TripPick Cambodia Cambodia

Phnom Penh 5-Day + Siem Reap (Angkor)

3-day Phnom Penh core + 2 nights Siem Reap Angkor temples

Five days adds Siem Reap (Angkor Wat + Angkor Thom + Ta Prohm + Bayon + Tonlé Sap floating villages, the canonical Cambodian heritage experience). Days 1-3 follow the Phnom Penh 3-day plan. Day 4: morning domestic flight Phnom Penh → Siem Reap (1h, $80-200) + Angkor Wat sunset + traditional Khmer dinner. Day 5: Angkor sunrise + Angkor Thom + Bayon + Ta Prohm + Pub Street dinner + Tonlé Sap floating village (optional) + return flight to Phnom Penh or fly direct from Siem Reap. Siem Reap is the photographic and cultural deepening of any Cambodia trip — pairing it with Phnom Penh is the canonical 5-7 night Cambodia combination.

Five days hits the sweet spot for Phnom Penh — three days for the major districts, plus two days for nearby destinations that show a different side of the country. The pace stays relaxed, you get more variety in your photo album, and the day trips break up the urban intensity nicely.

5-Day Total Budget at a Glance

Budget

$360

Per person, flights excl.

Recommended

Mid-Range

$800

Per person, flights excl.

Luxury

$1,790

Per person, flights excl.

Book Hotels & Flights for This Itinerary

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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule

DAY 1

Arrival + Royal Palace + National Museum + Mekong sunset + colonial dinner

Airport pickup + Royal Palace + Silver Pagoda + National Museum + Mekong sunset cruise + Raffles or FCC dinner

Activities

  1. 13:00 PNH Phnom Penh Airport arrival + BKK1 hotel check-in 1.5 hours

    Phnom Penh International (PNH) is 10 km west of downtown, 20-30 min by taxi. Official airport taxi counter (fixed price) $15-20 to BKK1; PassApp car $10-15; tuk-tuk $7-10; 4-5 star hotel pickup $25-40. e-Visa (30-day single-entry, $36, pre-applied online at evisa.gov.kh, 3-5 day processing) is the recommended option; visa-on-arrival $30 + 1 passport photo also works but the line runs 30-60 min.

    Cost: Taxi $15-20 / PassApp $10-15 / hotel pickup $25-40; e-Visa $36 pre-paid TIP: Use the official airport taxi counter or pre-arranged PassApp — informal taxis outside arrivals are harder to verify. ATM at the airport for an initial $200-300 USD (ABA Bank ATM is the safest brand). KHR change happens automatically through transactions — you don't need to exchange USD to KHR upfront. PassApp app installed + registered before arrival saves friction. Cards work at BKK1 hotels + restaurants + 5-star hotels + Aeon Mall; USD cash for tuk-tuks + street food + markets.
  2. 15:00 Royal Palace + Silver Pagoda 1.5-2 hours

    The Royal Palace (built 1866 by King Norodom when the capital moved from Oudong) is the current residence of Cambodia's royal family. Inside the complex, the Silver Pagoda (Wat Preah Keo Morakot) has a floor inlaid with 5,329 solid silver tiles (1.125 kg each), a 17th-century Baccarat crystal Emerald Buddha, and a 90 kg solid gold Buddha decorated with 9,584 diamonds (the largest is 25 carats). King Norodom Sihanouk's cremation site is also inside the grounds. Foreigner entry $10 + audio guide $5.

    Cost: $10 (KHR 41,000) + audio guide $5 TIP: Shoulders and knees must be covered (no rentals on site — bring or buy a krama scarf $3-8 at Russian Market). Shoes and hats off inside Silver Pagoda. Photography exterior + gardens only; no photos in throne hall or pagoda interior. 8-9 AM has the fewest crowds; 12-14 closed for lunch. Royal ceremonies may close the palace — check with hotel concierge same morning.
  3. 17:00 National Museum of Cambodia 1-1.5 hours

    The 1920 red-sandstone colonial building designed by French architect George Groslier houses 1,800 Khmer dynasty artifacts (statues, ceramics, bronzes from the 4th-14th centuries) — a critical pre-visit for travelers heading to the Angkor temples in Siem Reap. The central courtyard has massive Vishnu and Shiva sculptures + apsara (celestial dancer) reliefs lining the corridors. 5-min walk from Royal Palace.

    Cost: $10 (KHR 41,000) + audio guide $5 TIP: Pair Royal Palace + National Museum as one half-day (both $10 foreigner). No interior photography (gardens fine). English labels are solid; audio guide adds context. Last entry 17:00.
  4. 17:30 Mekong Sunset Cruise (Sisowath Quay) 1.5-2 hours

    1.5-hour Mekong River sunset cruise departing Sisowath Quay docks 17:00-17:30, looping the confluence of the Mekong + Tonlé Sap + Bassac (the only river in the world that reverses direction seasonally — the Tonlé Sap flows backward into the Mekong June-October and the reverse the rest of the year). Some boats include food + drinks + live music ($15-25). The canonical Phnom Penh honeymoon and anniversary moment.

