Cambodia Angkor Wat

10 Days in Cambodia: Phnom Penh, Kampot & the Temples of Angkor

From the Mekong riverfront of Phnom Penh to the pepper farms of Kampot and Angkor Wat at sunrise — a 10-day Cambodia itinerary that balances history, food, and one of the world's most significant archaeological sites.

Cambodia holds profound grief and extraordinary beauty with equal dignity. Angkor Wat rises from the jungle at dawn as it has for nine centuries; the Mekong and Tonlé Sap rivers converge at Phnom Penh in a confluence of colour and noise; and Khmer cooking — lemongrass, turmeric, kroeung spice paste, fresh herbs — fills every market with warmth. Ten days is enough to understand that this is one of the world’s essential journeys. It is not always easy. That is also part of its value.


Day 1:
Arrive Phnom Penh
Day 1: Arrive Phnom Penh
Photo by Channabo Yos on Pexels

Morning

Arrive Phnom Penh. Check in and walk the riverfront — the confluence of the Tonlé Sap and Mekong rivers below the Royal Palace creates one of Southeast Asia’s great urban waterway views. The riverside promenade is the city’s living room.

Afternoon

The Royal Palace and Silver Pagoda — still the working residence of King Sihamoni. The Silver Pagoda floor is lined with 5,329 silver tiles; the Emerald Buddha dates to the 17th century. Photography rules are strict but the access is remarkable.

Evening

Dinner at the Foreign Correspondents’ Club (FCC) on the riverside — a colonial-era institution with a wrap-around terrace overlooking the Tonlé Sap. Order fish amok and a Angkor beer. The history in the walls is worth the evening alone.

Day 2:
Phnom Penh Markets & Museums
Day 2: Phnom Penh Markets & Museums
Photo by Channabo Yos on Pexels

Morning

The National Museum of Cambodia — the finest collection of Khmer art in the world, displayed in a beautiful terracotta pavilion behind the Royal Palace. The Jayavarman VII sandstone heads and the Vishnu on Garuda are extraordinary.

Afternoon

Psar Thmei (Central Market) — the Art Deco dome is as much the attraction as the contents: gold jewellery, silk scarves, street food, and Khmer pop cassettes. Then the Russian Market (Psar Tuol Tom Poung) for silk, pepper, and local goods.

Evening

Khmer cooking class with a local chef — learn to make kroeung paste from scratch, fish amok steamed in banana leaf, and lok lak (stir-fried beef with lime-pepper dipping sauce). Eat what you cook.

Day 3:
Tuol Sleng & Choeung Ek
Day 3: Tuol Sleng & Choeung Ek
Photo by Viriya Lim on Pexels

Morning

Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum (S-21) — the Khmer Rouge prison built in a former high school where an estimated 17,000 people were tortured and killed between 1975 and 1979. This is difficult. It is essential. Allow three hours and take the audio guide.

Afternoon

Tuk-tuk to Choeung Ek Killing Fields Memorial, 15km south of the city — the extermination site associated with S-21, where mass graves were exhumed in the 1980s. The memorial stupa and the bone fragments visible in the pathways make this one of the most sobering sites in the world.

Evening

Allow yourself quiet time. A slow dinner along the riverside — good food, unhurried company, the river going by. Cambodia asks you to sit with what you’ve seen. That is the appropriate response.

Day 4:
Phnom Penh → Kampot
Day 4: Phnom Penh → Kampot
Photo by Channabo Yos on Pexels

Morning

Morning bus to Kampot (3 hours south). A French colonial riverside town in the shadow of the Cardamom Mountains, famous for growing the world’s finest black pepper — used in Michelin-starred kitchens across Europe and Asia.

Afternoon

Arrive and walk Kampot’s old colonial quarter — faded painted facades, tall shuttered windows, and the Preaek Tuek Chhu river running alongside. The pace here is immediately different from Phnom Penh.

Evening

Sunset from a riverside bar — Epic Arts Café or The Rusty Keyhole. Dinner at a backstreet Khmer restaurant: order anything with fresh Kampot pepper. The difference from shop-bought is significant and immediate.

Day 5:
Kep & Rabbit Island
Day 5: Kep & Rabbit Island
Photo by Blackcurrant Great on Pexels

Morning

Day trip to Kep — a former French colonial resort 25km from Kampot, now a quiet town known for one thing: blue swimming crabs with Kampot pepper sauce. The Kep Crab Market at the waterfront has been selling them since morning for decades.

Afternoon

Boat to Rabbit Island (Koh Tonsay) — 15 minutes offshore. No roads, no motorbikes, no development beyond a handful of thatched beach restaurants and guesthouses. Excellent snorkelling on the reef to the left of the main beach.

Evening

Return to Kampot for dinner. By now, pepper appears on everything and you understand why.

Day 6:
Bokor Hill Station
Day 6: Bokor Hill Station
Photo by Duy Nguyen on Pexels

Morning

Bokor National Park and the abandoned French hill station at 1,075m altitude — a 1920s casino and resort complex now slowly being consumed by forest and cloud. The ruins are eerie, spectacular, and genuinely unlike any other colonial relic in Cambodia.

Afternoon

Return to Kampot. Afternoon swim in the river or coffee at a wooden café on the waterfront. Kampot rewards doing very little very well.

Evening

Final Kampot evening — dinner at Rikitikitavi or Baraka. The town has a serious restaurant scene that punches far above its size.

Day 7:
Kampot → Phnom Penh → Siem Reap
Day 7: Kampot → Phnom Penh → Siem Reap
Photo by Channabo Yos on Pexels

Morning

Morning bus back to Phnom Penh (3 hours). Transfer to Phnom Penh domestic airport for the 45-minute flight to Siem Reap — the gateway to Angkor. (The overland bus is 5-6 hours; the flight is worth it.)

