✦ WHY VISIT MYANMAR?
▶ The Last Great Unspoiled Destination in Southeast Asia
Myanmar has retained the raw authenticity that Thailand, Vietnam and Cambodia lost decades ago. Ancient temples stand unguarded in open fields. Village life unfolds at its own unhurried rhythm. And the beaches — above all Ngwesaung — remain blissfully free from the resort overdevelopment that has transformed much of the region’s coastline.
▶ A Civilisation of Gold, Faith and Living Tradition
Over 89% of Myanmar’s population practises Theravada Buddhism in its most vivid, living form. Monks collect alms at dawn. Pilgrims apply gold leaf to sacred Buddha images. Temple bells ring across highland valleys. This is not cultural tourism — it is culture itself, simply continuing as it always has.
▶ Bagan: The Greatest Temple Complex on Earth
With over 2,000 Buddhist monuments spread across a 40 sq km plain, Bagan is arguably Asia’s single most overwhelming archaeological site. Unlike Angkor, you can explore most of it alone, on a bicycle, with barely another visitor in sight. Add a sunrise balloon flight and it becomes the travel experience of a lifetime.
▶ Inle Lake: A World Built on Water
Inle Lake is unlike any place on earth. The entire Intha community lives, farms, fishes and worships on the water. Floating vegetable gardens, stilted monasteries, one-legged rowing fishermen and lotus-fibre weaving create a scene of incomparable beauty. Combined with the cool highland air and the vineyards of Kalaw, this is Myanmar at its most magical.
▶ Ngwesaung: Myanmar’s Finest Undiscovered Beach
While tourists crowd Ngapali, those in the know head to Ngwesaung — 20 kilometres of pristine white sand on the Bay of Bengal, with warm clear water, spectacular sunsets and a fraction of the visitors. Several excellent resorts from comfortable to luxury offer a perfect final reward after days of cultural immersion.
✦ TRIP OVERVIEW
Distances and driving times are approximate and may vary with road conditions, stops and traffic.
| Day | Route | Km | Drive | Overnight |
| 1 | Yangon Arrival | – | – | Yangon |
| 2 | Yangon → Mandalay | ~620 km | ~9–10 hrs | Mandalay |
| 3 | Mandalay → Amarapura → Mandalay | ~30 km | ~1–2 hrs loop | Mandalay |
| 4 | Mandalay → Bagan | ~185 km | ~4–5 hrs | Bagan |
| 5 | Bagan Excursion + Sunset Boat Cruise | ~50 km | ~2 hrs + boat | Bagan |
| 6 | Bagan → Kalaw → Inle Lake + Winery | ~255 km | ~5–6 hrs | Inle Lake |
| 7 | Inle Lake → Indein → Inle Lake | Boat | ~4 hrs boat | Inle Lake |
| 8 | Inle Lake → Yangon | ~620 km | ~9–10 hrs | Yangon |
| 9 | Yangon → Ngwesaung Beach | ~165 km | ~3.5–4 hrs | Ngwesaung Beach |
| 10 | Leisure at Ngwesaung Beach | – | – | Ngwesaung Beach |
| 11 | Leisure at Ngwesaung Beach | – | – | Ngwesaung Beach |
| 12 | Ngwesaung Beach → Yangon Departure | ~165 km | ~3.5–4 hrs | – |
* Total driving distance by private car: approx. 1,915 km | Total trip duration: 12 Days / 11 Nights
* Days 2 & 8 are full long-distance driving days (~620 km each). Early departure (6:00–7:00 am) recommended for both.
