The five lotus-bud towers of Angkor Wat silhouetted against a pink-and-gold dawn sky, mirrored in the reflecting pool in the foreground. Siem Reap, Cambodia.

Sunrise over the largest religious monument on Earth

Angkor Archaeological Park pass — the 12th-century Khmer wonder of Angkor Wat, the giant stone faces of the Bayon, and the strangler figs of Ta Prohm. Open-date pass: choose your own days, no fixed time slot.

See pass options
  • 12th c. Built under King Suryavarman II, around 1113–1150
  • 162.6 ha Angkor Wat — the largest religious monument in the world
  • 400 km² The Angkor park spans temples across a vast forest landscape
  • Open-date 1-day, 3-day or 7-day pass — choose your own days, no time slot

Choose your ticket

1-Day pass

One full day across the Angkor park — ideal for a focused first visit

€47

  • Park-wide entry for one calendar day — Angkor Wat, the Bayon, Ta Prohm and more
  • Sunrise entry included — be at Angkor Wat for the dawn over the towers
  • Digital QR pass, open-date — choose your day, no fixed time slot
  • Concierge route plan for a single well-paced day
  • 5-minute audio history sent before your visit
Reserve 1-day pass

7-Day pass

Seven days of entry within a one-month window — for the deep explorer

€82

  • Entry on any seven days within a one-month window — days need not be consecutive
  • Every corner of the park, plus the outlying temples and a relaxed pace
  • Sunrise entry included on every one of your days
  • Digital QR pass, open-date — no fixed time slot
  • We'll request a passport-style photo for each traveller after booking — a quick step the multi-day pass requires
  • 5-minute audio history sent before your visit
Reserve 7-day pass
4.9 from 83 verified travellers
Claire M.
Melbourne, Australia
“Standing at the reflecting pool as the sun came up behind the towers is something I'll never forget. We were glad we'd booked the 3-day pass — one day is not enough for a place this size, and the second and third days were calmer and just as extraordinary.”
April 2026
Stefan R.
Hamburg, Germany
“The Bayon faces in the late afternoon, with almost no one around, were the highlight for me — even more than Angkor Wat itself. Having an open-date pass meant we could go back when the light was right rather than racing a clock.”
March 2026
Yuki N.
Nagoya, Japan
“Ta Prohm with the giant tree roots swallowing the stone is exactly as magical as the photos promise. The concierge sorted the photo step for our multi-day pass painlessly and sent a sensible route so we weren't backtracking in the heat.”
February 2026

5-minute audio guide

Your Angkor 5-minute guide

Hand-written, narrated by a heritage host, sent to every customer the day before their visit. Five minutes that turns the postcard photo into a real story — the god-king who built the largest temple on Earth, the smiling faces of the Bayon, and the jungle that swallowed Ta Prohm.

Included with your booking — your full guide arrives with your ticket.Get your guide
  • Why King Suryavarman II built the largest religious monument in the world
  • How to read the bas-reliefs and the towers of Angkor Wat
  • The Bayon's 200-plus stone faces — who they really are
  • Ta Prohm and the strangler figs: nature reclaiming the stone

Included free with every ticket. No app, no download — plays in any browser.

About Angkor Wat

Angkor Wat is the largest religious monument in the world and the supreme achievement of Khmer architecture. It was built in the first half of the 12th century, around 1113 to 1150, for King Suryavarman II as a temple-mountain dedicated to the Hindu god Vishnu, and later transformed into a Buddhist site. Its five lotus-bud towers, raised on a vast moated platform and reflected in the pools at dawn, have become the emblem of Cambodia itself — the only building to appear on a national flag. The temple's galleries carry nearly a kilometre of carved bas-reliefs depicting Hindu epics, churning oceans and marching armies.

But Angkor Wat is only the beginning. The wider Angkor Archaeological Park spreads across a vast forested landscape that was once the heart of the Khmer Empire, home to hundreds of temples built between the 9th and 15th centuries. At its centre stands the walled royal city of Angkor Thom, entered through monumental gates and crowned by the Bayon — a temple-mountain studded with more than two hundred huge, serene stone faces gazing out in every direction. A short distance away, Ta Prohm has been left much as explorers found it, its corridors gripped by the roots of giant strangler figs and silk-cotton trees in one of the most photographed marriages of stone and jungle anywhere.