    Cost: $10-25 (KHR 41,000-105,000) — varies by boat + food inclusion TIP: November-February dry season has calm water + best visibility. June-October monsoon has muddy water + some cancellations. Klook or GetYourGuide pre-booking saves 20-30% vs walk-up. Walk-up at the dock $5-10 for basic boats without dinner.
  5. 20:00 Raffles Le Royal Restaurant Le Royal or FCC dinner 1.5-2 hours

    For honeymoon + anniversary + heritage: Raffles Hotel Le Royal (1929) Restaurant Le Royal colonial dinner + Elephant Bar Femme Fatale cocktail (created in 1967 for Jackie Kennedy's visit). For accessible-luxury + Mekong view: FCC (1900 colonial villa, Mekong balcony, Cambodian-Western fusion, $10-25). Both featured in the 1984 film 'The Killing Fields' depicting the foreign press corps era.

    Cost: Restaurant Le Royal $25-60 / FCC $10-25 per person TIP: Raffles requires reservations + smart casual dress (no shorts or sandals after 18:00). FCC balcony seating books ahead (+855-23-724-014). Sunset 17:30-18:30 (pair with Mekong cruise). Cards accepted at both.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

In-flight breakfast (connecting flight)

transit · $5-15

Most international travelers connect through Bangkok, Singapore, Seoul, or Hong Kong. Eat at the connecting airport or in-flight.

Lunch

BKK1 The Common Tiger or Brown Coffee

BKK1 · $5-12

Post-arrival light brunch at The Common Tiger (Australian-style brunch, smashed avocado + flat white) or Brown Coffee (Cambodian specialty coffee chain). English menus, reliable Wi-Fi, recovery-from-transit pick.

Dinner

Raffles Le Royal or FCC

Daun Penh / Sisowath Quay · $10-60

Honeymoon + anniversary = Raffles Restaurant Le Royal colonial dinner $25-60 + Elephant Bar Femme Fatale cocktail $12-18. Value = FCC Mekong-balcony dinner $10-25. Both colonial-heritage canon.

Transit:

Airport-to-town: 10km, $15-20 official taxi or $10-15 PassApp or $25-40 hotel pickup. In-town: walking + PassApp. BKK1 is walkable internally; PassApp for trips over 1 km. Royal Palace + National Museum from BKK1: PassApp $2-5. Sisowath Quay from Royal Palace: walking 5 min.

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

Budget $40 Mid $100 Luxury $240
DAY 2

Killing Fields + S-21 + Russian Market + Top Banana Sky Bar

Cambodia modern history educational morning + Russian Market vintage afternoon + BKK1 sunset cocktail evening

Activities

  1. 08:00 Hotel breakfast + depart for Choeung Ek Killing Fields 30-min ride + 1.5-2 hours on site

    Hotel breakfast + departure for Choeung Ek Killing Fields (17 km south of downtown). The actual execution site where approximately 17,000 people were killed by the Khmer Rouge regime 1975-1979, with 129 mass graves identified (about 9,000 bodies exhumed) and a central memorial stupa holding 8,000 skulls in a glass case. The multilingual audio guide (including interviews with survivors and international journalists) is essential — without it, the visit is just walking past memorial markers; with it, you get 1.5-2 hours of contextual learning across 17 numbered stops.

    Cost: $6 + audio guide $3 + PassApp round trip $10-15 TIP: Tuk-tuk round trip + 2h wait $15-25 or PassApp $10. Sun hat + sunglasses + water (1+ hour outdoors). Arrive 8-9 AM for the fewest visitors. Be respectful — no selfies, no smiles, no posed shots, keep voice down. Skip if traveling with young children or if you have PTSD/depression triggers. The killing tree, the mass-grave markers, and the central skull stupa are emotionally heavy.
  2. 11:30 Khmer Surin or Romdeng lunch (back in BKK1) 1.5 hours

    Return to BKK1 for lunch — Khmer Surin (Cambodian home cooking, $8-15 per person, casual semi-outdoor patio) or Romdeng (Friends International NGO social enterprise, Cambodian classics + edible-insect tasting, $15-25). Fish Amok + Lok Lak + Khmer curry + green mango salad + jasmine rice is the canonical post-Killing-Fields recovery meal. The 90-min lunch break is genuinely important between Killing Fields morning and S-21 afternoon.

