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Mandalay in 3 Days — City + Ancient Capitals

Mandalay Hill, Mahamuni, U Bein Bridge sunset, and the old capitals (advisory-permitting)

Mandalay 3-Day Itinerary — Quick Answer

As of 2026
Trip length
3 days
Est. cost / person (mid, ex-flights)
$205
Budget–luxury
$95–$410

As of 2026, the recommended Mandalay 3-day route runs Day1 Central Mandalay — hill, pagodas, and palace · Day2 Ancient capitals — Amarapura, Inwa, Sagaing · Day3 Mingun by boat + markets and crafts, grouping the must-see sights with minimal backtracking. Estimated cost per person (excluding flights) is around $205 on a mid-range budget. Three days covers central Mandalay — Mandalay Hill, the Mahamuni Pagoda, the Kuthodaw Pagoda, and the royal palace area — plus a day among the ancient capitals (Amarapura's U Bein Bridge, Inwa, Sagaing) and a boat trip to Mingun. Read this with full caution: Myanmar is under military rule, the March 2025 earthquake damaged or destroyed several of these sites, and travel advisories warn against visiting. Hire a trusted local driver who knows current conditions, confirm each site is open and safe before going, carry US-dollar cash (cards and ATMs are unreliable), and check your government's advisory first.

3-Day Total Budget at a Glance

Budget

$95

Per person, flights excl.

Recommended

Mid-Range

$205

Per person, flights excl.

Luxury

$410

Per person, flights excl.

Book Hotels & Flights for This Itinerary

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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule

DAY 1

Central Mandalay — hill, pagodas, and palace

Mandalay Hill - Kuthodaw Pagoda - royal palace area - Mahamuni at dusk

Activities

  1. 07:00 Climb (or drive) Mandalay Hill early 2h

    Mandalay Hill rises about 240 m over the city and is dotted with temples and shrines; the summit gives a sweeping view of the grid, the palace moat, and the river. Go at dawn to beat the heat, since central Myanmar gets brutally hot by late morning. You can climb the covered stairways barefoot (shoes off on temple ground) or take a vehicle most of the way up.

    Cost: Small entry/camera fee historically; verify (zone ticket may apply) TIP: Start at dawn — by 10:00 it's punishing in the hot season. Wear easy-off shoes (you'll be barefoot on temple ground) and bring water. Confirm the stairways and shrines are open and undamaged after the 2025 quake before climbing.
  2. 10:00 Kuthodaw Pagoda — 'the world's largest book' 1.5h

    The Kuthodaw Pagoda complex holds 729 marble slabs inscribed with the Buddhist canon, each in its own small white shrine — hence the nickname 'the world's largest book.' The rows of white stupas under shade trees are striking and relatively cool to wander. Nearby is the Sandamuni Pagoda.

    Cost: Small fee or zone ticket historically; verify TIP: Dress modestly (shoulders and knees covered) and remove shoes on the platform. Visit before midday heat. Check current condition — some pagodas in the region were damaged in 2025.
  3. 12:30 Lunch + midday heat break 2h

    Retreat indoors for the hottest part of the day with a Burmese curry set or a bowl of Shan noodles, then rest. Sightseeing through the midday heat in Mandalay is genuinely draining, so build in a break.

    Cost: $2-8 per person (rough; kyat volatile) TIP: Cash in kyat for local eateries; pristine US dollars as backup. Hydrate heavily and pace yourself.
  4. 15:30 Royal palace area + Shwenandaw Monastery 1.5h

    The royal palace — a 20th-century reconstruction of King Mindon's 1857 capital — sits inside a huge moated square. The nearby Shwenandaw Monastery is a rare surviving teak building with intricate carving. IMPORTANT: the reconstructed palace was reported destroyed and monasteries damaged in the March 2025 earthquake, so confirm what is actually standing and open before planning this stop; you may only be able to view the moat and walls.

    Cost: Zone ticket historically; verify TIP: Foreigners have historically been restricted to part of the palace grounds. Given 2025 damage, treat access as uncertain. Carry water and sun protection.
  5. 17:30 Mahamuni Pagoda toward dusk 1.5h

    The Mahamuni Pagoda houses one of Myanmar's most revered Buddha images, so thickly covered in gold leaf applied by devotees over generations that its surface is lumpy with gold. The atmosphere of devotion is the draw. By custom, only men may approach to apply gold leaf; everyone can observe respectfully.

