Boat races watched by millions, water fights in every street, candlelit pagodas and Apsara dance beneath Angkor's towers — time your trip to a Cambodian festival and the whole country becomes the experience.
At the Water Festival, 1–3 million people line the rivers of Phnom Penh to watch hundreds of longboats race — a spectacle unlike any sporting event on earth.
From street-wide water fights at Khmer New Year to the candlelit pagodas of Pchum Ben, Cambodia's festivals swing from pure fun to the profoundly moving.
Independence Day illuminations and the Water Festival fall two weeks apart in cool, dry weather — the single best window to combine festivals with sightseeing.
The festivals travellers plan an entire trip around.

Cambodia's biggest festival, marking the reversal of the Tonlé Sap's flow each November. For three days Phnom Penh fills as 1–3 million people line the riverbanks to watch hundreds of longboats — 40–80 rowers each, with painted naga prows — race in heats. After dark, illuminated boats glide past the Royal Palace and fireworks light the water.

The cultural soul of the Khmer calendar, marking the harvest's end across three days of public holiday. Streets burst into joyful water fights; village squares fill with folk games like Bos Angkunh and Chaol Chhoung; and at Angkor Sankranta, the temple grounds become a stage of Apsara dance, music and lantern light against the ancient towers.

A 15-day Buddhist festival honouring ancestors up to seven generations back, when the gates of the spirit world are believed to open. For two weeks, families arrive at pagodas before dawn with sticky-rice offerings; on the final day, Ben Thom, the whole country travels home. The most genuine, emotional window into Cambodia's spiritual heart.
Twelve festivals across the year — colour-coded by the kind of experience each one offers.
Hundreds of naga-prowed boats racing across a wide river.
Streets awash at Khmer New Year — cleansing the old year away.
Wien Tien — rivers of candlelight circling pagodas at dusk.
Bursting over the Royal Palace and reflected in the rivers.
Classical Khmer dancers performing beneath Angkor's towers.
Bean-throwing, tag and rope games on village temple grounds.
Khmer New Year staged inside Angkor — Apsara dance, music and lanterns against 12th-century towers. The closest thing to celebrating at a living temple anywhere in Asia.
Feb 12 & May 22 · NationwideMeak Bochea and Visak Bochea bring the Wien Tien candlelight procession — devotees circling the pagoda three times in silence, lotus and incense in hand.
May 5 · Phnom PenhRoyal Brahmins read the royal oxen's choices of rice, beans and water to predict the harvest — an ancient rite blending Hindu, Buddhist and Khmer royal tradition.
Mar & Sep · Angkor WatTwice a year the sunrise aligns with Angkor Wat's central tower — plus the Angkor Photo Festival, Cambodia Film Festival, Kep Crab Festival and Kratie River Festival.
Independence Day illuminations on the 9th, the Water Festival on the 23rd–25th, and cool, dry weather in between make November the most rewarding window of the year — two of the country's most spectacular celebrations in a single trip, with perfect sightseeing conditions either side. Book accommodation months ahead; every room in Phnom Penh fills.
Tell us whether you want the spectacle of the boat races, the joy of New Year water fights, or the quiet reverence of Pchum Ben — and our local specialists will build your trip around the right dates, the best vantage points and accommodation booked well ahead.