    Cost: $8-25 (KHR 32,000-105,000) per person TIP: Reservations recommended for Romdeng (+855-92-219-565). English menus at both. Garden seating at Romdeng is photogenic. The edible-insect plate at Romdeng is the cultural experience option — mild flavor, crunchy texture. 'No spicy' = 'Ot tek krouy' for kid-friendly ordering.
  3. 14:00 Tuol Sleng (S-21) Genocide Museum 1.5-2 hours

    A former high school (Tuol Svay Prey) converted by the Khmer Rouge regime in 1975 into Security Prison 21 — the secret prison where ~17,000 people were detained, tortured, and forced to write false confessions before being sent to Choeung Ek for execution. Only 7 of the 17,000 detainees survived (as of 2026, two survivors are still alive). The four buildings (A, B, C, D) preserve the torture rooms, the forced confessions, and the prisoner photographs essentially as the Vietnamese liberators found them in January 1979. The emotional weight is significant. Background to the 1984 film 'The Killing Fields' and the 2003 documentary 'S-21: The Khmer Rouge Killing Machine.'

    Cost: $5 + audio guide $3 (KHR 20,500 + 12,500) TIP: 5-min PassApp from BKK1 lunch. The multilingual audio guide is essential — without it the visit is just walking through empty rooms. Survivors Chum Mey and Bou Meng are at the on-site bookshop on most days, signing their memoirs ($10-15). No photography in some rooms (signs marked). Don't see Killing Fields and S-21 on the same day if you can avoid it — split across two days for emotional recovery time between.
  4. 16:30 Russian Market (Phsar Toul Tum Poung) 1.5 hours

    Named in the 1980s for the Russian diplomats who frequented it, Russian Market is 15-min walk south of BKK1 — vintage clothing, copy-fashion goods, silk scarves, spices, souvenirs, and local food stalls. More relaxed and easier to bargain than Central Market (start at 50%, settle 60-70%). Foreign residents + NGO workers shop here, so English is widely spoken. Cultural recovery after the morning's heavy history.

    Cost: Souvenirs $5-30 (KHR 20,000-125,000); food stalls $2-5 TIP: Most active 9-11 AM and 16-18:00. Inside the market: Kuy Teav rice noodles $1.50, Num Pang baguette $1, rice + curry $2-3 (value food). Keep your bag in front. Souvenir picks to take home: Kampot pepper 100g ($5-10), Cambodian rum 1 bottle ($15-25), silk scarves ($10-30), Cambodian coffee beans 250g ($10-15), apsara-print T-shirts ($3-8).
  5. 18:30 Top Banana Sky Bar (BKK1 360° sunset) 1.5-2 hours

    BKK1 11th-floor rooftop bar with 360° panoramic views of Phnom Penh and the Mekong River — the canonical Phnom Penh sunset cocktail destination outside the 5-star hotel rooftops. Cocktails $4-7, Cambodian craft beer, pizza, Asian fusion small plates. Honeymoon + anniversary + Instagram-friendly pick. Sunset 18:00-18:30 is the photographic peak.

    Cost: $10-20 per person (cocktails + small plates) TIP: Arrive 17:30 for sunset. Reservations recommended weekends. Casual dress OK. Cards accepted. Honeymoon alternatives: Cloud Wine Bar (BKK1, 200+ bottle wine cellar, $15-30/glass) or Sora Sky Lounge (Rosewood 35F, $15-30, the city's highest rooftop).
  6. 20:30 Malis or Mok Mony Cambodian dinner 1.5-2 hours

    BKK1 traditional Cambodian course dinner — Malis (Chef Luu Meng, Fish Amok + Lok Lak + Beef Salad + Khmer curry full set, $15-30 per person, 5-star atmosphere + garden seating) or Mok Mony (BKK1, modern Cambodian in a colonial villa + garden dining, $15-30). The honeymoon + anniversary + canonical-Cambodian dinner pick.

    Cost: $15-30 per person (KHR 60,000-125,000) TIP: Reservations recommended (Malis +855-15-814-888). Garden seating photogenic. Chef's tasting menu $35-45 at Malis. English menus. Cards accepted. Smart casual.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel breakfast or BKK1 Bai Sach Chrouk stall

Hotel / BKK1 · $3-25

Hotel breakfast (boutique = Cambodian + international buffet, 5-star = live station) or BKK1 Street 51 Bai Sach Chrouk sidewalk stall (grilled pork over jasmine rice + iced coffee, $2-4 total). The Bai Sach Chrouk option is the canonical Cambodian morning experience.

Lunch

Khmer Surin or Romdeng (Friends International NGO)

BKK1 · $8-25

Khmer Surin = Cambodian home cooking value pick ($8-15 — Fish Amok + Lok Lak + green mango salad). Romdeng = NGO social enterprise + edible-insect tasting ($15-25). The 90-min lunch break is critical between Killing Fields morning and S-21 afternoon.

