Adam's Peak (Sri Pada) night climb — complete guide: when to go, how hard is it, and what should I expect?
Adam's Peak is at the top of my Sri Lanka list. I've read it's a night climb to reach the summit for sunrise. I have a lot of questions before I commit:
1. Which months is the pilgrimage season and which months is it closed (I've read the trail closes outside season)?
2. How long does the climb take — both up and down?
3. How difficult is it physically? I'm reasonably fit but not a runner.
4. What do I need to bring — layers, torches, water?
5. Is there food and water available on the mountain at night?
6. What's the start point and how do I get there from Kandy or Ella?
7. I've heard the queues can be brutal — is it worth going midweek?
I want to do this right, not end up exhausted and missing the sunrise.
3 Answers
I've climbed Sri Pada three times during pilgrimage season. Here's everything you need to know:
Pilgrimage season: Mid-December to mid-May (Duruthu Poya to Vesak Poya, following the lunar calendar). Outside this window the path is officially closed and the facilities (tea stalls, lights) are shut. Some people still climb off-season — it's physically possible but you'll climb in darkness with no stalls, no handrails lit, and it's significantly harder.
Duration:
- Ascent: 3–5 hours from Dalhousie base (7,000 steps)
- Descent: 2–3 hours (knees take more punishment going down than going up)
- Total return: 5–8 hours
Difficulty: The 7,000 steps are unrelenting but there is no technical terrain. Anyone with reasonable fitness can summit. The hardest part is the final 500 steps — near-vertical iron chains — but again, no technical skill required. Go at your own pace, rest when needed.
What to bring:
- Warm layers (summit can be 5–10°C even in March, wind makes it colder)
- Headlamp/torch (the path is lit on busy nights but not reliably)
- Water — but tea stalls sell hot tea, king coconut, and snacks throughout the climb at night
- Good grip shoes — the steps are slippery when wet
Starting time: Leave Dalhousie between midnight and 2 AM for a sunrise summit. The sunrise is the point — arriving too early means waiting in the cold.
Getting there: From Kandy (3 hours by bus via Hatton/Maskeliya) or Ella (2.5 hours via Haputale/Hatton). Night buses leave Kandy around 9–10 PM.
Midweek: Yes — weekends and Poya (full moon) days see thousands of pilgrims and the steps become a slow-moving queue. Tuesday–Thursday is noticeably quieter.
Climbed in February on a Wednesday — took 3.5 hours up at a comfortable pace with rests at each tea stall. The atmosphere is unlike anything else in Sri Lanka: pilgrims of all ages making the climb as an act of devotion, bells ringing at the summit, hot ginger tea at the stalls, the smell of incense as dawn breaks. Even as a non-religious person it was deeply moving. The sunrise from the summit, with the conical shadow of the peak projecting across the clouds below, is one of the most extraordinary natural phenomena I've ever seen. Do not skip this.
Practical addition: on the descent, take the alternative path via the back if it's open (ask locals at the summit). It's longer but gentler on the knees and avoids the worst of the descending crowds. Also: budget accommodation in Dalhousie is basic but perfectly adequate for a one-night stop. The town exists entirely to serve the pilgrimage — guesthouses are cheap and the timetable revolves around midnight departure.
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