The park rewards time. A single day is enough for the essential trio — Angkor Wat at sunrise, the Bayon, and Ta Prohm — but three days is the sweet spot, opening up Angkor Thom in full, the river-of-a-thousand-lingas at Kbal Spean, and the exquisite pink-sandstone carving of Banteay Srei. The pass is open-dated: you choose your own days within its window and arrive when it suits you, with no fixed time slot to book. Angkor was inscribed by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site in 1992.

Practical information

Opening hours
The Angkor park is open daily, with most temples open roughly 07:30 to 17:30. Angkor Wat and Phnom Bakheng open earlier for sunrise (from around 05:00), and a few sites have their own hours. We confirm current times with your booking.
Address
Angkor Archaeological Park, Siem Reap Province, Cambodia (main entrance and ticket area on Apsara Road, north of Siem Reap town)
Getting there from Siem Reap town
The park begins about 6 km north of central Siem Reap — roughly 15–20 minutes by tuk-tuk or car. Most visitors hire a tuk-tuk or driver for the day to move between temples.
Getting around the park
Distances between temples are large and the heat is intense, so a tuk-tuk, car-and-driver or e-bike is essential. A private guide can be arranged for the history and the carvings. Cycling is possible for the central temples in cooler months.
Time needed
One day for the essential trio (Angkor Wat, the Bayon, Ta Prohm). Three days to see the park properly, including Angkor Thom in full and Banteay Srei. A week for the outlying temples at a relaxed pace.
Dress code
Angkor Wat and active religious areas require shoulders and knees to be covered for all visitors — bring a light scarf or wear longer sleeves and trousers/skirt. The upper level of Angkor Wat (Bakan) enforces this strictly.
Photography
Permitted throughout for personal use. The classic shot is the five towers mirrored in the northern reflecting pool at sunrise; the Bayon faces and Ta Prohm's tree roots are the other great images.
Food
Small restaurants and stalls are dotted through the park near the main temples, and central Siem Reap has a vast choice of dining a short ride away.

About our service

Angkor Tickets acts as a facilitator to help international visitors arrange entry passes for the Angkor Archaeological Park, which is managed by the Cambodian authorities. We do not resell passes — we provide a personalised booking and English-language support service, and our concierge service fee is included in the displayed price. For multi-day passes, the pass is personal and carries each traveller's photo, so we'll request a passport-style photo for each visitor after you book. For those who prefer to arrange entry directly, passes are sold via the operator's ticketing platform.

Frequently asked

Which Angkor pass should I choose — 1-day, 3-day or 7-day?

For most visitors the 3-day pass is the sweet spot: it lets you see Angkor Wat at sunrise, the Bayon, Ta Prohm and Angkor Thom without rushing, and add Banteay Srei and the outlying temples. A 1-day pass works for a focused first visit to the essential trio. The 7-day pass suits travellers who want to explore the whole park slowly, including the jungle and river temples. The 3-day and 7-day passes let you spread your days out, not just use them back to back.

Is the pass for a specific time slot?

No. The Angkor pass is open-dated — you choose your own days within the pass window and arrive during opening hours, with no fixed entry time. That includes sunrise entry, so you can be at Angkor Wat for dawn on whichever morning you pick.

Do my pass days have to be consecutive?

No. The 3-day pass gives you entry on any three days within a 10-day window, and the 7-day pass gives you any seven days within a one-month window. Your days do not need to be back to back, so you can rest, take a side trip, or wait for clear weather between temple days.

How long is each pass valid for?

The 1-day pass is for a single calendar day. The 3-day pass is valid across a 10-day window (use any three days within it). The 7-day pass is valid across a one-month window (use any seven days within it). The window starts from your first day of entry.

How do I see the sunrise at Angkor Wat?

Sunrise is the iconic Angkor experience. Your pass includes early entry, and temples like Angkor Wat open from around 05:00 for dawn. Arrive in the dark, settle by the northern reflecting pool to the left of the causeway for the classic mirrored-towers view, and be in place 30–45 minutes before sunrise on busy mornings. It is the most popular moment of the day, so an open-date pass lets you pick a clear morning.