Dinner

Malis or Mok Mony

BKK1 · $15-30

Malis = canonical Cambodian fine dining (Chef Luu Meng, Asia's 50 Best nominee), Mok Mony = modern Cambodian in colonial villa. Both are the canonical BKK1 anniversary + honeymoon dinner picks.

Transit:

Day 2 covers BKK1 + Killing Fields (17 km outside city). BKK1 → Choeung Ek PassApp car $10-15 round trip with 2h wait. Choeung Ek → BKK1 → S-21 (BKK1 5-min walk or PassApp $2-3) → Russian Market (BKK1 15-min walk or PassApp $2-3) → Top Banana Sky Bar (BKK1 walking) → Malis or Mok Mony (BKK1 walking). No bicycles. PassApp + walking is the answer.

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

Budget $55 Mid $140 Luxury $340
DAY 3

Wat Phnom + Central Market + colonial walk + Aeon Mall + departure

Wat Phnom + Central Market 1937 Art Deco + colonial downtown walk + Aeon Mall souvenir + airport departure

Activities

  1. 08:30 Hotel breakfast + Wat Phnom 45-60 min

    Hotel breakfast + Wat Phnom (1372 temple on a 27 m hill that gives the city its name — 'Phnom Penh' literally means 'Penh's hill'). Legend says a woman named Penh found four Buddha statues in a tree at the riverside in 1372 and built the first stupa to house them on this hill. The current pagoda dates to 1926 reconstructions. Locals make wishes here and release small caged birds (a controversial Buddhist practice). 15-min walk or 5-min PassApp from BKK1 hotels.

    Cost: $1 (KHR 4,100) TIP: Cover shoulders + knees. Shoes off at the central shrine. Photo OK at exterior + courtyard; no flash inside. Don't buy birds to release — the trade encourages capture. Locals' fortune-tellers at the base of the hill offer readings $2-5 (English limited, more cultural than predictive). 30-min visit covers the essentials.
  2. 10:00 Central Market (Phsar Thmey, 1937 Art Deco) 1-1.5 hours

    Central Market is a 1937 Art Deco architectural landmark — a giant yellow dome with four wings spreading out in a cross pattern, designed by French architect Louis Chauchon as the largest market in Indochina at the time. Today it sells gold + silver + jewelry (the central dome), electronics + textiles + souvenirs + flowers + food + tropical fruits (the wings). The architectural setting is the photographic highlight — the food section is good for a $2-5 lunch.

    Cost: Free entry; food + souvenirs $5-20 TIP: Bargain at souvenirs (start at 50%, settle 60-70%) — gold + silver prices are essentially fixed at near-market value. Watch your bag in crowds. The Art Deco dome is best photographed from the front entrance with morning light. Pair with adjacent FCC Restaurant or a return to BKK1 for lunch.
  3. 11:30 Colonial downtown walking loop (free) 1.5-2 hours

    From Central Market, walk south to colonial-era 19 Street + 110 Street, with the restored Phnom Penh General Post Office (1890), Khema La Poste (now a restaurant), Wat Ounalom (Cambodia's Buddhist headquarters, founded 1422), and the riverside Sisowath Quay back to the Royal Palace. The 90-min self-guided colonial walk covers the architectural heritage of French Indochina (1863-1953). Most colonial buildings are restored 1990s-2010s after the Khmer Rouge era of neglect.

    Cost: Free (walking only) TIP: Comfortable shoes + hat + water. Best 9-11 AM or 16-18 (avoid midday heat). The Phnom Penh Heritage Trust offers Saturday morning colonial walking tours $15-25 — book through hotel if your visit timing matches. Wat Ounalom is free entry (modest dress code).
  4. 13:30 Light lunch + Aeon Mall souvenir shopping 2-2.5 hours

    Light lunch at BKK1 cafe (Brown Coffee, The Common Tiger, Le Boutier) or PassApp ride to Aeon Mall 1 or 2 — Phnom Penh's main Western-style mall with H&M, Watsons, Daiso, Aeon Wellness, supermarket grocery (Khmer + Asian + Western imports), Korean-Japanese-Cambodian food courts, and souvenir consolidation. Aeon Mall is the easy one-stop souvenir + last-minute purchase + lunch location.

    Cost: Lunch $5-10 + souvenirs $10-50 + Aeon return PassApp $5-8 TIP: Aeon Mall 1 (10-min PassApp from BKK1) is the original, Aeon Mall 2 (15-min PassApp) is larger and newer. Aeon supermarket grocery for Kampot pepper 100g ($5-10), Cambodian rum bottle ($15-25), Cambodian coffee beans 250g ($10-15), Sombai liqueur tasting set ($25-35), silk scarves ($10-30). Cards accepted.
  5. 16:30 Hotel rest + check-out + repack 2 hours

    Hotel rest + check-out + repack for international evening departure. Most BKK1 hotels store luggage free between check-out and your evening airport departure (3-6 hours).

