Angkor Wat Sunrise Tour By E-Bike Experience With Breakfast Included

Angkor Wat at sunrise is one thing. Doing it on an e-bike makes it practical. This tour stacks the big sights into one smooth morning-to-late-day route, starting with a 4:40 am run out to the temple for the earliest light and then rolling through Ta Prohm and Bayon before you’re back near town. I also like how breakfast and small comfort touches are built in, so you’re not scrambling between stops.

My favorite parts are the pace and the small-group feel. You get the temple complex without the all-day walking grind in the heat, plus frequent water, cool towels, and fruit along the way. One thing to consider: the Angkor Wat entrance fee isn’t included (listed as $37), and other temple admissions aren’t included either—so your day will cost a bit more once you add tickets.

Key highlights worth packing your day around

Angkor Wat Sunrise Tour By E-Bike Experience With Breakfast Included - Key highlights worth packing your day around

  • 4:40 am departure so you’re at Angkor Wat early for sunrise timing
  • E-bike touring over long distances, cutting down the walking fatigue inside the complex area
  • Breakfast stop in a village setting, with Khmer noodle soup and palm cake mentioned in the menu
  • Ta Prohm’s original, root-overgrown look, seen on a guided route instead of random wandering
  • Angkor Thom + Bayon in one run, including the victory gate area and Bayon’s smiling stone faces
  • Max 10 travelers, which keeps the ride easy to manage and the guide’s attention more personal

Why the 4:40 am start is the real point of this tour

If you’ve only seen Angkor Wat on postcards, you’ll be shocked by how much the light matters. Sunrise changes the mood fast. The whole temple complex looks different when it’s still cool outside and the sky is waking up rather than blasting midday sun.

This tour is built around that timing. You depart at 4:40 am, with a tuk-tuk ride from Siem Reap to Angkor Wat taking about 20 minutes. That means you’re not spending your early morning stuck in traffic or trying to figure out routes in the dark. You also get around 1.5 hours at Angkor Wat after you arrive, which is enough time to find a good viewing spot and still move before your energy drops.

The tradeoff is obvious: it’s early. You’ll want to keep your evening relaxed so you don’t start the day half-asleep. Bring your patience too—sunrise crowds happen everywhere around Angkor at that hour, and everyone is trying to see the same light.

You can also read our reviews of more cycling tours in Siem Reap

E-bikes in Angkor: less walking, more seeing

Angkor Wat Sunrise Tour By E-Bike Experience With Breakfast Included - E-bikes in Angkor: less walking, more seeing
Angkor is massive. Even if you’re a confident walker, you’ll hit the point where every extra hour feels like it steals from the rest of the temples. This is where the e-bike matters.

You’re not just riding to get from A to B. You’re using the e-bike so you can spend more time actually looking at details—stone carvings, temple edges, and the way each ruin frames the next view. The ride style is also described as closer to a slow scooter than a traditional bicycle, and that’s a big deal if you’re a first-time rider or you don’t want to pedal.

Here’s what I think you’ll appreciate most:

  • You can cover ground without turning the day into a leg workout.
  • The route feels fluid, so you’re not constantly stopping to catch your breath.
  • You’re more likely to keep your eyes up and your camera ready, instead of thinking only about exhaustion.

A practical note: the tour still mixes rides and short temple visits. So even with e-bikes, you should expect walking on temple paths and uneven ground. The benefit is you’re walking less overall.

The included breakfast stop: what it adds to the day

Angkor Wat Sunrise Tour By E-Bike Experience With Breakfast Included - The included breakfast stop: what it adds to the day
Early mornings can make you cranky fast. This tour plugs a food break into the schedule, at a village stop after the sunrise segment.

At Srah Srang, you get a short break for a local breakfast. The menu includes items like Khmer noodle soup, plus traditional desserts such as palm cake. That’s a nice contrast to the temple-only rhythm. It’s also a chance to refuel before you head into Ta Prohm and then keep rolling through Angkor Thom and Bayon.

What makes this breakfast stop valuable isn’t just the food. It’s timing. If you eat later, you risk feeling sick from heat and humidity. Eating here helps you keep momentum, and it makes the ride phase afterward feel more comfortable.

