Kandy – quick travel guide

Popular cultural tourist city in central highlands. Great food, variety of shopping, good mix of city accommodations or nature lodging.

Great food, lots of things to do and see. And still carries a very local vibe. I enjoyed my time in Kandy a lot. The more you stay, the more you find things to do.

Kandy and nearby tourist attractions can be seen in 2-3 days but with all the farther-out sights, I think 4 days might be better to fully enjoy it.

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Negombo – quick travel guide

Popular beach city just north of capital city Colombo (and next to the airport). Very westernized, touristy with all big city comforts, and creditcard accepted everywhere.

Feels like a proper beach city with many hotels, restaurants, shops, and westernized touristy area. Everything is very comfy and convenient. The price is expensive compared to the rest of Sri Lanka, but still very cheap by western standards. I also noticed this area tends to be much more full of Germans, rather than Russian (in the south).

The best reason to go here is to be close to the airport and out of Colombo (which everyone recommends you skip). If you check the map, you’ll see CMB airport is actually in Negombo. Making this your perfect final stop in Sri Lanka. It’s not a necessary destination at all (very low unique tourism value).

But can be a nice stop for some days before you fly out of CMB. Luckily, they accept card everywhere here so you don’t have to pull out more cash.

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Trincomalee – quick travel guide

Northeast beach city, with small beach towns adjacent. Very local and conservative vibe, with pockets of tourist areas during high season.

We came during off-season months of Dec & Jan, also stayed in the outer area of Nilaveli Beach, and felt like we were the only foreigners we saw everyday.

Definitely the least fun place we’ve been on our whole Sri Lanka tour. Beach nearby us was ugly. Everything was far and remote, needed to rent a bike to buy daily food and water. I guess it was nice in that we had time to focus on work stuff instead of getting distracted by tourist stuff. But that’s not why we go places, right?

I’d say 3 days is enough. But also, you need to have a reason to come here. Are you sure you want to see a more conservative part of Sri Lanka? A part that doesn’t have so many westernized food options and tourist things to do? A part that may not be a great place to visit during off-season? Because you might be better just skipping this place.

If you’re simply looking for the least touristy major city of Sri Lanka, skip this and go further north to Jaffna.

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Anuradhapura – quick travel guide

Many historic sites and ruins inside a big green bicycle-able park with lots of nature and wildlife.

Anuradhapura is the most iconic city in the Sri Lanka’s cultural triangle, and also its first capital before being destroyed by the Cholas in 993 AD. And lucky for you, all the main tourist sights are situated close together (within the “Sacred City”) and easily reached with a bicycle.

There’s also restaurants with GREAT FOOD, and some lakes and other things to see outside of the sacred city. In case you were looking for city comforts or specific conveniences, you can also find it here. Plenty of stores for electronics, clothing, upscale grocery stores, etc.

2 days is the perfect amount of time. You technically could do it all in one daytrip (5-hours of biking), but we felt it was best to have an extra day so there’s no rush, and also you have more time to try different restaurants.

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Sigiriya – quick travel guide

Tiny town where tourists come to see Sigiriya Rock aka “Lion Rock” (UNESCO site).

Go here for the big UNESCO ancient fortress palace on top of a giant rock sticking out of the jungle. Many cheap and nice nature accommodations to stay. And it’s close enough to several other destinations (between Kandy & Trincomalee). You have no excuse not to visit here.

Come as a day trip or stay the night. Maybe add a day if you just want to chill in a tiny tourist town.

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Ella – quick travel guide

Sri Lanka’s touristy mountain town. Lots of mountain views, nature hikes, waterfalls and caves, and the Nine Arch Bridge. Oh and good food!

It’s a mountain jungle place where accommodations have you staying right in nature. See birds, monkeys, and green all around you as you wake up to nature everyday. Take little hikes and enjoy picturesque mountain viewpoints all around you. The food is also the best we had up to this point, especially since coming from the south of Sri Lanka (which really didn’t have great food).

2 days is enough to see all the main points. Stay longer to relax more, eat good food, or give yourself more time with nature.

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Tangalle – quick travel guide

Relaxed beach town with beachside restaurants and remove beaches for a more local atmosphere. It’s still has touristy things like restaurants and bars, but not overly commercial with endless shops.

Tangalle can be a nice 2-day stop to relax and enjoy the long peaceful beachfronts. Or a 6-day stay to fully relax and also take tours to nearby national parks (Udalaware & Yala) to see wildlife, and Africa-like landscapes. We stayed here six days and loved it, but if you’re looking for things to do…then you should continue on to Ella.

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Sri Lanka – quick travel guide

Island country off India’s southern coast, and very similar to in culture and geography to south India.

Known as one of the cheapest and most convenient travel destinations. Because it’s a small country, easy to get around (since everything all in one island), very inexpensive. Lots of transportation…cheap trains and buses, taxis are cheap enough for foreigners to take 2-hr rides. The locals are friendly and many speak enough English. Internet is good enough. Everywhere feels very safe and accessible.

As a foreigner, you’ll find Sri Lanka to be very undeveloped and wild. Wild beaches, train-tracks running all over the country (past beaches, through jungles, around mountains), people walking on train tracks, people hanging out of train cars, very local vibe in many places and not overly touristy as other countries. Nature everywhere and you feel like you’re living in it (whether for good or for worse), rather than looking at it.

The default VISA period is one month and that’s a good amount of time to comprehensively immerse yourself on the Sri Lankan island. If you need to extend, you can do it easily enough online or through the tourist office.

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Unawatuna – quick travel guide

Classic local favorite beach town with many beachside restaurants along the road. Not really a city.

Unawatuna is a local favorite spot for many and it’s easy to see why. Beautiful beaches with a chill vibe, not crowded, great sunset views, and cheap accommodation easily found right next to the beach.

Although you could stay several days, there’s probably very little to do other than sit on the beach and you may get bored. We did just a 1-day stop through here.

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Galle – quick travel guide

Skippable local beach city with a touristy “Dutch Fort”, close to better spots in south Sri Lanka.

This city isn’t a worthy tourist destination. No beautiful beaches, mostly all local areas and local food (good if you want cheap food). It’s for passing by when you’re going between other southern coastal cities in Sri Lanka.

The only thing here is to check out the Dutch Fort, take pictures around the walls. And maybe buy or pickup things that can only be found in a bigger city. There are much more markets here and options to choose from. A friend went here to find bigger repair shops for his broken mobile phone.

A 2-hour pitstop is more than enough for me.

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Hikkaduwa – quick travel guide

Nice beach town known for having corals and turtles, and many Russians. And OK for surfing.

It’s a small beach town with a nice relaxed vibe without being pretentious. Plenty of water activities to do around here, and close to other towns for other excursions and activities. You can stay here a couple days or a couple weeks.

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