Highlights
- Marvel at the Shwedagon Pagoda in Yangon — the most sacred Buddhist monument in Myanmar, plated with 27 metric tonnes of solid gold
- Cross Myanmar's heartland on a grand overland drive from Yangon to Mandalay — through ancient towns, temple spires and the vast Irrawaddy River basin
- Explore Mandalay and Amarapura: the last royal palace, the world's longest teak bridge (U Bein), golden hilltop pagodas and master artisan workshops
- Discover the ancient capital of Inwa by horse cart and boat, and the sacred Sagaing Hill en route to Bagan
- Witness 2,000 temples spread across the Bagan plain — one of Asia's most magnificent archaeological landscapes
- Enjoy a magical sunset Irrawaddy River boat cruise in Bagan — golden temples glowing in the last light from the water
- Optional hot air balloon flight at dawn over Bagan — a breathtaking once-in-a-lifetime experience (Oct–Mar)
- Wind through the cool pine hills of Kalaw and visit the Inle Lake Myanmar Vineyard for sunset wine tasting
- Cruise by private motorboat on Inle Lake — floating gardens, leg-rowing fishermen, silkweavers and stilted temples
- Explore the ancient stupa city of Indein — hundreds of crumbling 11th–18th century temples in a remote jungle setting
- Drive to Ngwesaung Beach — one of Myanmar's finest and least-discovered beaches: 20 km of white sand, warm turquoise water and total serenity
- Three nights of pure beach leisure — swimming, seafood, sunsets and the extraordinary peace of Myanmar's Irrawaddy Delta coast
✦ DAY-BY-DAY ITINERARY
Welcome to the Golden Land
🚗 Driving: – | 📍 Distance: –
Your private English-speaking driver-guide meets you at Yangon International Airport with a personalised welcome sign and transfers you comfortably to your hotel. Freshen up and begin absorbing the extraordinary energy of Myanmar's largest and most vibrant city.
Afternoon — City Orientation
- Sule Pagoda — a 2,000-year-old stupa standing at the very heart of Yangon's colonial downtown grid, used by the British as the navigational centre of their 19th-century urban plan. An immediate and powerful introduction to Myanmar's living Buddhist culture
- Downtown Colonial Quarter — stroll along Pansodan and Merchant Streets past one of the finest collections of colonial architecture in Asia: the High Court, Strand Hotel, Customs House and General Post Office — extraordinary, crumbling and unique
- Bogyoke Aung San Market (Scott Market) — the city's iconic covered market with hundreds of stalls selling gems, jade, lacquerware, textiles and Burmese crafts. An ideal first taste of Myanmar's material culture and a perfect place to begin collecting memories
- Chinatown and Mahabandoola Garden — vibrant street life, local food stalls and the energy of a city that feels genuinely alive and unperformed
Evening — Shwedagon Pagoda
No arrival in Yangon is complete without a first evening at Shwedagon Pagoda — the most sacred Buddhist site in Myanmar and one of the most overwhelming religious monuments on earth. The 98-metre golden stupa is plated with 27 metric tonnes of solid gold and set with thousands of diamonds and rubies. Illuminated at night against the tropical sky, it is simply staggering. Allow 1.5–2 hours.
Overnight: Yangon
The Grand Crossing — From the Delta to the Royal Capital
🚗 Driving: ~9–10 hrs | 📍 Distance: ~620 km
Early departure after breakfast on the Yangon–Mandalay Expressway for the great overland crossing to Myanmar's royal heart. This epic full-day drive traverses the agricultural lowlands of the Bago Division, the purpose-built capital Naypyidaw and the broad Irrawaddy River basin — a fascinating cross-section of the country's diverse geography and daily life.
