Staying in Kandy - best area to stay and what to actually do in the city itself?

Asked 4 days agoViewed 1960 times
A
Amira J.155 rep1
asked 4 days ago

Most guides treat Kandy as a base for day trips but I want to understand the city itself. I'll have 3 nights. Which neighbourhood is best to stay in for walking to the main sites? Beyond the Temple of the Tooth, what is genuinely worth doing in Kandy - markets, food, local life? Is it worth venturing into the city without a guide or tuk-tuk for everything?

63
asked 4 days ago
A
Amira J.155 rep1

2 Answers

Accepted Answer

Three nights in Kandy is exactly the right amount to actually understand the city rather than just tick the temple. Here is the honest neighbourhood guide and city programme.

Where to stay:
- The area immediately around the lake (Kandy Lake road and Sangamitta Mawatha) puts you within 10 minutes walk of the Temple of the Tooth, the market, and the evening cultural shows. Most mid-range and boutique guesthouses here are on the hillside with lake views.
- Avoid staying in the town centre itself if you can - traffic noise and congestion make it difficult. The hillside above the town (Heerassagala or Anniewatte direction) is quieter with good access.
- Do not stay more than 15-20 minutes from the lake by foot if you want to explore independently.

What to do in the city beyond the temple:
- Kandy market (Pettah area near the bus stand): mornings, especially Tuesday and Saturday. Genuinely local - spices, vegetables, fish, everyday goods. Very photogenic.
- Kandy Lake walk at sunrise (6-6:30am): the lake is peaceful at this hour and the temple is quiet before tour groups arrive. The cloud wall bungalow (an old colonial structure over the water) is on this walk.
- Cultural show at Kandy Lake Club or YMBA Hall (7pm nightly during season): Kandyan dance, drumming, fire walking. LKR 1,500 for foreigners. Worth doing once - genuinely skilled dancers.
- Bahirawakanda (white Buddha statue): the steps up from the road below give you the best elevated view of the lake and town. Almost no tour buses bother stopping.
- Senkadagala fish market area (Pettah): for a genuinely local mid-morning experience, walk through the covered market area southeast of the bus stand.

Walking vs tuk-tuk: the lake area and town centre are very walkable for someone comfortable with South Asian street environments. The hillside guesthouses often need a tuk-tuk. Negotiate a half-day tuk-tuk rate (LKR 2,500-3,500) for the three-temple circuit on one of your days.

29
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answered 4 days ago
Kasun Silva
Kasun Silva1720 rep2

Kasun's neighbourhood guide is accurate. I will add one specific recommendation: the Kandy Central Market (indoor section) on a weekday morning between 7 and 9am is one of the most vivid sensory experiences in Sri Lanka. The spice section alone is worth visiting - sacks of cinnamon, cardamom, pepper, and dried chilli with a smell that stays with you. Walk through and buy a small bag of local cinnamon (true Ceylon cinnamon, milder than the cassia most of the world knows) directly from the vendors. It costs almost nothing and is a tangible piece of the country to bring home.

10
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answered 4 days ago
Saman Perera
Saman Perera2535 rep2

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