和朋友一起去暹粒:真正的团体旅行指南
16个人。一栋别墅。私人游泳池。每人每晚16美元。这就是团体不断回来的原因。
The usual Cambodia trip pitch goes: fly to Siem Reap, do the temples for 2–3 days, bus to Phnom Penh. That works fine. But it completely misses what happens when you bring a group.
When you come with 10–16 friends in your 20s, you don't just have a good trip. You have a legitimately insane trip, at a cost that would embarrass most European city breaks. Here's why — and exactly how to do it.
The Villa Maths
Stop pricing travel per person and start pricing it per group. This is the shift that makes Siem Reap make sense.
A private 8-bedroom villa with a pool — your own pool, no other guests, no hotel staff walking through, no 9 AM "we need to clean the room" knock — runs $250–350 per night. Split that across 10 people: $25–35 each. Across 16 people: $16–22 each.
A hostel dorm in Bangkok costs $15–20 a night per person. You'd be paying that just for a bunk bed in a room with strangers. At a villa in Siem Reap, for the same price, you get your own room, your own pool, and a kitchen stocked with whatever you bought at the market.
This isn't a budget hack. It's just what a private villa in Cambodia actually costs.
Night 1: Pub Street
Pub Street (officially Street 8) is both exactly what it sounds like and slightly better than you expect. Yes, it's touristy. Yes, there will be tuk-tuk drivers offering you things. Yes, you'll hear the same three songs at different volume levels from different bars. It's also genuinely fun.
The logical progression for a group:
Start at Angkor What? — the bar that's been there since 1998, covered floor-to-ceiling in graffiti tags from everyone who's ever passed through. Draft beer is $0.50 during happy hour. This is where you get oriented and realise how cheap the night is going to be.
Move to X Bar for the rooftop — there is genuinely a 6-foot half-pipe on the roof. Live DJs. Pool table. Billiards. A group of 12 fits fine here. Open mic sessions happen on Wednesdays.
Miss Wong for cocktails before or after. It's around the corner from Pub Street in the Wat Damnak area — 1920s Shanghai aesthetic, proper cocktails at $5–8, significantly better crowd than the chaos outside. This is where you go when two people in your group want to talk without shouting.
Temple Club has three floors and a rooftop terrace with a view over the street. Good middle-of-the-evening energy.
A note on budget: a full night out per person on Pub Street, including all drinks, is $10–25. That's not a typo. The $0.50 draft beers are real, happy hours start at 5 PM and sometimes run all night, and cocktails at non-fancy bars are $1.50–2.50.
Day 2: Do You Do Temples or Recover?
Honest answer: split the group. Some people will want the temple sunrise. Others will need until noon to exist.
If you do the temples: buy Angkor tickets online at least 24 hours ahead ($37 for one day, $62 for three days — buying online skips the 30–45 minute queue). Have your tuk-tuk sorted the night before — your driver picks you up at 4:15–4:40 AM. You arrive at the main causeway before 5 AM, and at some point around 5:45–6:00 AM, the five towers of Angkor Wat appear in the reflection pool as the sky turns from dark blue to orange to pink.
Here's the thing nobody says in the brochure: Angkor Wat at sunrise is actually staggering. Even if you've seen photos a thousand times. Even coming off four hours of sleep. The scale is different in person. Your group will be quiet for a few minutes, which rarely happens.
If you recover: pool day. The villa pool, your group, nobody else. Grab food from the market ($5 for a pile of fruit, $8 for a bag of local snacks), lie in the sun, play music from the outdoor speakers, and be in a swimming pool in Cambodia in the morning. There are worse ways to spend a Tuesday.
Khmer massage after temples or pool: $7–12 per hour at most places. Seeing Hands (staffed by blind masseurs) is $7 and the technique is excellent. This is the legitimate hangover cure. Get a one-hour foot + shoulder massage; you'll feel like a different person.
Breakfast/brunch options: Sister Srey Cafe by the river has excellent coffee and food for $6–8 a plate. Little Red Fox Espresso does the best bagels in the city if your stomach wants something substantial. For a completely local experience: a bowl of nom banh chok (Khmer rice noodles) from a morning street cart is $1.50 and is what most Cambodians eat before 8 AM.
Night 2: Phare Circus → Back Out
Phare Cambodian Circus runs Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday at 8 PM. Tickets are $18–28 depending on seat section. Book ahead — it does sell out.
This sounds like the "cultural" option that half your group won't want. They're wrong. Phare is contemporary circus — acrobatics, live band, Khmer storytelling that actually has a narrative arc. It's one hour. Everyone leaves with something to talk about. Grab early dinner near Old Market before (fish amok from a local restaurant: $5–7, a genuinely excellent dish), then go.
Afterward: back to Pub Street, or stay out until the city naturally winds down. Pub Street bars stay open until 2–3 AM on weekends. Angkor What? is infamous for going until dawn on its own schedule.
Day 3: Get Out of the City
This is where you separate a good group trip from a great one.
Quad biking through the countryside is the move. Three-hour circuits through rice paddies, rural villages, and unpaved tracks — designed for groups. You don't need experience. There are multiple operators; expect $35–50 per person for a guided tour. You will be dusty and slightly sunburned and it will be worth it completely.