En Route Stops
- Naypyidaw (optional drive-through, ~3.5 hrs from Yangon) — Myanmar's extraordinary purpose-built capital city offers a surreal spectacle: 20-lane highways with barely a vehicle, a scale-replica Shwedagon Pagoda, and government ministries the size of small towns. A brief stop makes for one of the most genuinely unique sights in Southeast Asia
- Roadside lunch in central Myanmar — experience authentic local cuisine at a roadside restaurant in one of the market towns along the expressway. The central plains are renowned for excellent Shan noodles, mohinga and grilled dishes (lunch at own account)
- Irrawaddy River viewpoints — as you approach Mandalay, the great river appears: wide, amber and majestic in the afternoon light
Evening Arrival in Mandalay
- Mandalay Hill sunset — if arrival allows, drive up Mandalay Hill (236 m) for a sweeping panoramic view across the city, the palace moat, the Irrawaddy River and the distant Shan Hills — one of Myanmar's finest vistas
- Zegyo Market — the largest market in Upper Myanmar, a labyrinth of local produce, gemstones, lacquerware, textiles and street food worth exploring on arrival
Overnight: Mandalay
Royal Palaces, Teak Wonders and the World's Longest Wooden Bridge
🚗 Driving: ~30 km loop | 📍 Distance: ~1–2 hrs
A full, richly rewarding day exploring Mandalay City and the nearby ancient royal capital of Amarapura — just 15 minutes by private car. The highlights of both destinations can be covered comfortably in one day at your own pace.
Morning — Mandalay City Highlights
- Mahagandayon Monastery — arrive before 10 am for the famous procession of over 1,000 monks collecting morning alms — a profoundly moving daily spectacle of disciplined monastic life
- Mandalay Palace — the last royal palace of the Konbaung Dynasty, surrounded by a 3 km-wide moat and pink brick walls. Climb the central watchtower for commanding views across the palace compound and the city skyline
- Kuthodaw Pagoda — the 'World's Largest Book': 729 marble slabs each inscribed with a page of Buddhist scripture, housed in 729 individual miniature temples arranged in immaculate grounds
- Shwenandaw Monastery — the only surviving original structure from the 19th-century Royal Palace, entirely built in gilded teak with breathtaking woodcarvings of celestial scenes and Jataka tales
- Mahamuni Pagoda — one of Myanmar's most revered Buddha images, its surface thickly encrusted with gold leaf applied by devotees over centuries. The dawn ceremony here is particularly atmospheric
Afternoon — Amarapura
- U Bein Bridge — Myanmar's most iconic image: a 200-year-old, 1.2 km teak bridge built from 1,086 salvaged palace posts, spanning Taungthaman Lake. Walk the full length at your own pace, watching monks, schoolchildren and fishermen cross. The sunset light here is extraordinarily beautiful — one of the classic golden-hour sights of Southeast Asia
- Boat under U Bein Bridge — take a small rowing boat underneath the bridge for the classic low-level photograph of the teak pillars stretching into the distance — a wonderfully peaceful 15-minute excursion
- Mahagandayon Monastery (afternoon return) — the monastery is meditative and open for respectful visits throughout the afternoon
Late Afternoon — Mandalay Craft Quarter
- Silk weaving on 26th Street — intricate Mandalay silk created on antique wooden hand looms
- Gold leaf beating workshops — observe the ancient craft of hand-pounding gold into sheets thinner than tissue paper
- Marble Buddha carving — an entire street of workshops turning white Sagyin marble into Buddhas of every scale
Overnight: Mandalay
Ancient Kingdoms En Route to the Plain of Temples
🚗 Driving: ~4–5 hrs | 📍 Distance: ~185 km
After breakfast depart Mandalay heading southwest through the Irrawaddy River valley to Bagan. En route, explore two of Myanmar's most captivating ancient royal sites before arriving at the great temple plain in the afternoon.
En Route — Inwa (Ava Ancient City)
- Cross to Inwa island by a short boat ferry, then explore the ruins of this former Burmese capital (400+ years of royal history) by horse cart: the atmospheric leaning Nanmyin Watch Tower, the beautifully weathered Maha Aungmye Bonzan brick monastery and the elegant teak Bagaya Monastery with its extraordinary carved interior. Allow 1.5 hours
En Route — Sagaing Hill
- A ridge adorned with over 500 white-and-gold pagodas and 90 monasteries, home to thousands of monks and nuns. The panoramic view from Soon U Ponya Shin Pagoda across the great bend of the Irrawaddy River is one of the most serene and beautiful in all of Myanmar
Arrival in Bagan
Arrive in Bagan by early to mid-afternoon. Check in, then take a first orientation drive across the temple plain as the sun begins its descent. The landscape of 2,000 ancient temples spreading across a vast plain is immediately overwhelming in scale and beauty. Make your way to Shwesandaw Pagoda or an approved elevated viewpoint for a first-evening sunset — an experience that never loses its power no matter how many times it is witnessed.
