Discover Kampot

How Long Should You Stay in Kampot?

By Jason for Discover Kampot

How Long Should You Stay in Kampot?

Kampot is best known for its old river town: colonial-era shophouses, a quiet waterfront, and enough cafes and restaurants to make staying easy. But the real appeal is the countryside around it. Rice fields, limestone karsts, a river, a mountain, the coast nearby. Almost everything people come to see is a short trip out of town.

One or two nights works if you’re passing through, but it turns Kampot into a checklist. Three nights is enough to see the main sights without rushing. Four nights is better, and plenty of people only realize after they arrive that they wish they had planned more time here. To plan your itinerary details, check out our master list of places to visit and things to do in Kampot.


One or Two Days in Kampot

You’re in a rush. You have places to be, and Kampot’s not it. If you only have one full day, spend it hiring a tuk-tuk for the countryside circuit. Every driver knows the route: a pepper farm, the salt fields, and one of the cave temples. For the afternoon you can usually choose between Kep or kayaking through the Green Cathedral. If you get back in time, the sunset boat cruise to see the fireflies is worth it.

If you have a second morning, get up early for Bokor. Half a day on the mountain and you’ll be back in time for lunch and your bus out.

It works, but it is the compressed version of Kampot. You’ll see enough to know what you missed.

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Two to Three Days in Kampot

With two or three nights, you can do the same core sights without treating Kampot like a race. You have time to arrive, walk the town, and let the countryside take a full day instead of forcing it between bus times.

If you get in by midday, spend the afternoon settling in. Walk the riverfront, find the old bridge, the seahorse, the giant clock, and wander the old town. In the evening, join the Sunset Walking Tour. It turns a walk into a history lesson.

Day two is the Grand Tour. Tuk-tuk for the local knowledge and the comfort, scooter if you’re watching your budget. Pepper farms, salt fields, cave temples, with a choice of Kep or kayaking through the Green Cathedral for the afternoon.

Day three, get up early for Bokor. You’ll be back by early afternoon. From there: kayaking, a cooking class, or a lazy afternoon at the High Tide Dog Sanctuary on the river. In the evening, find a good spot for dinner and stay for the sunset.

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Four to Five Days in Kampot

Four or five nights is when you start getting to know Kampot instead of just passing through it. You can still do the main circuit, Bokor, and the river, but you also have time for the places that shorter stays usually cut: Kampong Trach, Rabbit Island, a proper countryside ride, or a slower day when the heat wins.

That extra time changes the choices. You can spend a proper day in Kampong Trach with its limestone cliffs, rice fields, rural villages, and water buffalo. You can go out to Koh Tonsay (Rabbit Island) and do nothing on a quiet beach. If you’re into countryside villages and rural life, the full-day immersive countryside bicycle tour is the one to book. And if cultural depth is part of what you’re looking for, a guided visit to Kampot’s Cham Muslim fishing communities is a genuine look at a community most visitors never see.

And instead of a quick photo stop at the salt fields, you have time for the half-day tour: visiting the communities, meeting the families, understanding what the projects there are actually doing.

If you’re into yoga, even four or five days may not feel like enough. A retreat can take up a full morning, afternoon, or day, and you still have the countryside, Bokor, the river, and dinner in town competing for the rest of your time.

With four or five evenings you’ll also get into the restaurant scene Kampot is quietly becoming known for. One night Khmer, another Italian, then Greek, then Indian. Unlike most tourist-town imitations, these places are owned and run by people who actually come from those countries.

When the heat gets to you: a swimming day on the river, the jungle waterfall pools, or the swimming cave in Kampong Trach, which is where locals actually go when they need to cool down. Or there’s always playing with the dogs at the High Tide Dog Sanctuary.

Further reading


A Week or More in Kampot

A week in Kampot is not about adding more sights. It is about having enough time to stop scheduling every day. Slow travellers end up staying longer than they planned. You’ll meet people who came for a few days a month ago, and remote workers with laptops are a regular sight in the riverside cafes.

At a week or more, Kampot starts to feel like part of your routine. You drop in on the local chess club. You play a few games with the billiards league. You try a yoga retreat, drop into the same cafe twice, and start recognizing people along the riverfront. There are also NGOs in the area with volunteering opportunities for those who want to put a week or two to use.

Leaving starts to feel like more effort than it’s worth.

Further reading

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