Another win: seasonal fruits and fresh coconut show up as part of the included refreshments, along with a cool bottle of water and towels. That sounds minor, but after an early start, the cooling stuff helps you stay sharp instead of dragging.

Angkor Wat sunrise: how the time is structured

Angkor Wat Sunrise Tour By E-Bike Experience With Breakfast Included - Angkor Wat sunrise: how the time is structured
This is the crown moment. The tour gets you to Angkor Wat for sunrise with a tuk-tuk departure and an early arrival. Once there, you spend about 1 hour and 30 minutes, which is the right window.

Too short, and you rush the best light. Too long, and you start feeling the morning settle into the warmer part of the day while you’re still waiting for your group to move.

That time at Angkor Wat also gives you breathing room for a simple strategy:

  • Take a minute to re-check orientation (where you’ll enter from and where you want photos).
  • Then focus on the main view areas before moving deeper into the complex.
  • Keep some energy for the rest of the day—because you’ll ride out to more temples right after.

Admission note: Angkor Wat entrance fee is not included. The tour lists it as $37 per person. So if you’re budgeting, treat that as part of the real total, not an optional add-on.

Ta Prohm: seeing the roots without losing your day

Angkor Wat Sunrise Tour By E-Bike Experience With Breakfast Included - Ta Prohm: seeing the roots without losing your day
After sunrise and breakfast, you head to Ta Prohm, famous for its “left as found” look, including the giant tree roots that wrap around structures. This stop is built for people who want something different from the polished symmetry of the main temples.

You’ll spend about 1 hour at Ta Prohm. The benefit of having a guide here is that you don’t just bounce between photo spots. You learn what you’re looking at while you’re looking at it. And with an experienced English-speaking guide, you can ask quick questions and still keep the day on schedule.

The main drawback for Ta Prohm is also the nature of the site: uneven ground and root-heavy areas can slow you down. If you’re prone to slipping or you don’t like climbing around, take it slowly and use the moments when the group stops to regroup.

Also: Ta Prohm admission is listed as not included in the tour pricing details you provided. So you may need to pay temple tickets for this and other sites depending on what the day requires.

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Siem Reap

Angkor Thom by e-bike: victory gate energy

Angkor Wat Sunrise Tour By E-Bike Experience With Breakfast Included - Angkor Thom by e-bike: victory gate energy
Next comes Angkor Thom, and you ride through the victory gate area from the direction of Ta Prohm. This is a smart use of e-bike time: you can appreciate the scale of a major gateway without losing it to a long walk right after another temple visit.

The ride segment here is shorter—about 20 minutes—which means the pacing stays upbeat. You’re not stuck commuting for most of the day. Instead, you get a quick “big picture” moment and then roll into Bayon, which is where many people want their close-up time.

As a traveler, I like this part because it helps you connect the sites. Angkor isn’t just isolated temples. It’s a network and a layout, and moving through gates and transitions makes that clearer.

Bayon’s smiling faces: the photo moment with a time budget

Angkor Wat Sunrise Tour By E-Bike Experience With Breakfast Included - Bayon’s smiling faces: the photo moment with a time budget
Bayon is famous for its many carved faces, and it’s one of those places where you can keep looking longer than you planned. The tour gives you about 45 minutes, which is enough time to:

  • see the main face clusters,
  • walk the key viewing route,
  • and still feel ready to finish without rushing.

Bayon’s also a good place to slow down and notice patterns. The faces change depending on where you stand and how the light hits the stone. With a guide explaining what you’re seeing, you get more meaning out of the carvings rather than just collecting images.

Admission note: Bayon temple admission is also listed as not included, so expect the ticket portion to keep eating into your budget once you add it up.

Getting back to Siem Reap center without stress

Angkor Wat Sunrise Tour By E-Bike Experience With Breakfast Included - Getting back to Siem Reap center without stress
When the temple stops are done, the tour ends with a transfer back by tuk-tuk to the hotel area in Siem Reap center—about 40 minutes. That keeps the day simple. Instead of figuring out transport after a long morning, you close the loop with the same team.

This matters because Angkor days can be mentally heavy. After sunrise and multiple temple visits, your brain wants a clean ending: food planning, showering, and going back to real life without extra logistics.