    Cost: Free TIP: Repack for the international flight. Pay any final hotel bills. Arrange airport transfer (hotel pickup $25-40 or PassApp $10-15 or official taxi $15-20). Spend remaining KHR at the hotel cafe or bar before departure — KHR is essentially impossible to exchange at home airports.
  6. 18:30 Final dinner + PNH airport departure 3-4 hours

    Final dinner before departure — light meal at BKK1 or hotel restaurant ($8-25) or PassApp to airport with airport dining. International evening departures typically run 21:00-23:30 (Korean Air ICN 23:30, Singapore Airlines 22:50, AirAsia BKK 21:00). Arrive PNH 2.5 hours before flight (check-in 45 min + security 30 min + duty-free + final KHR spending 30 min).

    Cost: Light dinner $8-25 + airport transfer $10-40 TIP: Spend remaining KHR at duty-free — Kampot pepper, Cambodian rum, Sombai liqueur, Cambodian coffee beans, silk scarves, apsara T-shirts, and lacquerware. KHR cannot be exchanged outside Cambodia, so use it all before departure.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel breakfast

Hotel · $5-25

Hotel breakfast (boutique = Cambodian + international buffet, 5-star = live station). Day 3 starts later (08:30) so a full hotel breakfast is the relaxed option.

Lunch

BKK1 cafe or Aeon Mall food court

BKK1 / Aeon Mall · $5-12

Brown Coffee or The Common Tiger or Le Boutier in BKK1, or Aeon Mall food court (Korean, Japanese, Cambodian, Western options $5-10). Light + quick + air-conditioned.

Dinner

Hotel restaurant or BKK1 light meal

Hotel / BKK1 / Airport · $8-25

Light meal before airport — hotel restaurant, BKK1 cafe, or save for airport dining. Save KHR for last-minute spending at duty-free.

Transit:

Day 3 walking + PassApp. Wat Phnom from BKK1: 5-min PassApp or 15-min walk. Central Market from Wat Phnom: 10-min walk south. Colonial walk: self-guided 90 min walking. Aeon Mall: 10-15 min PassApp from BKK1 ($5-8). Town → PNH airport: 10 km PassApp $10-15 or official taxi $15-20 or hotel pickup $25-40.

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

Budget $35 Mid $90 Luxury $200
DAY 4

Phnom Penh → Siem Reap + Angkor Wat sunset + Pub Street

Domestic flight + Angkor Pass + Angkor Wat sunset + traditional Khmer dinner

Activities

  1. 07:30 Phnom Penh → Siem Reap (REP) domestic flight (1h) 1 hour flight + 1.5h ground

    Cambodia Angkor Air or Sky Angkor operate daily flights Phnom Penh (PNH) → Siem Reap (REP) — 1 hour, $80-200 one-way, 5-7 daily flights. Book 1-2 weeks ahead. Siem Reap (REP) airport is 8 km from town, 15-min taxi ($5-7) or PassApp ($4-6) to the hotel zone. Bus alternative is Giant Ibis VIP sleeper $15 / 6 hours but logistically harder for first-timers.

    Cost: Flight $80-200 + REP airport → hotel $4-7 TIP: Domestic flight check-in 1 hour before. Cambodia Angkor Air is the local operator; Sky Angkor and Lanmei have additional routes. Carry-on only for the domestic flight to skip baggage waits. Buy your Angkor Pass at the official ticket office (4 km from town) — 1-day $37, 3-day $62, 7-day $72. Bring passport.
  2. 11:00 Siem Reap hotel check-in + lunch + Angkor Pass 2 hours

    Siem Reap hotel check-in (Old Market area + Pub Street + Riverside are the main hotel zones, $30-300/night). Light lunch at a local restaurant ($5-12). Then taxi to the official Angkor Pass ticket office (4 km outside town — credit card or USD cash, passport required, digital photo taken on site) for your 1-day, 3-day, or 7-day Pass.

    Cost: Hotel $30-300/night + lunch $5-12 + Angkor 1-day Pass $37 / 3-day $62 / 7-day $72 TIP: 3-day Pass is the right choice for 1-night stays. The Pass office accepts USD cash and major cards; bring passport. The Pass is personalized with your photo and is non-transferable.
  3. 15:30 Angkor Wat afternoon visit + sunset 3 hours

    Angkor Wat (12th-century Khmer temple, the largest religious monument in the world, originally Hindu then converted to Buddhist) is the canonical first-day visit. The afternoon-to-sunset window (15:30-18:30) is the photographer's choice — soft golden light on the western face + sunset behind the central towers. Enter through the west entrance (the original ceremonial approach), walk the 350 m causeway, and ascend the main temple. The bas-reliefs on the outer galleries depict the Hindu epics (Ramayana, Mahabharata, churning of the milk ocean).

