Angkor Wat Sunset Private Tour – 7 hour afternoon route through Ta Prohm, Bayon and Angkor Wat at Golden Hour

Angkor deserves better than a rushed, red-eyed morning where you never really wake up. The Angkor Sunset Private Tour gives you the same three temples every guidebook lists, but with a slower rhythm, a private car, a guide who’s yours alone, and a sky that puts on a show every single afternoon. Ta Prohm becomes atmospheric instead of crowded. Bayon’s faces catch shadow like they were carved for late light. Angkor Wat glows.

From: 20$

Angkor Wat Sunset Private Tour – 7 hour afternoon route through Ta Prohm, Bayon and Angkor Wat at Golden Hour

Tour Overview

The Angkor Sunset Private Tour is a 7-hour afternoon route through Ta Prohm, Bayon, and Angkor Wat, starting at 12:30 pm and ending around 7:30 pm. You get a private air-conditioned car, an English-speaking guide, and a plan built around softer light and thinner crowds. No 4 AM alarm, no shoulder-to-shoulder scramble at the reflection pool. If you want the same three iconic temples that sunrise groups fight over, but with room to breathe and better photos, this Angkor Sunset Private Tour was designed for you.

Key benefits

  1. Afternoon pickup so you sleep in and skip the 4 AM chaos.
  2. Golden hour timing at Angkor Wat when the stone turns amber.
  3. Private car and guide, so pace and photo stops belong to your group.
  4. Three headline temples in one relaxed loop, no rush.
  5. Slots perfectly into a 2 days in Siem Reap plan as your calmer second day.

Most travelers hear one story about Angkor Wat, and it starts with a 4 AM wake-up call. That story leaves out the tired eyes, the packed reflection pond, and the phones held above heads blocking every angle. This tour rewrites that story from the other end of the day. You start after lunch, when the sunrise groups have already gone back to their hotels for a nap, and you finish at Angkor Wat as the sun drops low and paints the towers in warm orange.

Essential Highlights for Your Angkor Sunset Private Tour

Here’s what makes this Angkor Sunset Private Tour stand out from the standard temple day. Each point below is a real, felt difference once you’re on the road.

Itinerary Details

This isn’t a stop-and-shoot bus tour. It’s a tight, three-temple loop built by people who’ve watched afternoon light hit these stones a thousand times. You’ll move in a smart order so heat drops as you go and the sky gets kinder to your camera with each stop.

Here’s where you’ll actually set foot:

  1. Ta Prohm, the temple wrapped in strangler fig and silk-cotton roots, made famous by Hollywood but far older than any film reel.
  2. Bayon Temple inside Angkor Thom, where hundreds of serene stone faces stare back at you from every tower.
  3. South Gate Bridge or Terrace of the Elephants (optional), a short pause for classic Angkor Thom postcard angles.
  4. Angkor Wat, the crown of the park, walked slowly through galleries and inner courtyards as afternoon slides into sunset.

Every stop happens in one private vehicle with one guide, so nothing gets lost between transfers. The day feels like one clean thread, not a rushed checklist.

The clock runs like this. Times shift a little with season and sunset, and your guide will flex them if your group wants more time somewhere.

  1. 12:30 pm, Hotel pickup and briefing. Your driver rolls up, your guide runs through the plan, checks your Angkor pass, and asks what you most want out of the day. Any special photo requests, mention them now.
  2. 1:00 pm to 2:30 pm, Ta Prohm. You walk the shaded corridors while afternoon sun cuts through the canopy in ribbons. Roots swallow doorways whole. The tik-tik-tik of cicadas fills the gaps between stones. Most sunrise crowds packed up hours ago.
  3. 2:45 pm to 4:00 pm, Bayon Temple and Angkor Thom. You pass through the South Gate, then climb into Bayon’s upper terrace where those famous faces watch you from every direction. If your group’s still fresh, you add a short stop at Terrace of the Elephants.
  4. 4:00 pm to 4:30 pm, Short break. A quick pause for cold coconut water, iced coffee, or fresh mango at a shaded stall near the park. This one’s out of your pocket, but it’s a small price for the reset before the main event.
  5. 4:45 pm to 7:00 pm, Angkor Wat for golden hour and sunset. You walk across the causeway when most day-trippers are heading out. The stone starts to warm in color as you move through the galleries. By 6 pm, the towers are lit like they’re plugged in. You finish near the west side or reflection pools as the sky turns pink.
  6. 7:00 pm to 7:30 pm, Drop-off at your hotel. You’re back in town before dinner, tired in a good way, with a phone full of shots you’ll actually keep.