Floating village on Tonle Sap Lake is the full Southeast Asia experience — entire communities of wooden houses on stilts over the largest lake in the region, fishermen in wooden boats, kids swimming between the structures. Kampong Phluk is the most frequently visited and for good reason. Half-day tour plus your own tuk-tuk works out around $40–50 per person including boat.
Phnom Kulen National Park if you're staying longer — waterfall, mountain, carvings in the riverbed. Day trip, about 1.5 hours from Siem Reap.
Cooking class for the group that wants a different kind of afternoon. The countryside cooking class operators do market tours, rice paddy walks, and then you cook a four-course Khmer meal with ingredients from the market. $35–45 per person. One of the more memorable afternoons you'll have.
Night 3: The Villa Night
The night you don't leave the villa is sometimes the best one.
The KTV room (private karaoke) at the villa is not a gimmick. Karaoke is central to Cambodian social culture — private rooms are how people actually socialize here, not the open-mic-at-a-bar version. Your group, your song list, no strangers watching. This is genuinely a three-hour activity that goes in a direction nobody predicted at the start.
Combine with: someone cooking in the outdoor kitchen, the pool at night (different energy than daytime), and whatever you grabbed from the night market on the way back. A bag of Angkor beers from the shop down the road is $1.50 per can. An evening at the villa with 12 friends costs approximately nothing and is frequently the highlight that people message about in the group chat for the next year.
The Practical Stuff
Getting there: Siem Reap International Airport (REP) connects directly to Bangkok, KL, Singapore, Ho Chi Minh City. AirAsia and Bangkok Airways are the main carriers. A group from Europe usually routes through Bangkok (direct flights from most major cities).
Airport to villa: Tuk-tuk for a group takes 50 minutes and costs $6–8 per tuk-tuk. Minivan transfers if you need everyone together.
Buying Angkor tickets: angkorenterprise.com — online purchase, no queue. Do not wait until you arrive.
SIM cards: Get one at the airport (Smart or Cellcard). $10–15 for a month of data. Cheap enough that everyone should have their own.
WhatsApp works fine for coordinating. Grab works for rides. Siem Reap is genuinely easy to navigate — the Old Market area, Pub Street, and most temples are within 25 minutes of each other.
What This Trip Costs
Five nights, 12 people, flying from Bangkok:
| Item | Per Person | | Villa (5 nights, $300/night) | $125 | | Angkor 3-day pass | $62 | | Food (5 days, eating well) | $75 | | Nights out (3 nights, drinks) | $50 | | Activities (quad biking + circus) | $70 | | Transport (tuk-tuks, airport) | $25 | | Total | ~$410/person |
Five days in Cambodia, private villa, private pool, temples, nightlife, and actual activities. This is a real number. The hostel-and-walking-tours version would cost more in most European cities for half the experience.
→ See the villa: Zentro Khmer Villa — 8 bedrooms, private pool
→ Read: 15 Things to Do in Siem Reap Beyond the Temples
→ Read: Best Time to Visit Angkor Wat
1. Angkor Wat at Sunrise
4:15 AM tuk-tuk, arriving before 5 AM to watch the towers emerge in the reflection pool. Even on three hours of sleep, this is worth it. Buy tickets online ($37/day, $62/3-day) to skip the 30-minute queue.
2. Private Pool Day
The villa pool is yours from morning to midnight. Nobody else. No reservation needed. Stock up at the local market and spend a day doing absolutely nothing in Cambodia.
3. Pub Street Crawl
Angkor What? for $0.50 draft beers → X Bar rooftop for live DJs and a half-pipe that shouldn't exist → Miss Wong for actually good cocktails. Budget $15-25 per person for a full night.
4. Phare Cambodian Circus
Tuesdays, Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays at 8 PM. Contemporary acrobatics and live music telling Khmer stories. $18-28 per seat. One hour. Book online ahead — it does sell out.
5. Quad Biking Through Rice Paddies
3-hour guided circuits through Cambodian countryside — rice paddies, village roads, local farms. Groups of 10-15 work well. Dusty, bumpy, genuinely fun. No experience needed.
6. Floating Village on Tonle Sap
Kampong Phluk is the closest floating village — whole communities built on stilts over Southeast Asia's largest lake. Half-day boat trip with a guide, genuinely unlike anything else.
7. KTV Night at the Villa
Private karaoke room, your group, no strangers. This is how Cambodians actually socialise. Three hours disappear. Combine with the pool, the outdoor kitchen, and whatever you grabbed from the night market.
8. Khmer Massage Recovery
$7-12 per hour at most places. Seeing Hands (staffed by blind masseurs) is $7 and genuinely excellent technique. Book two or three hours after a big night. This is the standard hangover protocol.
为您的团体预订别墅
Zentro Khmer Villa:8间卧室,私人游泳池,KTV卡拉OK房,户外厨房,距离吴哥窟20分钟。整栋别墅每晚250美元起,10人分摊每人25美元,比曼谷青年旅馆的床位还便宜。
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