Overnight: Bagan
Temples at Dawn, the River at Dusk — Bagan's Greatest Day
🚗 Driving: ~50 km + boat | 📍 Distance: ~2 hrs + 2 hrs boat
✈ OPTIONAL: Hot Air Balloon Over Bagan (October–March only | Approx. USD 320–380/person | Advance booking essential)
Rise before dawn for an optional hot air balloon flight over the Bagan plain — watching temples emerge from the morning mist as the sun rises is unquestionably one of Asia's supreme travel experiences. Flights are 45–60 minutes and include a champagne landing breakfast.
Morning — Architectural Masterpieces
- Ananda Temple (1105 AD) — the finest and best-preserved temple in Bagan, built by King Kyanzittha in the Mon style. Four 9.5-metre standing Buddhas face the cardinal directions in a luminous, multi-vaulted interior. The whitewashed exterior crowned by a gilded spire is the most beautiful silhouette on the Bagan plain
- Thatbyinnyu Temple (1144 AD) — at 61 metres, the tallest structure in Bagan, built by King Alaungsithu. Its massive two-tiered form conveys the extraordinary ambition of the Pagan Empire at its height
- Dhammayangyi Temple (1167 AD) — the widest and most imposing temple in Bagan. Famous for its legendary brickwork: so precisely laid that not even a pin can penetrate between the bricks
- Sulamani Temple (1183 AD) — the 'Crowning Jewel', beautifully proportioned, with original frescoes still visible on the interior walls
- Htilominlo Temple (1218 AD) — three storeys of ornate plasterwork carvings, with traces of original painting and a lofty interior filled with atmospheric half-light
Afternoon — Hidden Gems and the Artisan Quarter
- Minnanthu Village Temples — venture southeast of the main tourist zone to the scattered, atmospheric ruins among farmland and village life, with virtually no other visitors. Some of Bagan's finest original murals are found in these lesser-known temples
- Shwezigon Pagoda — the prototype for all Myanmar's bell-shaped stupas, located in Nyaung U, enshrining bones of the Lord Buddha. A major pilgrimage site, it comes alive with vendors and devotees
- Nyaung U Market — Bagan's most authentic local market: an excellent stop for lacquerware, sand paintings, wooden puppets and locally produced Bagan palm wine
- Lacquerware workshop visit — Bagan is the lacquerware capital of Myanmar. Watch artisans create the distinctive black-and-gold ware using techniques unchanged for centuries
Evening — Irrawaddy River Sunset Boat Cruise
The crowning experience of your time in Bagan: a private motorboat cruise on the Irrawaddy River at sunset. As the sun descends over the western bank, the great plain of temples glows gold, amber and crimson behind you. The silhouettes of stupas and spires reflected in the broad, slow river create a scene of almost unreal beauty. The boat cruise typically lasts 60–90 minutes and includes refreshments on board. This is Bagan at its most sublime and romantic.
Overnight: Bagan
Highland Tea Hills, the Hill Station Town and a Lakeside Toast
🚗 Driving: ~5–6 hrs | 📍 Distance: ~255 km
Depart Bagan after breakfast heading east, climbing steadily from the hot arid plains into the cool pine-covered highlands of the Shan Plateau. Today's drive is one of the most scenically varied of the journey — the landscape transforms dramatically with every hour of ascent.
