Island of the Lion King
Two Thousand Years of History in a Single Island
Sri Lanka's astonishing compactness is its defining paradox — 65,610 km² (smaller than Ireland), yet packing 8 UNESCO World Heritage Sites, 26 national parks, 1,600 km of coastline, and the world's oldest planted tree (the Jaya Sri Maha Bodhi, propagated from a cutting of the original Bodhi tree and planted in 288 BCE). The island has been known by many names: Serendip — from which the word "serendipity" derives, the Persian rendering of the Sanskrit Simhaladvipa — Taprobane, and Ceylon, each hinting at the sense of lucky discovery that still defines a journey here. This is a country where every bend in the road reveals something extraordinary.
The Cultural Triangle — Sigiriya's 5th-century rock fortress palace rising 200 metres from the jungle plain; Dambulla's 2,000-year-old cave temple with 157 statues of the Buddha; Polonnaruwa's medieval capital preserved almost intact; Anuradhapura's ancient stupas and the Bodhi tree planted by a Buddhist missionary princess in the 3rd century BCE — this quadrant of the island north of Kandy contains more ancient Buddhist architecture per square kilometre than anywhere outside Ashoka's India. The sheer density of history here, in a landscape of tanks (reservoirs) and jungle, has no parallel in South Asia.
The contrast with the coast is extraordinary. The south and east hold beaches of every temperament: Mirissa's headland where whale sharks glide beneath whale-watching boats, Tangalle's deserted coves and sea-turtle nesting sands, Trincomalee's harbour (one of the world's finest natural anchorages), and Arugam Bay's right-hand surf break, a fixture on the global surf circuit. Inland, the Hill Country — producing the world's finest high-grown tea — offers the iconic nine-arch bridge at Ella, the colonial strawberry farms of Nuwara Eliya, and the train journey between Kandy and Ella that is, without question, one of the world's most beautiful rail rides. Two monsoons mean that somewhere in Sri Lanka is always in perfect weather.
Combine Your Journey
Explore the Island
Sri Lanka's Four Great Regions
Each corner of Sri Lanka rewards differently — but together they form one of the most complete travel destinations in Asia. A 12-day circuit can touch all four without rushing.
The Ancient Buddhist Heartland
Cultural Triangle
The Cultural Triangle encompasses four UNESCO World Heritage Sites within a rough triangle in the island's north-central dry zone: Sigiriya, Dambulla, Polonnaruwa and Anuradhapura. Sigiriya alone — a 5th-century palace fortress built atop a sheer volcanic plug by King Kashyapa I (477–495 CE), rising 200 metres from the surrounding jungle, its flanks decorated with the celebrated "Cloud Maidens" frescoes — would justify the entire journey to Sri Lanka. The ancient capital of Anuradhapura adds 2,500 years of continuous Buddhist civilisation, its colossal stupas (the Jetavanaramaya was the world's third-tallest structure when completed in the 3rd century) still dominating a sacred city where pilgrims have circled the Bodhi tree without interruption for 23 centuries.
Dambulla's cave temple complex — five caves of living rock transformed into a continuous Buddhist shrine from the 1st century BCE, with 157 statues and 2,100 sq metres of fresco — is among the most extraordinary sacred spaces in Asia. Polonnaruwa, the medieval capital (1070–1215 CE), preserves the Gal Vihara — four colossal Buddha figures carved directly from a single granite face, including a 15-metre reclining parinirvana figure — in a state of haunting completeness. These are not distant ruins; they are places of active devotion, still fragrant with incense and marigolds.
Royal Capital & Tea Country
Kandy & the Hill Country
Kandy, the last royal capital of the Kandyan kings (UNESCO), is home to the Sri Dalada Maligawa — the Temple of the Sacred Tooth Relic — Sri Lanka's most sacred Buddhist site and one of the most venerated in the Buddhist world. The left canine tooth of the historical Buddha, brought from India wrapped in the hair of Princess Hemamali in 313 CE, rests here in a golden casket within a golden reliquary within a golden shrine. To hold political power over this relic was to legitimise rule over the island — which is why every Kandyan king enshrined it in the palace complex, and why pilgrims from across the Buddhist world still make the journey here in an unbroken 1,700-year tradition.