Why does the multi-day pass need a photo of each traveller?

The Angkor multi-day pass is personal and carries each visitor's photo, which is checked at temple entrances to prevent passes being shared. Because of this, for the 3-day and 7-day passes we'll ask for a simple passport-style photo of each traveller after you book — it takes a moment and we handle the rest. The 1-day pass does not need this step.

What's the dress code at Angkor Wat?

Angkor Wat and active religious areas require shoulders and knees covered for everyone. The upper level of Angkor Wat (the Bakan sanctuary) enforces this strictly and may refuse entry to anyone in vests, short shorts or short skirts. Bring a light scarf or wear breathable long sleeves and trousers or a long skirt — it keeps you respectful and protects you from the sun.

Should I hire a tuk-tuk, a car or a guide?

A tuk-tuk for the day is the classic, affordable and breezy way to move between the central temples and is ideal for one to three days. A car-and-driver is more comfortable in heat or rain and better for the more distant temples like Banteay Srei. A private guide is not required for entry but transforms the visit — the bas-reliefs and history come alive. Many visitors combine a tuk-tuk with a guide for the key temples. We can help arrange transport and a guide alongside your pass.

How long do I need at Angkor?

One day covers the essential trio — Angkor Wat at sunrise, the Bayon in Angkor Thom, and Ta Prohm. Three days lets you see the park properly, including Angkor Thom in full, Banteay Srei and Pre Rup. A week opens up the outlying and jungle temples at a relaxed pace. Most first-time visitors find three days the right balance of depth and stamina in the heat.

How do I get to the park from Siem Reap?

The Angkor park begins about 6 km north of central Siem Reap, roughly 15–20 minutes by tuk-tuk or car. Siem Reap has an international airport with connections across Asia. Most visitors base in Siem Reap town and hire a tuk-tuk or driver each day to reach and move around the temples.

What are the must-see temples?

Angkor Wat itself, for its scale, towers and bas-reliefs; the Bayon, in the walled city of Angkor Thom, for its 200-plus giant stone faces; and Ta Prohm, the 'jungle temple' wrapped in strangler-fig roots. With more time, add Banteay Srei (exquisite pink-sandstone carving), Preah Khan, Ta Som, Pre Rup and the sunset hill of Phnom Bakheng.

Is Ta Prohm the temple from the films?

Yes — Ta Prohm, with its corridors gripped by the roots of giant strangler figs and silk-cotton trees, is the temple made globally famous by film and is one of the most photographed sites at Angkor. It has been deliberately left much as it was found, with the jungle still entwined in the stone, rather than fully cleared.

When is the best time of year to visit Angkor?

November to February is the most comfortable season — drier and a little cooler, though the most popular. March to May is very hot. The June–October wet season brings short heavy downpours but lush green landscapes, fuller moats and reflecting pools, and thinner crowds. Sunrise visibility depends on the morning, so an open-date pass that lets you pick a clear day is a real advantage in any season.

Can we change our dates?

Your pass is open-dated within its window, so for most visits you simply choose your own days and arrive during opening hours. If your plans change, reply to your confirmation email and our concierge team will help where we can.

Is Angkor a UNESCO World Heritage site?

Yes. Angkor was inscribed by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site in 1992, recognising one of the most important archaeological landscapes in Southeast Asia — the temples and hydraulic landscape of the Khmer Empire's capital from the 9th to the 15th century.

Is Angkor suitable for children and older visitors?

Yes, with planning. The temples are spread out and the heat is significant, so a car-and-driver, frequent water and shade breaks, and an early start help a great deal. Some temples involve steep stairs and uneven ancient stone — the upper level of Angkor Wat in particular — but the main galleries, the Bayon and Ta Prohm are manageable at a gentle pace. A 3-day pass lets families spread the visit out rather than tiring in a single long day.

Do I need to bring my passport to the temples?

Carry your passport or a copy as general travel ID in Cambodia, but at the temple gates the QR pass — which carries your photo on the multi-day version — is what's scanned and checked. We'll explain exactly what to have ready when we send your confirmation.