Midday — Kalaw Hill Station
- Kalaw town — a wonderfully quirky British hill station at 1,320 metres elevation, where Victorian bungalows, Nepalese Gurkha temples, Indian mosques and Shan Buddhist pagodas coexist in perfect harmony. The cool mountain air after the Bagan heat is immediately refreshing
- Aung Chan Tha Zedi Pagoda — a hilltop pagoda above the town with sweeping views over pine forests, tea plantations and the rolling Shan Hills — a perfect photo stop and peaceful rest
- Kalaw Morning Market — pick up locally grown highland tea, roasted peanuts, dried mushrooms, lotus seeds and Shan snacks. The market reflects Kalaw's exceptional ethnic diversity: Shan, Danu, Pa-O, Palaung and Bamar traders all present
Afternoon — Descent to Inle Lake
From Kalaw the road descends through terraced hillsides growing tea, sunflowers and tomatoes, through Pa-O and Danu minority villages where traditional dress and customs are vibrantly alive, to the Inle Lake basin. A short motorboat ride takes you to your over-water or lakeside hotel as the afternoon light plays across the lake.
Late Afternoon — Myanmar Vineyard Visit
One of the most unexpected pleasures of the Inle Lake region: a visit to Myanmar Vineyard, perched on the hillside above the western shore. Founded by a Swiss winemaker, the vineyard now produces a range of red, white, rosé and sparkling wines from local Shan grapes. Enjoy a guided tasting session on the terrace as the sun sets over the lake — the combination of good wine, extraordinary scenery and the cool highland air makes for a genuinely memorable early evening.
- Wine tasting session on the lakeside terrace (own account — approximately USD 5–15 per person for a tasting flight)
- Vineyard tour available — see the production process from grape to bottle
- The terrace view of Inle Lake at golden hour is outstanding and perfect for photography
Overnight: Inle Lake
Floating Gardens, Stilted Temples and the Ancient Stupa City
🚗 Driving: Boat | 📍 Distance: ~4–5 hrs boat
A full day by private motorboat on one of the most hauntingly beautiful lakes in Asia — an unhurried journey through the floating world of the Intha people, ending at the remote ancient stupa city of Indein.
Morning — The Living Wonders of Inle Lake
- Intha leg-rowing fishermen — the Intha's unique technique of balancing on one leg on the stern of a canoe while rowing with the other is one of Myanmar's most iconic images. Early morning is the best time, with mist rising from the lake and mountains as a backdrop
- Floating gardens (Kyun Kan) — rectangular plots of water hyacinth, lake sediment and compost anchored to the lake bed, producing tomatoes, cucumbers, flowers and vegetables year-round. An ingenious agricultural system visible nowhere else on earth
- Phaung Daw Oo Pagoda — the holiest temple on Inle Lake, housing five golden Buddha images so heavily coated in gold leaf over the centuries that they have become abstract spherical forms
- Nga Phe Kyaung Monastery — a beautiful 200-year-old wooden monastery on stilts over the lake, housing an exceptional collection of antique Buddha images in Shan, Inle and Danu regional styles
- Inn Paw Khon Weaving Village — silk and lotus-fibre textile production on traditional handlooms. The lotus weaving is unique to Inle Lake: fibres are extracted from lotus stems to produce an exceptionally fine, silky fabric — among the most expensive textiles in the world
Afternoon — Indein: The Forgotten Stupa City
- Journey by motorboat through increasingly narrow, flower-lined canals into the remote Indein wetlands — the landscape gradually becoming wilder and more beautiful as you approach
- Shwe Inn Dain Pagoda complex — a hillside covered with hundreds of ancient stupas dating from the 11th to the 18th centuries, many overgrown with fig trees and wildflowers, creating an atmosphere of extraordinary remoteness and mystery. A long covered walkway of Pa-O craft stalls winds uphill to the main stupa field. Allow at least one hour here — it is one of the most magical places in Myanmar
- Indein Village — a traditional Pa-O community at the canal's edge where daily life continues at an ancient pace among teak stilted houses
Overnight: Inle Lake
The Grand Return — Shan Hills to the Golden City
🚗 Driving: ~9–10 hrs | 📍 Distance: ~620 km
An early morning on the lake before the long scenic drive back to Yangon. This is the day's final, unhurried farewell to Myanmar's extraordinary interior — a richly rewarding overland journey through highland landscapes, central plains and the Bago lowlands.