Above Kandy, the road climbs steeply through tea country — the hill country that produces Ceylon tea, still the world's finest high-grown variety, from estates established by British planters in the 1870s after a coffee blight destroyed the original plantations. The journey by train from Kandy to Ella (6 hours, climbing through tunnels and across viaducts over mist-filled valleys) is widely considered one of the world's great rail rides. At Ella, the Nine Arch Bridge — a colonial viaduct of nine 24-metre stone arches completed in 1921 — is Sri Lanka's most photographed structure after Sigiriya. Nuwara Eliya's Victorian bungalows, golf club and strawberry farms feel improbably English at 1,900 metres elevation, and utterly charming for it.
- › Kandy Esala Perahera (July–Aug) — 10-day festival with 50+ elephants, fire-dancers and drum corps
- › Dawn puja at the Temple of the Tooth — oil lamps, white-robed pilgrims, Kandyan drumming
- › Tea estate tour: pick, wither, roll, fire — learn every step of Ceylon tea production
- › Train Kandy–Ella: sit at the open door of the 3rd-class carriage for the full panoramic experience
- › Ella Rock hike (4 hrs round trip) — 360° views of the Ella Gap and southern plains
- › Horton Plains & World's End — 8km plateau walk to a 870m escarpment dropping into clouds
Dutch Forts, Surf & Sea Turtles
Coastal & Beach Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka's southern coast, from Galle's Dutch colonial fort (UNESCO, built 1663 and the best-preserved Dutch colonial fort in Asia, with cobblestoned streets, boutique hotels in merchant mansions, and a cricket ground enclosed within 17th-century ramparts) through Unawatuna's sheltered bay, Mirissa's headland — where blue whales (the largest animals on earth) pass within two kilometres of shore between November and April — and Tangalle's deserted coves and sea-turtle nesting beaches, to the whale-watching waters off Dondra Head (Sri Lanka's southernmost point), is among Asia's most varied and accessible coastlines.
The east coast offers a rawer, less developed alternative. Trincomalee's natural harbour — rated by Nelson as one of the finest in the world, protected on three sides by jungle headlands — gives way to Pigeon Island's coral reef and the offshore whale shark aggregations of Uppuveli beach. Arugam Bay, a right-hand point break rated among Asia's ten best surf spots, draws an international surf community May–September (the east coast's dry season) while the west sleeps through its monsoon. Sri Lanka's two-monsoon geography is a gift to visitors: there is always a perfect coastline available.
Leopards, Elephants & Rainforest
Wildlife & Nature
Yala National Park — Sri Lanka's most famous wildlife reserve, in the island's dry southeast corner — has the world's highest density of leopards of any protected area: an estimated one leopard per 2.8 km², making sightings not merely possible but genuinely probable. Yala's 1,268 km² of lagoon, scrub jungle and rocky outcrops also hold elephant, sloth bear, crocodile, water buffalo and 215 bird species. A two-night stay with morning and afternoon jeep safaris gives a remarkable hit rate for big mammal encounters.
Minneriya National Park, in the Cultural Triangle, hosts the famous Gathering — the largest terrestrial wildlife spectacle in Asia: up to 300 wild elephants from across the north-central dry zone converging around the 4th-century Minneriya reservoir in August and September as it shrinks, exposing nutritious shoreline grass. Udawalawe (best year-round) is the easiest place in Asia to see wild elephants — herds of 20–40 cross open grassland in morning and evening light with almost predictable regularity. The Sinharaja Forest Reserve, a UNESCO World Biosphere Reserve covering some of the last intact lowland rainforest in the Indian subcontinent, is a destination for serious birdwatchers: 21 of Sri Lanka's 26 endemic bird species are found here.
- › Yala NP: Sri Lankan leopard — highest density of any national park in the world
- › Minneriya: The Gathering (Aug–Sep) — 300+ wild elephants, largest terrestrial wildlife spectacle in Asia
- › Udawalawe: Wild elephant herds year-round — best in Asia for reliable sightings
- › Mirissa & Dondra: Blue whale (world's largest animal) Nov–Apr, within 2km of shore
- › Sinharaja: 21 of 26 endemic Sri Lankan bird species; purple-faced langur; leopard (rare)
- › Bundala NP: Pink flamingo and over 150 migratory bird species, Dec–Mar
Sample Journey
A Classic 12-Day Sri Lanka Circuit
A perfectly paced circuit covering all four regions — ancient cities, hill country, coast and wildlife — without rushing. Can be shortened to 10 days or extended to 14 with Jaffna or Trincomalee added.