The day duration is listed as 7 to 8 hours, which is a believable time window for early departure + multiple major temple stops. If you’re worried about being gone too long, this tour is still a compact “big hit” day compared with building a DIY route that can drag.

Price and entrance fees: is $98 good value?

The headline price is $98 per person. For this area, that’s not “cheap,” but it’s also not priced like a luxury private driver day. The value shows up in what’s included:

Included highlights you’ll actually use:

  • Professional English-speaking tour guide
  • Electric bike plus tuk-tuk rides
  • Breakfast
  • Cool bottle of water and towels
  • Seasonal fruits and fresh coconut

That’s a lot of daily support for one ticket. Where the price gets tricky is entrances. Angkor Wat admission is not included and is listed at $37 per person. Other temple admissions are also listed as not included for the stops beyond Srah Srang.

So I’d calculate it like this:

  • Base tour price covers guide + transport + e-bike + breakfast + comfort extras.
  • Your temple ticket total may add up beyond Angkor Wat.

If you want a simple day where someone sets the flow, provides bikes, and keeps you cool and fed, the $98 can feel fair. If you’re the type who already has temple tickets sorted and loves self-guided wandering, you might question the cost. For most people though, the time saved and fatigue avoided is the real bargain.

Small group size: why max 10 people makes a difference

This tour caps at 10 travelers. That isn’t just a number. It changes how the day feels.

Smaller groups mean:

  • less waiting at key moments,
  • easier communication with the guide,
  • and quicker adjustments if your group needs an extra stop for water or to catch up.

The reviews you shared also highlight the guide’s role in keeping the experience smooth, including consistent support like cold towels, water, and fruit. With a larger group, those “little helps” can get chaotic. With a small one, they stay controlled.

Who this tour suits best (and who might hesitate)

This is a great fit if:

  • you want sunrise at Angkor Wat but don’t want to spend half the day walking between sites,
  • you like guided context (so you’re not reading stone carvings from a distance),
  • you want comfort support during long outdoor hours: water, towels, fruit, coconut,
  • you’re okay with an early start.

You might hesitate if:

  • you strongly prefer total independence and are comfortable building your own route and managing entrances,
  • you dislike paying additional temple fees beyond Angkor Wat,
  • you’re very sensitive to early mornings.

Also consider that the “e-bike” style may feel more like a scooter than a pedal bicycle, and the day includes short walks at temple sites.

Should you book this Angkor Wat sunrise e-bike tour?

Book it if your goal is a high-impact Angkor day with less physical drain, and you want someone else to manage the timing and transitions. The early 4:40 am start plus the built-in breakfast and cooling extras make it feel designed for real bodies, not just eager calendars. I also like that you’re not forced into hours of heat-soaked walking to see multiple major temples.

Pass or compare if you already have temple tickets sorted and you’re happy to DIY with tuk-tuks or transport on your own schedule. In that case, you might prefer spending less on guided transport.

My practical take: if you want sunrise and you want Ta Prohm + Bayon without turning it into an exhausting march, this is a smart way to spend your one big day in Siem Reap.

FAQ

What time does the tour start?

The tour starts at 4:40 am.

Is pickup from my hotel included?

Pickup is offered, and the day begins with a tuk-tuk ride from your hotel area toward Angkor Wat.

What’s included in the $98 price?

The tour includes a professional English-speaking guide, electric bike and tuk-tuk rides, breakfast, cool bottle of water and towels, and seasonal fruits plus fresh coconut.

Are temple entrance fees included?

No. Angkor Wat admission is listed as not included ($37 per person). Srah Srang’s admission is included, while Ta Prohm, Angkor Thom, and Bayon admissions are listed as not included.

How long is the tour?

The duration is about 7 to 8 hours.

How many people are in the group?

The maximum group size is 10 travelers.

Is a mobile ticket used?

Yes, the tour includes a mobile ticket.

What should I eat during the breakfast stop?

Breakfast is a local Cambodian-style meal, including Khmer noodle soup and traditional desserts such as palm cake.

What happens if weather is bad?

This experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.

Not for you? Here's more nearby things to do in Siem Reap we have reviewed

Scroll to Top