    Cost: Included in Angkor Pass TIP: Cover shoulders + knees (strict enforcement; people are turned away). Comfortable shoes + sun hat + water. The central towers close 17:30 — visit the upper level first if you arrive late. Sunset 18:00-18:30 is photographed from the western causeway (the canonical reflection shot) or from Phnom Bakheng (a nearby hilltop temple, separate climb).
  4. 19:30 Traditional Khmer dinner + Pub Street 2-2.5 hours

    Siem Reap's Pub Street + Night Market is the canonical evening — Khmer restaurants + Western pubs + craft cocktails + souvenir vendors + apsara dance shows. Traditional Khmer dinner with apsara dance show is the recommended first-night experience ($15-30 per person including show). The Sugar Palm Restaurant ($15-25) or Cuisine Wat Damnak Siem Reap original ($30-50 tasting) for non-show Khmer dinners.

    Cost: Dinner + show $15-30 / dinner only $15-50 TIP: Apsara dance show + dinner combo at restaurants like Temple Bar, Apsara Theatre, or Por Cuisine Khmer is the canonical first-night setup. Reservations recommended for show seating. Pub Street is the post-dinner cocktail + souvenir + crowd-watching evening.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel breakfast (early Phnom Penh)

Phnom Penh · $5-15

07:30 flight means 05:30 hotel breakfast or pre-packed snack. Most hotels accommodate early breakfast for domestic flight departures.

Lunch

Siem Reap local Khmer restaurant

Old Market / Pub Street · $5-12

Light Khmer lunch on arrival — Khmer Kitchen Restaurant, Sugar Palm, or any Old Market casual spot. Save energy for the afternoon Angkor Wat visit.

Dinner

Apsara Theatre dinner + dance or Sugar Palm

Pub Street / Old Market · $15-30

Apsara dance show + traditional Khmer dinner is the canonical first-night experience. Sugar Palm (no show, $15-25) is the Khmer cooking-focused alternative.

Transit:

Phnom Penh → Siem Reap domestic flight 1h ($80-200). REP airport → hotel 15-min taxi ($5-7). In-town: walking + tuk-tuk (PassApp limited in Siem Reap — most travelers use street tuk-tuks or hotel-arranged drivers $15-25/day). Angkor temples: tuk-tuk + driver $20-30/day or air-conditioned car + driver $40-60/day.

DAY 4 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $130 Mid $250 Luxury $530
DAY 5

Angkor sunrise + Angkor Thom + Bayon + Ta Prohm + return

5:00 AM Angkor Wat sunrise + Angkor Thom + Bayon + Ta Prohm + return flight

Activities

  1. 05:00 Angkor Wat sunrise (the canonical Cambodia photo) 1.5-2 hours

    Tuk-tuk or hotel-arranged car pickup at 05:00 + sunrise at Angkor Wat 05:30-06:30. The pre-dawn approach across the causeway + the sun rising directly behind the central towers (mirrored in the reflecting pool on the north side) is the most-photographed Cambodian moment. Bring layer (cool pre-dawn at 18-22°C / 64-72°F), water, and full-battery camera.

    Cost: Included in Angkor Pass + transport $20-30/day TIP: Pre-dawn crowds are significant — arrive by 05:15 for a good photo spot at the north reflecting pool (the canonical reflection-shot location). Sunrise time varies: 05:30-06:00 winter, 05:45-06:15 summer. Bring small flashlight for the walk in.
  2. 07:30 Hotel breakfast + Angkor Thom + Bayon 2-2.5 hours

    Hotel breakfast + Angkor Thom (the 12th-century Khmer capital, walled city 9 km², 5 monumental gates) + Bayon (the central temple of Angkor Thom — 54 stone towers each carved with four giant smiling faces of King Jayavarman VII / Buddhist Bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara, 216 total faces). The 200+ stone faces watching from all directions is the canonical Bayon photographic experience.

    Cost: Included in Angkor Pass TIP: Cover shoulders + knees. The South Gate of Angkor Thom (the canonical 'gods + demons + Naga' causeway entrance) is the photographic stop before Bayon. Bayon's upper level closes for restoration occasionally — check current access.
  3. 10:30 Ta Prohm (the jungle temple) 1.5 hours

    Ta Prohm (12th-13th-century temple, intentionally left partially overgrown by jungle as a 'discovery' atmosphere). Massive silk-cotton tree (Tetrameles nudiflora) and strangler fig (Ficus gibbosa) roots growing through the temple stones — the canonical 'Tomb Raider' temple (Angelina Jolie filmed here 2001). The tree-and-stone combination is the photographic highlight.

