Banteay Chhmar Tour from Siem Reap with Prasat Mebon temple
The Banteay Chhmar Tour - Ancient Khmer Ruins, No Crowds, and the Cambodia Most Visitors Never See








Banteay Chhmar Tour from Siem Reap
The Banteay Chhmar Tour is a full-day private guided trip that picks you up from your Siem Reap hotel at 7:30 AM and takes you northwest to one of Cambodia’s biggest and least-visited Angkorian temple sites. You get two hours inside the main temple, a local lunch, and a Prasat Mebon tour stop at a rare satellite temple built on an ancient baray.
No 4 AM alarm. No crowds. Just you, an experienced guide, and eight centuries of carved stone. The Banteay Chhmar Tour runs as a private trip, so the pace is yours to set. Book the Banteay Chhmar Tour from Siem Reap and see the side of Cambodia that most first-time visitors miss completely.
The Banteay Chhmar Tour covers more history and more ground than most one-day trips out of Siem Reap. Here is what stands out:
- Departs at 7:30 AM from your hotel, no pre-sunrise alarm needed
- Two-hour scenic drive through Banteay Meanchey Province, past open rice fields and roadside markets
- Full guided walk through Banteay Chhmar temple, Cambodia’s fourth largest Angkorian temple site
- Local lunch at a village eatery near the main temple
- Prasat Mebon visit, a satellite temple sitting in the center of a 1,500 x 1,000 meter baray
- Private, air-conditioned van for all transfers
- Return to Siem Reap well before dinner
Locations Visited on Banteay Chhmar Tour
- Banteay Meanchey Province (scenic drive, countryside and rice field views)
- Banteay Chhmar temple site (2 hours, full guided walk)
- Local village near Banteay Chhmar (1-hour lunch break)
- Prasat Mebon, east of Banteay Chhmar (1.5 hours, guided visit)
Itinerary
Banteay Chhmar Tour Itinerary
7:30 AM – Hotel Pickup, Krong Siem Reap
Your guide and driver meet you at your hotel lobby. The drive to Banteay Chhmar takes approximately two hours. As you leave Siem Reap and head northwest, the city quickly gives way to flat farmland. Rice paddies spread out wide on both sides of the road. Wooden stilt houses dot the open landscape. Your guide begins talking about the area, the people here, and what you are about to see. By the time the first signs for Banteay Meanchey Province appear, you are already inside a Cambodia most travelers never reach.
Around 9:30 AM – Banteay Meanchey Province
You cross into Banteay Meanchey Province, where the countryside opens even wider and the sky seems twice as big. The guide points out local markets along the road and explains how daily living in this part of Cambodia differs from the busier pace in Siem Reap. This is not a tourist corridor. This is the working northwest.
9:30 AM to 11:30 AM – Banteay Chhmar Temple (2 Hours)
You park and walk in. The outer wall of Banteay Chhmar stretches wide on all sides, and the first thing most visitors notice is the scale of the place. This temple site was built during the reign of King Jayavarman VII in the late 12th century. It covers nearly 1 square kilometer and was meant to serve as both a military fort and a Buddhist shrine for the Khmer empire.
The name translates to “Narrow Fortress.” Jayavarman VII reportedly ordered its construction as a memorial to his son and four generals who died defending Cambodia against the Cham people. That story is carved into the walls in long, running rows of bas-relief panels. Naval battle scenes, infantry lines, war elephants, and chariots fill gallery after gallery. Stone soldiers march across walls that have been standing longer than most countries have existed.
The face towers are the other thing people remember. Giant stone faces, four to a tower, look out in every direction. This is the Bayon style, used across Jayavarman VII’s building projects from Angkor Thom to Ta Prohm. At Banteay Chhmar, these towers carry the weight of eight centuries without apology. Your guide walks you through the galleries, points out the medical blessing carvings, explains the tantric Buddhist imagery, and helps you read the story in the stone. Two hours passes quickly here.
11:30 AM to 12:30 PM – Lunch at a Local Village (1 Hour)
After the temple, you head to a small local eatery near Banteay Chhmar. Lunch is included in the tour price. The food is Cambodian, freshly prepared, and genuinely good. This is a proper break, not a rushed pit stop.
12:40 PM – Short Van Transfer (10 Minutes)
A quick drive east takes you to the next stop.
12:40 PM to 2:10 PM – Prasat Mebon (1.5 Hours)
The Prasat Mebon tour stop is quieter than the main temple. This satellite temple was built at the center of a massive baray, a man-made reservoir measuring 1,500 meters by 1,000 meters. The water management network around Banteay Chhmar was one of the most well-built hydraulic systems of the Angkorian period, designed to manage water in a dry, arid region where both droughts and floods were real risks.
