, Khone Phapheng, is just east of Don Khon on the mainland. Day-trip tours that include visits to the Irrawaddy dolphins and the mainland's Phapheng fall set out from Don Khon. Also on Don Khon, and the connected Don Det, are the remains of a French-built railway.

Don Khon Island, Champasak, Laos

Don Khong Island

The largest island in the area, Don Khong is inhabited by a fisherfolk living in small villages amid ancient Buddhist temples. The best way to explore is by bicycle—this is a pretty big place. Far less visited than Don Det/Don Khon, it's also a great spot to chill out along the river. A bridge across the Mekong connects Don Khong to the mainland, but it hasn't yet spoiled the quiet pace of the island, which has beautiful rice fields in the interior.

Don Khong Island, Champasak, Laos

Historical Heritage Museum

Pakse's history museum displays stonework from the famous Wat Phou in Champasak, handicrafts from the Bolaven Plateau ethnic groups, and locally made musical instruments.

Hwy. 13, Pakse, Champasak, Laos
020-552--71733
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Rate Includes: 10,000 kip

Ho Phra Keo

There's a good reason why Ho Phra Keo, one of the city's oldest and most impressive temples, has a name so similar to the wat in Bangkok's Grand Palace (there it's Wat Phra Kaew, the temple of the Emerald Buddha). The original Ho Phra Keo here was built by King Setthathirat in 1565 to house the Emerald Buddha, which he had taken from Chiang Mai in Thailand. The king installed the sacred statue first in Luang Prabang and then in Vientiane at Ho Phra Keo, but the Siamese army recaptured the Buddha in 1778 and it was installed in Bangkok. The present temple, restored in 1936, is a national museum. On display are Buddha sculptures of different styles, some wonderful chiseled images of Khmer deities, and a fine collection of stone inscriptions. The masterpiece of the museum is a 16th-century lacquered door carved with Hindu images.

Setthathirat Rd. and Mahosot Rd., Vientiane, Vientiane, Laos
021-212621
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Rate Includes: 5,000 kip

L'etranger Books and Tea

From 7 am until 10 pm, patrons of this bookstore and hangout sip tea, coffee, and smoothies or nibble on snacks while reclining on comfortable and chic floor pillows. In the evening, the place fills up for DVD screenings.

Lao National Museum

Recently relocated to the outskirts of the city, this building aims to outline the "official" version of Lao history with some interesting geological and historical displays. Exhibits touch on Laos's ancient past, its colonial years, and its struggle for liberation. Other highlights include details about the country's 50 main ethnic groups, along with indigenous instruments that illustrate how they make music.

KM 5, Avenue Kaysone Phomvihane, Vientiane, Vientiane, Laos
021-212460
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Rate Includes: 10,000 kip

Muang Sing

In the late 19th century this mountain-ringed town on the Sing Mountain River was the seat of a Tai Lue prince, Chao Fa Silino. Muang Sing lost its regional prominence, however, when French colonial forces occupied the town and established a garrison here. These days, it's known for its morning market, which draws throngs of traditional ethnic hill tribes. Shoppers from among the 20 different tribes living in the area, and even traders from China, visit the market to buy locally produced goods and handicrafts. The market is open daily throughout the day, but it is best to go from 6 to 8 before the minority groups return to their villages.

Nam Ha Ecotourism

This ecotourism program, a model for Southeast Asia, actively encourages the involvement of local communities in the development and management of tourism policies. You can join a two- or three-day trek through the Nam Ha Protected Area, which provides some excellent opportunities for communing with nature, having outdoor adventures, and visiting ethnic minorities (Khmu, Akha, Lanten, and Yao tribes live in the dense forest). The Boat Landing Guesthouse, Forest Retreat Laos, Phou Iu Travel, and Green Discovery Laos (all in Luang Nam Tha) conduct or arrange tours.

Nam Phou Square

The main square in Vientiane's tourist area used to reflect more emphatically the city's French influence, reinforced further by a cadre of very Gallic restaurants around the perimeter. Unfortunately, a recent renovation saw Nam Phou's namesake central fountain incorporated into a fancy new restaurant complex, including a skate park, visually disrupting the plazalike feel. The fountain is lit up multicolor at night, and bands perform for a crowd dominated on most days by tourists and Lao youth hanging out. The square and surrounding streets still contain many restaurants.