    Cost: Included in Angkor Pass TIP: Some sections roped off for tree-root preservation. The famous tree-stranger-fig shot is at the east gate. Morning has the best light for the canopy effect.
  4. 12:30 Lunch + final Siem Reap walk 2-2.5 hours

    Lunch at a Siem Reap restaurant ($5-15) + final Old Market + Pub Street walk for souvenirs (Cambodian silk, Kampot pepper, Cambodian coffee, lacquerware, copy fashion). The Made in Cambodia Market (Saturday + Sunday only) has the highest-quality handmade goods.

    Cost: Lunch $5-15 + souvenirs $10-50 TIP: Khmer Kitchen Restaurant, The Hive, Spoons Cafe (NGO social enterprise), or any Old Market lunch spot. Bargain at Pub Street souvenirs (start at 50%); fixed prices at Made in Cambodia Market.
  5. 16:00 Hotel check-out + REP airport + return flight Half-day

    Hotel check-out + 15-min taxi to REP airport + 1h flight Siem Reap → Phnom Penh ($80-200) or Siem Reap → home airport (Bangkok BKK 1h, Singapore SIN 2h30, Seoul ICN 5h30). Most travelers fly Siem Reap → home directly rather than backtracking through Phnom Penh.

    Cost: Flight + REP airport transfer $85-210 TIP: Book the return flight with the outbound — Phnom Penh → Siem Reap → home or Phnom Penh → Siem Reap → Phnom Penh → home. Most travelers prefer the direct REP → home route to save 5+ hours of backtracking.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel breakfast (after Angkor sunrise)

Siem Reap hotel · $5-15

Post-Angkor-sunrise (return to hotel around 7 AM) hotel breakfast is the right pattern. Most hotels accommodate the early-out / late-breakfast schedule for Angkor sunrise travelers.

Lunch

Khmer Kitchen Restaurant or Spoons Cafe (NGO)

Old Market / Pub Street · $5-15

Khmer Kitchen for traditional Cambodian, Spoons Cafe for NGO social enterprise + modern Cambodian, The Hive for casual Western + Khmer. All Old Market area.

Dinner

REP airport meal or in-flight

REP airport / in-flight · $8-20

Light dinner at Siem Reap airport or in-flight meal on return. Save remaining KHR for last-minute airport spending — KHR cannot be exchanged outside Cambodia.

Transit:

Angkor temples Day 5: tuk-tuk + driver $20-30/day or air-conditioned car + driver $40-60/day. REP airport → hotel 15-min ($5-7). REP → home or REP → Phnom Penh return flight 1h ($80-200).

DAY 5 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $100 Mid $220 Luxury $480

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Phnom Penh 5-Day Itinerary FAQ

