Luxury Travel Guide: Cambodia
Travel in style with premium hotels, fine dining, private transfers, and exclusive experiences
Daily Budget: $360-1310 per day
Complete breakdown of costs for luxury travel in Cambodia
Accommodation
$150-600 per night
Heritage boutique hotels in converted French colonial buildings with cool tiled corridors and ceiling fans alongside modern amenities, luxury resort properties with temple views near Angkor, and five-star riverside hotels in Phnom Penh with pools, spas, and rooftop bars overlooking the Mekong. Splurge level.
Browse luxury accommodation →Food & Dining
$60-180 per day
Hotel rooftop restaurants, fine-dining establishments serving refined Khmer cuisine with the faint fragrance of lemongrass and galangal, private chef experiences, and premium imported wine. Cambodia's luxury dining scene is strong, for fresh seafood and elevated takes on traditional dishes.
Transportation
$50-180 per day
Private air-conditioned cars with drivers for full-day temple circuits, private speedboat transfers between coastal destinations, and domestic flights between Phnom Penh, Siem Reap, and Sihanoukville that cut hours from overland journeys. Fast track.
Activities
$100-350 per day
Private guided temple tours with expert historians at Angkor, sunrise helicopter flights over the Archaeological Park with views of the stone spires gleaming in the early light, exclusive cooking retreats, luxury spa treatments at temple-view properties, and private Mekong sunset cruises. Top shelf.
Currency: Cambodian Riel (KHR) is the official currency. But US Dollars function as the practical everyday currency across most of Cambodia's tourist economy. Hotel rates, restaurant bills, tour operators, and even many street vendors quote prices in USD. Riel circulates primarily as small change for amounts under one dollar, with the approximate exchange rate hovering around 4,000 KHR per US dollar. Carrying small USD bills and accepting riel as change is the standard day-to-day approach for most travelers in Cambodia. Keep ones handy. Count change twice. Life runs on dollars.
Money-Saving Tips
Buy Angkor Archaeological Park passes directly at the official ticket counter rather than through guesthouse intermediaries or touts near the entrance roads. The savings compound meaningfully on a multi-day visit. Just do it.
Eat breakfast and lunch at covered market food courts and local rice shops where Cambodians eat. A full meal typically runs 60-70% less than the same food at tourist-facing restaurants a few blocks away. Same flavor. Lower price.
Use shared minivans between Siem Reap, Phnom Penh, and Kampot rather than private transfers. The journey is essentially the same. The price difference is substantial enough to cover an extra night of accommodation. Smart move.
Rent bicycles for temple exploration within the Angkor complex rather than hiring tuk-tuks for every circuit. The flat terrain around Siem Reap makes cycling practical. Most guesthouses offer daily rentals. Pedal power.
Travel during the shoulder months of late October through November or April. Peak-season hotel rates have not yet fully kicked in. The weather remains manageable. The temple crowds are noticeably thinner. Win-win.
Drink locally brewed Cambodian beers at restaurants and street-side bars rather than imported spirits or international labels. The price gap is significant. A cold local lager in Cambodia's humid evening heat is hard to argue with. Cheers.
Stay one neighborhood back from the main tourist strips in Siem Reap and Phnom Penh. Accommodation quality tends to be comparable. Prices drop noticeably once you step off the most heavily trafficked streets. Simple savings.
Common Budget Mistakes to Avoid
Buying single-day Angkor passes when you plan to visit the complex over multiple days. A 3-day pass costs substantially less than three single-day tickets. The Archaeological Park rewards the extra time with temples that most day-trippers never reach. Plan ahead.
Eating every meal in the tourist restaurant zones around the main market areas. Markups of 100-200% over local market prices are standard. Cambodian food at a local rice shop tastes just as good, frequently better, and costs dramatically less.
Agreeing on a tuk-tuk fare without settling the return pickup time and price in the same breath. The return trip often gets repriced upward if not negotiated in advance. This happens near popular temple sites where demand spikes at sunset. Lock it in.
Underestimating the Angkor entrance fee as a major daily cost item. It is not a trivial sum relative to Cambodia's otherwise very low prices. Failing to budget for it accurately can distort the rest of your daily spending calculation. Count it first.