    Cost: Small fee historically; verify TIP: Dress conservatively and go barefoot on the grounds. Evening brings cooler air and active worship. Confirm the pagoda is open and undamaged before visiting.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel or local tea shop (mohinga)

Downtown · $1-5

Mohinga (fish-noodle soup) and sweet tea are the classic Burmese breakfast — at a busy, fresh tea shop.

Lunch

Burmese curry house

Downtown · $2-8

A curry set with free side dishes; eat indoors during the midday heat.

Dinner

Shan noodles or Chinese-Burmese restaurant

Downtown · $3-12

Shan noodles for something light, or a sit-down Chinese-Burmese place for a fuller meal. Cash in kyat.

Transit:

Hire a trusted car and driver for the day — sights are spread out and a driver who knows current road and checkpoint conditions is the safest option. Confirm prices in advance and carry small kyat notes.

DAY 1 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $30 Mid $65 Luxury $130
DAY 2

Ancient capitals — Amarapura, Inwa, Sagaing

U Bein Bridge - Inwa ruins - Sagaing Hill monasteries - U Bein sunset

Activities

  1. 08:00 U Bein Bridge at Amarapura (morning) 1.5h

    About 11 km south of the city, the U Bein Bridge is a roughly 1.2 km teak footbridge — often called the longest of its kind — crossing shallow Taungthaman Lake, built in the 1850s from timbers salvaged from the old Inwa palace. Monks, fishermen, and locals cross it all day. Mornings are quieter and cooler than the famous sunset.

    Cost: Free to walk (historically) TIP: Watch your footing — the teak planks are uneven and there are gaps. Go early to avoid both heat and crowds. Confirm the bridge is intact and open after 2025 damage in the wider area.
  2. 10:30 Inwa (Ava) — ruins by horse-cart 2.5h

    Inwa, a former royal capital reached by a short ferry across a river channel, is a quiet landscape of monastery ruins, a leaning watchtower, and the teak Bagaya Monastery, traditionally toured by horse-cart on dirt tracks. NOTE: the Inwa/Ava bridge and historic structures in Inwa were reported damaged in the March 2025 earthquake — confirm the ferry, cart tours, and specific monuments are operating before going.

    Cost: Ferry + horse-cart fees historically; verify TIP: The horse-cart loop is the classic way around. Bring sun protection and water. Given earthquake damage, treat the ruins' condition and access as uncertain.
  3. 14:00 Sagaing Hill — monasteries and river views 2h

    Across the Ayeyarwady, Sagaing Hill is a major monastic center, its slopes crowded with hundreds of pagodas and meditation monasteries and topped by viewpoints over the river. It's the spiritual counterpoint to Mandalay's bustle. Sagaing was near the 2025 earthquake epicenter and sustained heavy damage, so verify carefully which sites are accessible.

    Cost: Small fees historically; verify TIP: Modest dress, shoes off on temple ground. The river views are best in clear afternoon light. Confirm road access and site safety after 2025.
  4. 17:00 U Bein Bridge sunset 1.5h

    Return to Amarapura for the iconic image: the teak bridge silhouetted against the sunset over the lake, with fishing boats below. You can watch from the bank or hire a small rowboat to drift out for the classic photo. It's Mandalay's signature scene — crowds gather, so arrive early for a spot.

    Cost: Optional boat hire (rough $5-15; verify) TIP: A boat gets you the postcard silhouette but negotiate the price first. Even at sunset it's warm — bring water. Confirm the bridge remains open and safe.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Early hotel breakfast

Downtown · $3-10

Eat before the ancient-capitals loop; it's a long day in the heat.

Lunch

Local restaurant near Inwa/Sagaing

Amarapura / Sagaing · $3-10

Simple Burmese fare near the sites; ask your driver for a currently-open spot. Cash in kyat.

Dinner

Downtown restaurant after sunset

Downtown · $3-15

A relaxed Burmese or Chinese-Burmese dinner back in the city after the U Bein sunset.

Transit:

A full-day hired car covers Amarapura, Inwa, and Sagaing with the river crossings; a driver/guide who knows which bridges and ferries are working is essential after 2025 damage. Confirm the route and price in advance.

DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $35 Mid $75 Luxury $150
DAY 3

Mingun by boat + markets and crafts

Mingun river trip - giant unfinished pagoda - markets - workshops

Activities

  1. 08:30 Boat upriver to Mingun 1h boat each way

    Mingun is about an hour upriver by boat. Its centerpiece is the Mingun Pahtodawgyi — a massive, deliberately unfinished pagoda begun in the 1790s, already cracked by an earlier 1839 quake, intended to be the world's largest. Nearby stand the huge Mingun Bell and the white, wave-tiered Hsinbyume Pagoda. IMPORTANT: Mingun's monuments are old and were already earthquake-cracked; confirm the boat runs and the structures are safe to approach after the 2025 quake.

    Cost: Boat fare + Mingun zone fee historically; verify TIP: The slow river boat is part of the experience. Bring sun cover — there's little shade. Treat climbing the cracked pagoda as off-limits unless local authorities confirm it's safe.
  2. 10:00 Explore Mingun's monuments 2h

    Wander the giant unfinished pagoda's base, see the Mingun Bell (one of the largest ringing bells in the world), and visit the photogenic Hsinbyume Pagoda with its white concentric terraces. The riverside setting is peaceful compared with the city.

    Cost: Included in zone fee historically; verify TIP: Shoes off on temple ground. Go early before midday heat. Verify which structures are open and safe post-earthquake.
  3. 13:30 Lunch back in the city 2h

    Return downriver and refuel with a Burmese or Shan lunch, then rest through the worst of the afternoon heat before the final outing.

    Cost: $2-10 per person (rough; kyat volatile) TIP: Hydrate and slow down — three days of heat add up. Cash in kyat.
  4. 16:00 Markets, gold-leaf workshops, and crafts 2h

    Mandalay is Myanmar's craft hub — gold-leaf beating (the leaf used at Mahamuni), stone carving, tapestry, and bronze. Historically you could watch artisans at workshops, and the Zegyo and other markets offer everyday Mandalay life and souvenirs. This is a flexible afternoon; ask your driver which workshops and markets are open now.

    Cost: Free to browse; purchases vary TIP: Bargaining is normal in markets; cash in kyat. Workshop visits are low-pressure and educational. Confirm what's operating after the 2025 disruptions.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Tea shop or hotel

Downtown · $1-5

Tea-leaf salad or mohinga before the river trip.

Lunch

Burmese curry or Shan noodles

Downtown · $2-10

A relaxed local lunch after returning from Mingun.

Dinner

Farewell dinner downtown

Downtown · $3-15

A Chinese-Burmese fish dinner or a curry feast, finished with falooda or ice cream.

Transit:

Morning boat to Mingun (arranged at the jetty or via your hotel/driver), then a car for markets and workshops. Confirm the boat is running and carry small kyat notes.

DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $30 Mid $65 Luxury $130

Book Mandalay Tours & Tickets

Packing Checklist

Mandalay 3-Day Itinerary FAQ

Is 3 days enough for Mandalay?
For central Mandalay plus the ancient capitals and a Mingun boat trip, 3 days is a solid core in normal times. But 'enough' is the wrong question right now — the real questions are whether travel is advisable (many governments say no), whether you can get a visa, and which sites survived the March 2025 earthquake. Confirm all of that before counting days.
Can I see everything without a guide or driver?
Not comfortably — the sights are spread across the city and the river, and the ancient capitals need transport with river crossings. A hired car and driver is the practical choice and, given the current security and post-earthquake situation, also the safest, because a good local driver knows which roads, bridges, and sites are actually open and safe.
What if a site I planned to see is damaged or closed?
Assume some will be. The 2025 earthquake damaged or destroyed many monuments here, including the reconstructed palace, monasteries, pagodas, and the Inwa/Ava bridge. Build flexibility into your plan, confirm each site close to your dates, and lean on your driver or a local operator for an up-to-date picture rather than older guidebooks.

Looking for Different Trip Lengths?

Why you can trust 3-day itinerary

Jimmy Kong TripPick founder · Travel content creator

Based in Chiang Mai for 8+ years, with 30+ countries visited across Southeast Asia, Japan, and Europe. Every detail in this guide is primary-source verified as of April 2026, with prices auto-refreshed via live exchange rate APIs. This isn't AI-generated boilerplate — it's written from the perspective of someone who has actually been there.

8+ years analyzing travel data 30+ countries visited Live exchange rate verified
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