Early Morning — Final Lake Moments
- Sunrise boat ride — the most peaceful hour of the entire journey: mirror-still water, mist rising over the mountains, the silhouettes of fishermen and the calls of lake birds
- Nyaung Shwe Morning Market — a vibrant local market where Pa-O, Intha, Shan and Danu people trade produce, textiles and livestock. One of the most authentic markets in Myanmar
Morning Drive — Shan Hills Descent
- Taunggyi (Shan State capital) — pass through or stop for tea in this busy highland city. The Taunggyi market is excellent for Shan tea, dried fruit and local crafts
- Shan Plateau panoramas — the long descent from the plateau via Thazi offers sweeping views across the central Myanmar plains stretching to the horizon
Afternoon — Through the Central Plains
- Lunch at Meiktila or Thazi — authentic local roadside restaurants with excellent Burmese food at very low prices (own account). Meiktila Lake is a pleasant stretch stop
- The final expressway section passes through the Bago lowlands — paddy fields, golden stupa tops and the gradual build of Yangon's distant skyline
Evening Arrival in Yangon
- Arrive approximately 6:00–7:00 pm. Check in and freshen up — tomorrow morning you head to the beach
- Light dinner in the colonial quarter or a rooftop restaurant overlooking the illuminated Shwedagon (own account)
Overnight: Yangon
From the Golden City to the Turquoise Shore
🚗 Driving: ~3.5–4 hrs | 📍 Distance: ~165 km
After breakfast, depart Yangon heading west through the lush Irrawaddy Delta region — one of Myanmar's most fertile and scenic agricultural landscapes. Cross the Pathein River and continue to Ngwesaung Beach on the Bay of Bengal: one of the finest and least-developed beaches in all of Southeast Asia.
The Drive to Ngwesaung
- The route west from Yangon through the Irrawaddy Delta passes through a completely different landscape to the dry interior: dense tropical vegetation, river crossings, egret-filled paddies and fishing villages along brackish waterways
- Pathein — Myanmar's 'City of Parasols', famous across the country for its hand-painted traditional umbrellas. A brief stop to browse the workshops is highly recommended. Pathein's Shwemokhtaw Pagoda is also a remarkable golden stupa worth a visit
- The final stretch to Ngwesaung is through coastal palm groves and fishing communities — the air changing from humid heat to the fresh salt breeze of the Bay of Bengal
Arrival at Ngwesaung Beach
Arrive at Ngwesaung by early afternoon — three perfect days of beach leisure begin here. Check in to your resort and spend the rest of the day acclimatising to paradise: swimming in the warm, clear turquoise water, walking the long white sand beach, watching fishing boats return at sunset and enjoying freshly caught seafood at your resort restaurant (own account).
Ngwesaung Beach at a glance: 20 km of pristine white sand · warm, calm Bay of Bengal waters · minimal tourist development · spectacular sunsets · excellent fresh seafood · no jet skis, no crowds, no party scene — just extraordinary natural beauty and genuine peace.
Overnight: Ngwesaung Beach
A Day of Pure Sea, Sand and Silence
🚗 Driving: – | 📍 Distance: –
A completely free day at Ngwesaung Beach — no schedule, no transfers, no temples. Simply rest, recharge and enjoy one of Myanmar's most beautiful natural environments.
