Highlight Sri Lanka Package
7Day Adventure
Get Ready for an Amazing 7-Day Adventure in Sri Lanka!
Sri Lanka is a breathtaking tropical paradise, inviting you to explore its beauty all year round. While a week might fly by too quickly to see everything this incredible country has to offer, you’ll still be able to visit some of the most iconic sites and uncover hidden treasures. And guess what? You’ll definitely leave with a longing to return for more!
Tour Highlights
Negombo is a coastal city in Sri Lanka, located just north of Colombo. With a vibrant fishing industry, it is often dubbed the “Little Rome” due to its numerous churches.
The orphanage which boasts to have the largest herd of captive elephants in the world is very popular and visited daily by many Sri Lankan and foreign tourists.
Born as a king’s court in 1371, Peradeniya became a garden in 1780. The “Royal Botanic Garden” includes more than 4000 species of plants, including orchids, spices, medicinal plants and palm trees.
It’s a city of delightful chaos, with its bustling streets, ancient temples, colonial architecture, aristocratic gardens and the glorious Kandy lake
Often referred to as ‘Little England’, this genteel highland community does have a rose-tinted, vaguely British-country-village feel to it.
The Horton Plains National Park at Ohiya is a beautiful highland plateau situated at an elevation of 2100 -2300m (6,900-7,500ft) above sea level.
The park is best known for its variety of wildlife and is important conservation of Sri Lankan elephants, Sri Lankan leopards and aquatic birds.
A beach town on Sri Lanka’s southern shores, Mirissa is renowned for its namesake Mirissa Beach, nightlife, and whale and dolphin watching.
Famed for its shallow fringing reef, Hikkaduwa & Bentota is perfect for water sports such as snorkeling, scuba diving, surfing, glass bottom boat rides, Turtle Hatcher & Boat rides in River to explore nature.
The Galle Fort is the largest remaining fortress in Asia constructed by any European imperial powers. Explore the colonial heritage of Galle Fort, first built in the 16th century by the Portuguese, and its modern-day vibrant multicultural society.