Afternoon

Arrive Siem Reap, check in, and ease into the city. Walk the Old Market (Psar Chas) area and Pub Street. Siem Reap is more polished than Phnom Penh but still genuinely charming away from the tourist main drag.

Evening

Early dinner and early bed — tomorrow requires a 4:30am alarm. Pre-purchase a 3-day Angkor Pass (USD $62) from the pass office, open until 5:30pm.

Day 8:
Angkor — The Main Complex
Day 8: Angkor — The Main Complex
Photo by Alexa V. Mato on Pexels

Morning

Pre-dawn tuk-tuk to Angkor Wat (5am) for sunrise from the main reflecting pool. The temples turn orange then gold as the light grows. Stay for the full morning: five towers, three gallery levels, 800 metres of bas-relief carvings detailing the entire Hindu cosmos.

Afternoon

Angkor Thom — the walled royal city, entered through the South Gate lined with 108 stone devas and asuras. Bayon Temple at the city’s centre: 216 stone faces staring serenely in all four directions from 54 towers. Possibly the strangest and most beautiful thing in Southeast Asia.

Evening

Phare Ponleu Selpak Cambodian Circus — performers trained at an arts school founded by survivors of the Khmer Rouge era. The shows are extraordinary: acrobatics, storytelling, live music. Book in advance; it sells out.

Day 9:
Jungle Temples & Tonlé Sap
Day 9: Jungle Temples & Tonlé Sap
Photo by DUYTRG TRUONG on Pexels

Morning

Ta Prohm — the temple where giant silk-cotton trees have grown through the walls and gallery roofs over centuries, their roots flowing like liquid stone over carved doorways. Then Banteay Kdei and Sra Srang reservoir — quieter and less photographed but equally fine.

Afternoon

Boat trip on the Tonlé Sap — the largest freshwater lake in Southeast Asia, which quadruples in size during the monsoon. Visit a floating village where entire communities live, work, and go to school on the water year-round.

Evening

Khmer cooking class in Siem Reap: papaya salad, amok, mango dessert. The town’s restaurant scene is excellent in its own right — Cuisine Wat Damnak is the benchmark if budget allows.

Day 10:
Final Morning at Angkor & Departure
Day 10: Final Morning at Angkor & Departure
Photo by Channabo Yos on Pexels

Morning

Pre-dawn return to Angkor Wat — or Preah Khan, the 12th-century temple-city of 100,000 residents, less crowded and equally atmospheric. The temple complex gives something different on every visit.

Afternoon

Siem Reap’s Old Market for final shopping: silk scarves, kampot pepper, Cambodian coffee, and handmade crafts. Departure from Siem Reap International Airport (REP) — direct connections to Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur, Singapore, and onward.


Travel Tips

  • Best Time to Visit: November to March — dry season, clear skies, 25-32°C. December and January are peak months. April–May is brutally hot (38°C+). The wet season (June–October) brings lush greenery and fewer tourists, but some rural roads flood and afternoon rain is daily.
  • Currency & Payments: US Dollars are the de facto currency alongside the Cambodian Riel (KHR). USD is accepted and preferred almost everywhere; Riel is given as change for amounts under $1. Keep small USD bills ($1, $5) for tuk-tuks, temples, and markets. ATMs dispense USD.
  • Getting Around: Tuk-tuks for city travel and temple circuits — negotiate a half-day or full-day rate with your driver rather than per trip. Giant Ibis is the best bus operator between cities. Domestic flights between Phnom Penh and Siem Reap (45 min) are strongly recommended over the 6-hour bus.
  • Must-Try Food: Fish amok (Khmer curry steamed in banana leaf — the national dish), lok lak (stir-fried beef with lime-pepper sauce), bai sach chrouk (grilled pork on rice, the Phnom Penh breakfast), fresh Kampot pepper crab in Kep, and nom banh chok (rice noodles with green curry, eaten for breakfast).
  • Good to Know: The Angkor Wat temple complex requires covered shoulders and knees at the main sanctuary. Tuol Sleng and Choeung Ek are genuinely emotionally difficult — visit early in your trip so you have time to process, not on the day before departure. Negotiate tuk-tuk prices before getting in; agree the full day rate upfront.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many days should I spend in Cambodia?
This itinerary covers 10 days in Cambodia, which is enough time to experience the highlights without feeling rushed. You can extend or trim based on your pace.
When is the best time to visit Cambodia?
November to March — dry season, clear skies, 25-32°C. December and January are peak months. April–May is brutally hot (38°C+). The wet season (June–October) brings lush greenery and fewer tourists, but some rural roads flood and afternoon rain is daily.
What currency is used in Cambodia and how should I handle payments?
US Dollars are the de facto currency alongside the Cambodian Riel (KHR). USD is accepted and preferred almost everywhere; Riel is given as change for amounts under $1. Keep small USD bills ($1, $5) for tuk-tuks, temples, and markets. ATMs dispense USD.
How do I get around Cambodia?
Tuk-tuks for city travel and temple circuits — negotiate a half-day or full-day rate with your driver rather than per trip. Giant Ibis is the best bus operator between cities. Domestic flights between Phnom Penh and Siem Reap (45 min) are strongly recommended over the 6-hour bus.
What should I know before visiting Cambodia?
The Angkor Wat temple complex requires covered shoulders and knees at the main sanctuary. Tuol Sleng and Choeung Ek are genuinely emotionally difficult — visit early in your trip so you have time to process, not on the day before departure. Negotiate tuk-tuk prices before getting in; agree the full day rate upfront.