Colombo — Gateway & Gangaramaya Temple
📍 ColomboArrive at Bandaranaike International Airport and transfer to your Colombo hotel. Day 1 afternoon: Gangaramaya Temple — Colombo's most eclectic Buddhist shrine, a fusion of Sri Lankan, Thai, Indian and Chinese architecture housing a museum of extraordinary gifts from Buddhist nations. The weekly Thursday puja at dusk is unforgettable. Day 2: Pettah Market — the oldest and most chaotic commercial district, Dutch-era colonial churches, the National Museum (housing the original Lion Throne of the Kandyan kings), and Galle Face Green at sunset, where half of Colombo gathers to fly kites and eat fried kottu.
Dambulla Caves · Sigiriya Rock Fortress (Sunrise)
📍 Cultural Triangle (Dambulla / Sigiriya)Drive north to the Cultural Triangle. Day 3: Dambulla Cave Temple — five rock chambers transformed into continuous Buddhist shrines over 2,000 years, with 157 Buddha statues and 2,100 sq metres of fresco in ochre, white and gold. Vivid, magnificent, deeply peaceful. Day 4: pre-dawn start at Sigiriya — arrive at the base in darkness, climb the 1,200 steps through boulder garden and Lion's Paw Gate as the jungle below lightens from grey to green. The sunrise from the 200-metre-high palace plateau, across a flat plain of tanks and forest, is one of the great views of Asia. The 5th-century frescoes of the Cloud Maidens are on the descent.
Polonnaruwa Ruins by Bicycle · Minneriya Elephant Gathering
📍 Polonnaruwa / MinneriyaDay 5: Polonnaruwa — hire bicycles from the museum gate and cycle the UNESCO ruins: the Vatadage (a circular relic house of extraordinary proportions), the Lankatilaka (a 15m-tall standing Buddha image, roofless, its brick walls still 17m high), and the Gal Vihara — four colossal Buddhas cut directly from a single outcrop of granite. The 15m reclining Buddha (parinirvana) in the far cave is the finest piece of rock-cut sculpture in Sri Lanka. Day 6 (Aug–Sep): afternoon jeep safari in Minneriya National Park for the Gathering — or, outside season, a morning safari in Kaudulla or Eco-Safari at Minneriya for reliable elephant herds.
Kandy — Temple of the Tooth · Peradeniya · Kandyan Dance
📍 KandyDrive south to Kandy. Day 7: check in and visit the Temple of the Tooth at the evening puja (6pm) — the drumming begins outside the golden entrance hall as the inner sanctum opens, white-robed pilgrims press forward with armloads of lotus blossoms, and the gold casket containing the Tooth Relic is briefly visible behind a screen. No other single moment in Sri Lanka carries this weight of devotion. After puja, walk the lake circuit — the Kandy Lake was built by the last king in 1807 and the lamplit evening stroll is deeply pleasant. Day 8: Peradeniya Botanical Gardens (the Royal Botanic Gardens, 60 hectares including the largest single specimen of a Java fig tree on earth — 147 years old, covering 1,600 sq m); afternoon Kandyan dance recital at the cultural centre.
Scenic Train to Ella · Nine Arch Bridge · Ella Rock
📍 Kandy → Nuwara Eliya → Ella (scenic 6-hr train)Board the morning train from Kandy towards Ella — one of the world's great rail journeys, climbing through tea estates in spiralling loops, over viaducts above mist-filled valleys, through cool eucalyptus forest. Sit in the open doorway of the last carriage for the definitive photograph. Stop at Nuwara Eliya ("Little England" at 1,900m) for lunch — the hill station retains Victorian bungalows, a horse-racing track and a famous golf club. Continue to Ella. Day 10: Nine Arch Bridge in early morning (the 8:45am train crosses it — time your walk for maximum drama). Afternoon: Ella Rock hike — a steep 4km trail through tea estates and jungle to a 1,041m summit with panoramic views over the Ella Gap to the southern plains.
Mirissa Whale Watching · Galle Fort · Fly from Colombo
📍 Mirissa → Galle → ColomboDay 11: early start for a whale-watching boat from Mirissa harbour (Nov–Apr optimal for blue whales — the largest animals that have ever lived on earth, up to 30 metres long; spinner dolphins nearly guaranteed year-round). Afternoon: drive to Galle — 45 minutes. Explore the Dutch colonial fort (UNESCO): Church of the Groote Kerk (1755), the Dutch Reformed Church across the oval, the lighthouse, the cricket ground within the ramparts, and the boutique hotels and cafés that have colonised the merchant houses. Sunset from the fort walls over the Indian Ocean. Day 12: drive back to Colombo airport for your international departure. The Colombo–Mirissa–Galle loop takes under 2.5 hours in light traffic.