Nam Phou Fountain, Rue Pangkham, Vientiane, Vientiane, Laos

Patouxay Monument

An ersatz Arc de Triomphe, this monument is a prominent landmark, if minor attraction, between the city center and Pha That Luang. During the war years, America donated concrete for a new airport runway, but it was used to build this monument, instead. You can climb the stairs of its seven stories for a decent photo op and stroll the souvenir stalls on the second floor.

Avenue Lang Xang, Vientiane, Vientiane, Laos
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Rate Includes: 5,000 kip

Pha Tad Ke Botanical Garden

Set on 40 hectares of land on the opposite side of the Mekong, a 15-minute boat ride south of town, the centerpiece of these botanical gardens is the ethno-botanic garden, where Laos's flora and its uses in daily life, rituals, and cuisine are richly explained. Gravel pathways bring visitors through an arboretum, a limestone habitat, and a ginger garden. This green oasis also has a restaurant/café, a plant retail store, and a souvenir shop. A dedicated jetty near Wat Mahathat has hourly departures to and from the gardens until 4 pm.

Luang Prabang, Louangphabang, Laos
071-261000
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Rate Includes: 210,000 kip, Closed Wed.

Phou Si Hill

Several shrines and temples and a golden stupa crown this forested hill, but the best reason to ascend its 328 steps is to enjoy the view from the summit: a panorama of Luang Prabang, the Nam Khan and Mekong rivers, and the surrounding mountains. It's a popular spot for watching the sunset (bring insect repellent), but there are huge crowds (watch for pickpockets), so the view here might be better appreciated at sunrise, when you will have it all to yourself. If you're not game for the steep climb up the staircase, there's a less strenuous hike up the trail on the "back" side of the hill behind the Traditional Arts and Ethnology Centre; there aren't really views on the way up but the view from the top is the same.

Luang Prabang, Louangphabang, Laos
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Rate Includes: 20,000 kip

Plain of Jars

A major archaeological wonder, the Plain of Jars is one of the world's most tantalizing mysteries. The broad, mountain-ringed plain northeast of Vientiane is littered with hundreds of ancient stone and clay jars, some estimated to weigh 5 or 6 tons. The jars are said to be at least 2,000 years old, but no one knows who made them or why. They survived heavy bombing during the Vietnam War, and their sheer size has kept them out of the hands of antiquities hunters.

The jars are scattered over three main areas, but only the Ban Ang site is accessible and worth visiting. Here you can find some 300 jars dotting a windswept plateau about 12 km (7½ miles) from Phonsavan, the capital of Xieng Khuang Province. This is true Hmong territory: you pass Hmong villages on the way from Phonsavan to Ban Ang and on Highway 7, which leads east to the Vietnamese border at Nong Het. There's much of interest in this remote area along Highway 7, including hot mineral springs at Muang Kham. From Muang Kham, a road leads to Vieng Xay, which has more than 100 limestone caves, some of them used as hideouts by the revolutionary Pathet Lao during the war years.

Royal Palace

In a walled compound at the foot of Phou Si Hill stands this palace, the former home of the royal family. Built by the French at the beginning of the 20th century, the palace served as the royal residence until the Pathet Lao took over Laos in 1975 and exiled King Savang Vatthana, Queen Khamphoui, and Crown Prince Vong Savang to a remote region of the country (their fate has never been fully confirmed). It still has the feel of a large family home—a maze of teak-floor rooms surprisingly modest in scale. The largest of them is the Throne Room, with its gilded furniture, colorful mosaic-covered walls, and display cases filled with rare Buddha images, royal regalia, and other priceless artifacts.

The walls of the King's Reception Room are decorated with scenes of traditional Lao life painted in 1930 by the French artist Alix de Fautereau. The Queen's Reception Room contains a collection of royal portraits by the Russian artist Ilya Glazunov. The room also has cabinets full of presents given to the royal couple by visiting heads of state; a model moon lander and a piece of moon rock from U.S. president Richard Nixon share shelf space with an exquisite Sèvres tea set presented by French president Charles de Gaulle and fine porcelain teacups from Chinese leader Mao Tse-tung. Other exhibits in this eclectic collection include friezes removed from local temples, Khmer drums, and elephant tusks with carved images of the Buddha.