Is 3 days enough for Phnom Penh?
Yes — 2-3 nights covers the core. Day 1: arrival + Royal Palace + Silver Pagoda + National Museum + Mekong sunset cruise + Raffles or FCC dinner. Day 2: Choeung Ek Killing Fields + Tuol Sleng S-21 + Russian Market + Top Banana Sky Bar + Malis dinner. Day 3: Wat Phnom + Central Market + colonial walk + Aeon Mall + departure. Honestly, Phnom Penh alone is 2 nights' worth of attractions; 4+ nights gets repetitive. The standard Cambodia loop is Phnom Penh 2 nights + Siem Reap 1h domestic flight + Siem Reap 3 nights for 5-7 nights total. Add Sihanoukville beach (6h bus) or Kampot pepper farms (5h bus) for 7-10 nights.
How do I get from the airport to the city?
Phnom Penh International (PNH) is 10 km west of downtown, 20-30 min by taxi. Official airport taxi counter (fixed price) $15-20 to BKK1 or Royal Palace area. PassApp car booked through app $10-15. Tuk-tuk $7-10 but harder to verify drivers. 4-5 star hotel pickup $25-40 (often included with suite bookings). After 22:00 the official taxi counter closes — pre-arrange hotel pickup or order PassApp. ATM at the airport for initial $200-300 USD (ABA Bank ATM is the safest brand).
What's transport like in Phnom Penh?
No Grab — Cambodia uses PassApp (90% market share, fixed pricing, ride history) instead. Install and register before arrival. Short downtown tuk-tuk $1-3, PassApp car $2-5; downtown to airport tuk-tuk $7-10, PassApp $10-15. Always use PassApp at night instead of flagging street tuk-tuks — fixed price + no fare disputes + recorded ride. Downtown BKK1 + Royal Palace + Sisowath Quay + Russian Market + Central Market all walkable within a 1-2 km core. Outer destinations (Killing Fields 17 km, Aeon Mall) use PassApp $5-15.
Is Phnom Penh safe?
Average for Southeast Asia or slightly below — busier and rougher around the edges than Siem Reap. Realistic risks: pickpocketing in markets, occasional motorbike-snatch theft (phones, bags) on riverside roads, petty scams. Use PassApp at night instead of street tuk-tuks. Walk solo only in BKK1 + Royal Palace after dark; use PassApp for anywhere outside that core. Daytime tourism is fine. Most Western governments rate Cambodia 'exercise normal precautions' — comparable to Vietnam. Buy travel insurance with medical evacuation; Phnom Penh's medical infrastructure is below regional standard and serious cases evacuate to Bangkok.
Best time to visit Phnom Penh?
November-February dry season is the clear answer — 24-32°C / 75-90°F days, 21-25°C / 70-77°F nights, low humidity, clear blue skies. March-May is hot dry pushing 35-40°C / 95-104°F with 70% humidity. June-October monsoon brings near-daily afternoon storms 1-2 hours, occasional flooding, traffic chaos. November 18-21 (Bon Om Touk / Water Festival — Mekong boat races) is the year's most vibrant cultural week. Khmer New Year (Choul Chnam, April 13-16) is iconic but combines 40°C heat + 30-40% hotel premium.
What about USD and KHR cash?
USD is the primary transaction currency. Hotels, restaurants, tuk-tuks, attraction entries — all priced in USD. Khmer Riel (KHR) handles change under $1: 1 USD ≈ 4,100 KHR. So a $4.50 noodle bowl means you pay $5 and get 2,000 KHR back. KHR cannot be exchanged outside Cambodia — spend it before flying home. USD notes should be reasonable condition; some restaurants and tuk-tuks reject torn or marked bills. Bring small denominations: lots of $1, $5, $10, $20 plus a few $50, $100. ATMs at ABA, ACLEDA, and Canadia Bank dispense USD with $4-5 fees. Cards work at BKK1 + 5-star hotels + Aeon Mall; not at tuk-tuks + street food + markets.
What's the total 3-day budget?
Excluding flights: budget $130 (BKK1 guesthouse + market food + Killing Fields + S-21 + Royal Palace + transport), mid-range $330 (BKK1 boutique + Khmer Surin + Romdeng + Malis + Mekong cruise + tuk-tuks + entries), luxury $780+ (Raffles Le Royal or Rosewood + Cuisine Wat Damnak + Khema La Poste + private car + FCC + Mekong dinner cruise). Phnom Penh is one of Southeast Asia's cheapest capitals — about 50-60% of Bangkok pricing. International flights add $300-1,000 depending on origin (Bangkok connection $300-500, Seoul direct $300-500, North America $1,200-2,500 with connections).
Is Angkor Wat worth the side trip?
Absolutely — it's the architectural and photographic highlight of any Cambodia visit. Angkor Wat (12th-century, the largest religious monument in the world), Bayon (54 face towers of King Jayavarman VII), Ta Prohm (the jungle temple where 'Tomb Raider' was filmed), and Angkor Thom (the walled capital) are the canonical four. Sunrise at Angkor Wat with the central towers reflected in the north reflecting pool is the most-photographed Cambodian moment. 1-night minimum, 2-3 nights ideal for a full Angkor experience. Phnom Penh → Siem Reap flight 1h ($80-200) or Giant Ibis VIP bus 6h ($15).
Should I see Phnom Penh or Siem Reap first?
Phnom Penh first is the canonical order. The reason: Phnom Penh's Killing Fields + S-21 + National Museum give you the Cambodian modern-history and Khmer-dynasty context that makes Angkor Wat make sense. Reverse the order and Angkor feels disconnected from the country. Phnom Penh 2 nights + Siem Reap 2-3 nights is the smart 5-7 night Cambodia loop.
Should I add Sihanoukville beach or Kampot?
Yes if you have 7+ nights. Sihanoukville (beach + islands, 6h bus from Phnom Penh or 30-min flight) is the Cambodia beach option — but it's developed heavily in recent years with mixed reviews. Koh Rong + Koh Rong Samloem (islands off Sihanoukville, 30-min boat) are the cleaner alternatives. Kampot (5h bus south of Phnom Penh, pepper farms + riverside + Bokor National Park) is the boutique alternative for travelers wanting French colonial atmosphere outside the capital. Add 2-3 nights for either. The full 9-10 night Cambodia is Phnom Penh + Siem Reap + Sihanoukville or Phnom Penh + Siem Reap + Kampot.

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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.

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