Prasat Mebon is smaller than the main temple, but it is well worth the stop. The architectural style here reflects the same Buddhist design logic as the main site but shows it from a different angle and a quieter setting. Your guide explains how the baray worked and what it tells us about how people lived in this region 800 years ago.
The silence out here is complete. Birds call from the scrub around the reservoir. The flat land stretches in every direction without interruption. It is the kind of quiet that is genuinely hard to find anywhere near Angkor Wat.
2:10 PM to 4:10 PM – Return to Siem Reap (2 Hours)
The van heads back south toward Siem Reap. Most travelers nap on the return. You arrive in the city well before dinner, with a long afternoon still ahead.
Pickup and Drop Off
Pickup is at 7:30 AM from your hotel in Krong Siem Reap. The driver comes directly to your hotel entrance or lobby. There is no central meeting point to find on your own.
Drop-off is back at your hotel. The Banteay Chhmar Tour from Siem Reap is structured so you are back in the city by around 4:00 PM to 4:30 PM.
If your hotel serves breakfast, ask the front desk for a takeaway breakfast box the evening before your tour. The 7:30 AM pickup does not allow time for a full sit-down hotel breakfast on the morning of your trip.
The van is private, air-conditioned, and set up for a comfortable road trip. It is not a shared minibus with other bookings.
Included
Everything below is covered in your tour price:
- Hotel pickup and drop-off in Krong Siem Reap
- Private air-conditioned van for all transfers throughout the day
- Experienced English-speaking guide for the full day
- Guided walk through Banteay Chhmar temple
- Prasat Mebon guided visit
- Local lunch at a village eatery near Banteay Chhmar
- All vehicle parking fees at each stop
- Bottled water during van transfers
Tour Exclusions
The following costs are not covered in the Banteay Chhmar Tour price:
- Temple entry pass. Must be purchased separately. The current fee is USD 5 per person and is paid on arrival at the temple gate.
- Personal travel insurance. Not included and strongly recommended.
- Tips for your guide and driver. Not required, but always appreciated for a good day.
- Extra drinks, snacks, or food beyond the included lunch.
- Personal souvenirs or shopping at any stop along the way.
- Any activity not listed in the itinerary above.
What to Bring
Packing right makes a real difference on a day like this. Here is what to bring:
- Sun hat – you spend a lot of time outside under open sky and direct sun
- Sunglasses – stone walls and open fields reflect a lot of midday light
- Umbrella – works for both rain and shade, and you will use it
- Camera or charged phone – there is no shortage of good shots at any point during this day
- Comfortable walking shoes – temple grounds are uneven stone, raised doorways, and packed dirt
- Modest clothing – shoulders and knees must be covered at both temple sites. Pants or a long skirt are both fine. Skirts must fall below the calf. Sleeveless tops, shorts, ripped clothing, and see-through clothing are not allowed.
- Cash in USD or Khmer Riel – for your temple entry pass, tips, and any extra snacks or drinks
- Sunscreen – apply before you leave the hotel, not when you arrive at the temple
- Small backpack – to carry everything comfortably throughout the day
Additional Information
Dress Code at the Temples
Both Banteay Chhmar and Prasat Mebon follow the same dress code as all Angkorian-period temples in Cambodia. Clothing must cover the shoulders and knees at all times. Clothing that shows cleavage is also not permitted. If you arrive at the gate in shorts or a sleeveless top, staff may ask you to cover up before entering. Buying a cheap cotton scarf or sarong in Siem Reap the evening before is a smart backup plan.
Temple Entry Pass
An entry pass is required at Banteay Chhmar. The current price is USD 5 per person and is payable on arrival at the gate. This fee is not included in the tour price. The Prasat Mebon tour stop does not require a separate entry pass.
Mobility and Accessibility
The temple grounds at Banteay Chhmar include uneven stone floors, raised doorways, and many areas with no paved paths. Wheelchair access is limited throughout much of the site. Travelers with mobility concerns should contact the tour operator before booking to discuss what is and is not accessible on the route.
About UNESCO Recognition
The Banteay Chhmar temple site is on Cambodia’s tentative UNESCO World Heritage list. It is recognized for its water management system, its Buddhist carvings, and the scale of its Angkorian-period construction. The hydraulic network that once supplied water to this area included moats, channels, canals, catchment basins, and the great baray where Prasat Mebon stands today. The entire system is a feat of ancient engineering that still impresses archaeologists today.
Cancellation Policy
- Full refunds are issued for cancellations made with at least 24 hours’ notice.
- Non-refundable: Cancellations made within 24 hours or no-shows will not receive a refund.
- Amendments: Changes must be communicated at least 24 hours in advance.
- Refund Processing: Refunds will be issued within 7 business days.
A glimpse into our tours
We Provide The Finest In Guided Tours Throughout Cambodia
Southeast Asia Journeys, a Cambodia-based travel service, offers immersive tours and reliable ground operations throughout Southeast Asia.