The museum's most prized exhibit is the Prabang, a gold image of the Buddha slightly less than 3 feet tall and weighing more than 100 pounds. Its history goes back to the 1st century when it was cast in Sri Lanka; it was brought to Luang Prabang from Cambodia in 1359 as a gift to King Fa Ngum. This event is celebrated as the introduction of Buddhism as an official religion to Laos, and the Prabang is venerated as the protector of the faith and the most important Buddha image in the country. An ornate temple called Haw Prabang, near the entrance to the palace compound, has been constructed to house the image.

Tucked away behind the palace is a crumbling wooden garage that houses the aging royal fleet of automobiles, including an Edsel. You'll need about two hours to work through the Royal Palace's maze of rooms.

Sisavangvong Rd., Luang Prabang, Louangphabang, Laos
071-212470
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Rate Includes: 30,000 kip

Tad Fane Waterfall

The waterfall is set on the border of the Dong Houa Sao National Park and up in the cool air of the Bolaven Plateau, Laos's premier coffee-growing region. There's good hiking here, and the cool temperatures are a relief from the heat and humidity down on the Mekong. The area is accessible as a day trip from Pakse, though there is a somewhat run-down and overpriced resort at the base of the falls should you care to stay. Aside from the easy stroll out to the viewing platform above the main falls, those who don't suffer vertigo can try the 400-meter-high zipline that soars over the falls, giving a bird's-eye view of the area ($40 per person). You can also take a guided walk down to the base of the falls, or venture onto one of the roundabout trails going up above the falls. These trails take in some minor falls and some fun swimming holes. Farther afield, the beautiful Tat Yeuang falls can be reached in about an hour via a trail from Tad Fane or from a turnout at Km 40 on the main road. Inquire at the resort about guides and trail information.

Talat Sao

To immerse yourself in Vientiane, visit this indoor bazaar, named for the local morning market that once stood here. Shops within the bright and orderly space sell everything from handwoven fabrics and wooden Buddha figures to electric rice cookers and sneakers. Most vendors cater to locals, but there is plenty to interest travelers: fabric, handicrafts, intricate gold-and-silver work, jewelry, T-shirts, and bags and suitcases, though many products are imported from abroad. Local restaurants and noodle soups are upstairs. It's also worth crossing Nong Bone Road to the Khoua Din market for a look at Vientiane's largest wet market.

Ave. Lane Xang and Khou Vieng St., Vientiane, Vientiane, Laos

Talat Yen Plaza

Savannakhet's center develops around this old square, at whose upper end stands the iconic Catholic church Eglise Sainte Therese. One of the few churches in Laos, it is surrounded by peaceful gardens and can be visited throughout the day. All around Talat Yen Plaza, a grid of historical lanes boast several interesting yet crumbling art deco French buildings, perfect to explore on foot. From 5 pm Talat Yen Plaza fills up with a popular night market: you'll find souvenirs and stalls selling the usual Lao and Thai stir-fries and noodle-based dishes. The series of little bars and cafés that dot the square's perimeter are great spots to have a coffee or a drink in town.

Tha Kaek

Parts of the ancient city wall in this port in Khammuan Province are still intact. Stunning countryside and karst (limestone caverns and sinkholes) surround Tha Kaek, and the area contains dramatic limestone caves, most notably Tham Khong Lor. More than 6½ km (4 miles) long, this cave is so large that the Nam Hin Bun River runs through it. Thailand's provincial capital of Nakhon Phanom sits across the Mekong River from Tha Kaek. Ferries connect the two cities.

The Gibbon Experience

Popular and unique, this experience combines a visit to the Bokeo Nature Reserve with jungle trekking, sleeping in canopy-level tree houses, traveling among the trees by ziplines, and watching gibbons and other wildlife. Profits benefit gibbon rehabilitation and sustainable conservation projects. Be prepared to rough it a bit. Groups are small, so book the experience well ahead.