All itineraries are fully customisable — we adapt pace, accommodation and inclusions to your preferences.
Plan My Sri Lanka TripBefore You Go
Practical Travel Information
Everything you need to plan your Sri Lanka journey with confidence.
Best Season
Sri Lanka has two monsoons. West & south coast (Colombo, Galle, Mirissa) + Cultural Triangle + Hill Country: November to April is optimal — warm, clear, with whale watching at peak Nov–Apr. East coast (Trincomalee, Arugam Bay): May to September is dry and perfect while the west is rainy. The Cultural Triangle is good year-round. December–January is peak season — book early.
Getting Around
The Kandy–Ella scenic train (daily, 6 hrs) is a bucket-list journey — book 1st or 2nd class observation car seats weeks ahead at Colombo Fort station or online. Private driver for Cultural Triangle and wildlife is the most flexible option. Tuk-tuks for town-level travel. Intercity buses are cheap, frequent and comfortable on main routes. The highway network has improved dramatically since 2010.
What to Eat
Rice and curry (12 different curries on a banana leaf, served at room temperature) is the national staple and extraordinary. Kottu roti — shredded flatbread stir-fried with egg, vegetables and spiced meat — is the street-food classic: order by the noise it makes at 10pm outside a roadside warung. Hoppers (egg-centred crispy bowls of fermented rice-flour batter) at breakfast. Fresh king coconut (thambili) everywhere. Watalappan — a Malay-influenced coconut custard — is the dessert of choice.
Visa & Entry
Most nationalities require an Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA) — apply at eta.gov.lk. Cost: USD 35 for most western passports. Processing: usually within hours, sometimes minutes. Valid for 30 days, single entry (extendable to 90 days in-country). Your passport must have at least 6 months validity. Nationals of some countries (Maldives, Singapore, Seychelles and others) receive free visas on arrival.
Photography Tips
Sigiriya: sunrise climb gives raking light on the rock face and mist in the forest below — priceless. Gal Vihara (Polonnaruwa): visit at 7am before tour groups arrive — the giant Buddhas glow gold in early light. Nine Arch Bridge: the 8:45am train from Ella passes — position yourself on the far side 20 minutes early. Yala leopard: a 400–500mm lens is essential. Kandy Perahera (July–Aug): an external tripod and a spot on the upper-floor balcony of a Dalada Veediya guesthouse for the elephant procession.
Accommodation Guide
Sigiriya: a jungle lodge near the rock gives access to sunrise before the day-trip crowds arrive. Kandy: a hill-view property on Rajapihilla Mawatha overlooking the lake is worth the small premium. Ella: compact guesthouses on the ridge above town; book early (only ~30 good rooms exist). Galle Fort: stay inside the fort — boutique hotels in colonial mansions are the defining experience. Mirissa: beachfront and cliff-top, 3★–5★. Colombo: Fort or Cinnamon Gardens for location.
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Traveller Reviews
What Our Travellers Say
"Climbing Sigiriya in the dark and watching the jungle below gradually lighten was one of the most extraordinary experiences of my life. Then the frescoes. Then the view from the top. I genuinely didn't expect it to be that moving. Tranceholidays arranged the early access and the guide who explained the full history of King Kashyapa — it made everything make sense."
"The train from Kandy to Ella — six hours sitting in an open doorway as the tea estates rolled past and the mist lifted over the valleys — was the single best day of our entire three-week trip. And the whale watching in Mirissa with a blue whale surfacing 50 metres from the boat was completely surreal. Sri Lanka delivered in a way we never anticipated."
"We saw leopards on three out of four Yala safaris. Three. The fourth morning we saw a mother elephant and calf crossing the track for fifteen minutes while we waited. The guide from Tranceholidays was exceptional — he knew every inch of that park. Sri Lanka is the greatest wildlife destination in Asia that nobody is talking about."
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Eight UNESCO sites. Twenty-six national parks. One thousand six hundred kilometres of coastline. And the world's oldest planted tree. Our Sri Lanka specialists will design your perfect itinerary — from the first sunrise on Sigiriya to the last blue whale off Mirissa.