Key Details

Duration

7 Hours

Tour Starts

12:30 PM

Tour Capacity

12 People Max

Tour Ends

19:30 PM >

Price Includes

Price Excludes

You get a private air conditioned car, an English speaking guide for your group only, hotel pickup at 1230 pm, and drop off by 730 pm

What You Will Do?

On the Angkor Sunset Private Tour, here’s what fills your afternoon:

  1. Ride in a private, air-conditioned car with a driver who knows every shortcut between temples.
  2. Walk Ta Prohm slowly with a guide who points out the exact spot where Angelina Jolie stood in Tomb Raider, plus a dozen carvings tour buses always miss.
  3. Climb Bayon’s tight staircases and stand eye-level with those enormous stone faces, hearing the story of Jayavarman VII in plain terms, not a lecture.
  4. Snap frames at Terrace of the Elephants or South Gate if the group’s up for it.
  5. Wander Angkor Wat’s inner courtyards during the softest hour of the day.
  6. Set up your camera or phone at sunset near the reflection pools without elbowing anyone.
  7. Ask questions freely, because you booked the whole guide, not a slice of one.

The Angkor Sunset Private Tour sells you time, light, and quiet, which are harder to buy at sunrise. Here’s the payoff, in plain terms:

  1. You skip the 4 AM alarm and still walk out with the same iconic Angkor Wat shots. Same temple, kinder hour.
  2. Ta Prohm feels almost private in the afternoon. You’ll hear your own footsteps on the flagstones.
  3. Bayon’s stone faces cast long, dramatic shadows after 3 pm that morning light flattens.
  4. Angkor Wat at 5:30 pm has maybe a fifth of the sunrise crowd, sometimes less. Wide shots without human heads become possible again.
  5. Your group controls the schedule. Add ten minutes at Ta Prohm if the light’s perfect, skip Terrace of the Elephants if kids are wilting. It’s your day.
  6. It fits like a puzzle piece into a 2 days in Siem Reap trip. Sunrise on day one, sunset on day two, and you’ve seen the park at both edges of the light spectrum.

Accessibility

  • Not wheelchair accessible
  • If you have questions about accessibility, we’d be happy to help

Additional information

  • A confirmation will be received at the time of booking.
  • Not recommended for pregnant travelers.
  • No heart problems or other serious medical conditions.
  • Travelers should have a moderate physical fitness level.
  • This experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date but not a full refund.
  • This is a private tour/activity. Other travelers will not accompany you.

Don't Forget to Bring

Pack light, but bring the right stuff. Here’s the short kit list.

  1. Your Angkor Pass (paper or a clear phone photo of it).
  2. Comfortable closed-toe walking shoes. Ta Prohm’s flagstones are uneven.
  3. Light clothing that covers shoulders and knees, ideally breathable cotton or linen.
  4. Sunscreen, sunglasses, and a hat with a real brim.
  5. A small backpack for water refills, snacks, and a thin rain shell in the wet season.
  6. Camera or phone with extra battery and storage. You’ll take more shots than you plan to.
  7. Some small Cambodian riel or US dollars for drinks, snacks, and tips.
  8. A refillable water bottle if you want to reduce plastic waste.

A short list of things worth knowing before you book.

  1. You must buy your Angkor Pass before the tour starts. Passes are sold only at the official Angkor Enterprise ticket office on Apsara Road. Your guide can point you there, but the pass cost stays on you.
  2. Dress code applies at every temple. Shoulders and knees covered, no exceptions at Angkor Wat’s upper level. Bring a light scarf if you’re wearing a tank top.
  3. The tour runs in most weather. In heavy monsoon rain (roughly June to October), your guide may shift time between stops for safety and dry-ish walkways.
  4. Sunset time swings across the year. In December you’re wrapping by 6:15 pm, in June closer to 7:00 pm. End time flexes with it.
  5. Route can be softened for older travelers, kids, or reduced mobility. Just mention needs at booking.
  6. This is a private tour, so the price is per group of up to a set number, not per head.
  7. Cambodian temples are working cultural sites. Please, no climbing on restricted stones, no touching carvings, and no drones.

Cancellation policy

For a full refund, cancel at least 72 hours in advance of the start date of the experience.

Help

Please contact us if you have any questions about this excursion or need assistance scheduling it.

Call the number below or reach us via WhatsApp (+855) 78 5555 18 / 98 5555 18.

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