Suggested Activities (all optional, own account)
- Morning swim — Ngwesaung's water is warmest and calmest in the mornings. The beach is rarely crowded even in peak season, giving you the sense of a private stretch of coast
- Beach walk — walk north or south along the full length of the beach at sunrise or sunset for extraordinary light and views. Local fishing communities at the northern and southern ends of the beach make for fascinating brief encounters
- Fishing boat trip — arrange through your resort to join a local fishing family for an early morning boat trip and watch traditional coastal fishing methods in action
- Kayaking — several resorts offer kayaking along the coast or into the mangrove creeks behind the beach. The mangroves are home to kingfishers, herons and occasional monitor lizards
- Massage and spa — most 4-star and 5-star resorts have spa facilities offering traditional Burmese and Thai-style massages at excellent prices
- Village walk — take a walk into the small fishing village behind the beach to see daily life, visit the local market and interact with the friendly Rakhine and Bamar fishing families
- Sunset from the beach — Ngwesaung's sunsets over the Bay of Bengal are spectacular and long. Bring a cold drink, find a quiet spot on the sand and watch
- Fresh seafood dinner at your resort or a local beachside restaurant — Ngwesaung's lobster, prawns and fish, caught the same day, are exceptional (own account)
Overnight: Ngwesaung Beach
Your Second Day of Sea, Sky and Complete Freedom
🚗 Driving: – | 📍 Distance: –
A second full free day at Ngwesaung Beach — more of everything you loved yesterday, or something completely new.
Further Suggestions for Day 11
- Day trip to Chaungtha Beach — a sister beach approximately 45 minutes north of Ngwesaung, more lively and with good local restaurants. Worth a comparison visit by car (arrange through the hotel)
- Pathein day trip — if you would like a cultural half-day, the 'Umbrella City' of Pathein is 1.5 hours away and offers the famous parasol workshops, a historic pagoda and a lively riverside market
- Stand-up paddleboarding or snorkelling — available at some resorts in the calmer morning waters
- Beach bonfire evening — some resorts can arrange a private beach bonfire at sunset with fresh seafood BBQ — an outstanding final night experience
- Photography — the combination of fishing boats, palm trees, golden hour light and an empty white beach makes Ngwesaung an extraordinary photography location at any time of day
Overnight: Ngwesaung Beach
Farewell to the Bay of Bengal — Until We Return
🚗 Driving: ~3.5–4 hrs | 📍 Distance: ~165 km
After a final morning swim and leisurely breakfast, check out and depart Ngwesaung Beach for the drive back to Yangon. Your private car will deliver you to Yangon International Airport in good time for your departure flight. You leave Myanmar with memories spanning the full spectrum of the country's extraordinary gifts: golden temples, ancient ruins, misty mountain lakes and a pristine, unhurried beach that most of the world has yet to discover.
En Route — Optional Pathein Stop
If your flight timing allows, stop in Pathein for a farewell visit to the famous parasol-making workshops, a last taste of Pathein halawa (a famous local sweet) and a walk along the Pathein River — a perfectly gentle conclusion to a grand Myanmar adventure.
~ End of Tour — Thank You for Travelling with Us ~
Includes/Excludes
Cost Includes
- 11 nights accommodation (twin/double) at chosen category — 3★, 4★ or 5★ — daily breakfast included
- Private air-conditioned car/van: Toyota Corolla (1–2 pax) or
- Toyota HiAce (3–6 pax)
- English-speaking driver-guide throughout all 12 days
- All fuel, highway tolls, bridge fees and parking
- All airport, hotel and inter-city transfers as per itinerary
- Private motorboat on Inle Lake (Days 7 & 8 morning)
- Private sunset boat cruise on the Irrawaddy River in Bagan (Day 5)
- Inwa Ancient City boat ferry and horse-cart (Day 4)
- All entrance fees to temples, pagodas and sites in itinerary
- Complimentary bottled water in vehicle daily
- All applicable taxes and service charges
- 24/7 on-trip support from local operations team
Cost Excludes
- International airfare to/from Yangon
- Lunch and dinner throughout the tour
- Myanmar e-Visa fee (USD 50/person — www.evisa.moip.gov.mm)
- Optional Hot Air Balloon over Bagan (~USD 320–380/person, Oct–Mar)
- Myanmar Vineyard wine tasting, Inle Lake (approx. USD 5–15/person)
- Pathein parasol workshop donations / purchases
- Water sports, kayaking & activities at Ngwesaung Beach
- Tips & gratuities (suggested USD 5–10/day/group for guide)
- Travel insurance incl. medical evacuation (strongly advised)
- Personal expenses: laundry, minibar, room service, calls
- Camera/video fees at certain pagodas and museums
- Any services not listed under 'Services Included'
Frequently Asked Questions
General
Yes. Most nationalities require a visa. The Myanmar e-Visa (Tourist) costs USD 50 per person and is available at www.evisa.moip.gov.mm. Processing takes approximately 3 business days; the visa is valid for 28 days from entry. Apply at least 2 weeks before travel.
For 1–2 passengers we use a Toyota Corolla or equivalent comfortable sedan. For 3–6 passengers we use a Toyota HiAce van with reclining seats, air conditioning and full luggage space. All vehicles are well-maintained, insured and driven by licensed, experienced drivers.
The Yangon–Mandalay and Inle Lake–Yangon routes (approx. 620 km each) are integral to the overland experience, passing through Myanmar's heartland with stops at interesting towns and viewpoints. However, domestic flights are available on both legs for approx. USD 80–120/person one-way. If you prefer to fly on Day 2, Day 8, or both, please inform us at booking and we will adjust the itinerary and quote accordingly
Ngwesaung Beach is approximately 165 km from Yangon — about 3.5–4 hours by private car via the Delta highway and Pathein. The route through the Irrawaddy Delta is itself scenic and interesting. There is no domestic flight to Ngwesaung; the drive is the standard route.
Both are excellent. Ngapali is more developed with more restaurant choice and slightly calmer water in places, but is significantly more crowded and expensive. Ngwesaung is longer (20 km vs ~7 km), completely unspoiled, quieter, and offers a far more authentic Myanmar beach experience. For travellers who want peace, natural beauty and value, Ngwesaung is the better choice.
Your private motorboat departs from the Bagan riverbank approximately 30 minutes before sunset for a 60–90 minute cruise on the Irrawaddy River. As the sun descends, the 2,000 temples of the Bagan plain glow behind you, reflected in the wide, slow river. Light refreshments are provided. This is one of the most romantically beautiful experiences of the entire tour and is fully included in the price.
For those who can afford it, unequivocally yes. Watching the Bagan temple plain emerge from the morning mist from 200–500 metres above, in complete silence broken only by occasional bursts of the burner, is one of the most extraordinary travel experiences available anywhere in Asia. We consider it the single greatest optional upgrade on this itinerary. Book early — it sells out weeks in advance in peak season.
Yes — Myanmar Vineyard is a beautiful location regardless of wine interest. The lakeside terrace view over Inle Lake at golden hour is outstanding, and non-alcoholic grape juice and local soft drinks are always available. The vineyard setting in the Shan Hills is genuinely lovely and makes for an excellent sunset stop.
Yes, with some planning. The beach days (Days 9–11) are ideal for families. Bagan is excellent for older children (bicycles, open-air temples, wide spaces). The two long driving days (Days 2 and 8) can be tiring for young children — bring entertainment, snacks and plan for extra stops. Please inform us of children's ages at booking so we can optimise the pace.
Lightweight breathable clothing for hot days (Bagan, Yangon, Delta); a warm layer for Kalaw and Inle Lake evenings (can drop to 12°C in winter); wraps or sarongs for temple visits (or buy locally); slip-on shoes for frequent temple entry; swimwear and beach essentials; sunscreen (SPF 50+ for Ngwesaung); insect repellent; a small daypack; and a power bank. Myanmar uses UK-style three-pin plugs.
Cancellations 30+ days before departure: full refund less booking fee. 15–29 days: 50% refund. Under 14 days: no refund. Comprehensive travel insurance covering trip cancellation is strongly recommended for a 12-day itinerary of this scope
For lunch and dinner at local restaurants: USD 8–15/day per person is very comfortable. At resort restaurants (especially at Ngwesaung Beach): USD 20–40/day. Guide tip: USD 5–10/day per group (suggested). Boat crew: USD 3–5/day. Myanmar Vineyard tasting: USD 5–15. Total suggested daily spending budget beyond the tour price: approximately USD 30–60 per person per day.
