Bagan

How many days in Bagan?

Plan 1-2 days for Bagan. 1 day catches the highlight; 2 lets you slow down for sunrise/sunset light, hiking, and a backup weather day.

The minimum

1 day

One full day on-site to see the headline view in good light, plus arrival/departure time.

The sweet spot

2 days

2 days adds a back-up weather day, an alternative viewpoint, and a deeper hike or guided experience.

Slow travel

4 days

4 days is for travellers who want to chase weather, hike multi-day routes, or combine with the wider area.

The headline things to do in Bagan

From the Bagan guide β€” these are the items that anchor a 1-day visit. For the full breakdown, read the Bagan travel guide.

  1. Ananda Temple β€” Old Bagan

    Often considered the most architecturally perfect of the Bagan temples β€” built in 1105 by King Kyansittha, with a perfect Greek-cross floor plan, a gilded sikhara (corn-cob spire), and four 9.5-metre standing Buddha statues facing the cardinal directions. The interior is whitewashed and cool; the south-facing Buddha's expression appears to change between joyful and stern depending on viewing distance β€” a deliberate sculptural device. The most-visited temple in Bagan and a working pilgrimage site.

  2. Shwezigon Pagoda β€” Nyaung U

    The prototype for Burmese-style stupas everywhere β€” a solid gilded bell with a tiered terraced base, completed in 1102. Houses a Buddha tooth relic and a frontal bone fragment, making it one of Myanmar's most important Buddhist pilgrimage sites. Active devotion every day; remove shoes before entering the marble-paved enclosure. The gilding is restored every few years using leaf-gold offerings; under the right light it appears to glow from within.

  3. Dhammayangyi Temple β€” Central archaeological zone

    The largest temple by mass in Bagan β€” built in 1170 by King Narathu, who is said to have ordered the brickwork so tight that "not even a needle could pass between the bricks" (and reportedly had bricklayers executed if a needle could). The interior corridors are partially walled-off (the inner sanctum has been bricked up since the 13th century for unknown reasons) and the temple has a brooding, slightly ominous atmosphere matching its founder's legend.

  4. Sulamani Temple β€” Central archaeological zone

    A two-storey 12th-century temple known for the most extensive surviving 18th–19th-century murals in Bagan β€” interior corridors painted with detailed scenes of the Buddha's life, jatakas, and royal donor portraits. The murals were extensively restored after the 1975 earthquake. Accessible to visitors and one of the temples most rewarding to spend an unhurried hour inside. Bring a torch β€” interior lighting is minimal.

  5. Sunset Viewpoints (Bulethi or Shwesandaw replacement) β€” Various across archaeological zone

    Climbing the upper terraces of major temples for sunrise/sunset photography is now restricted at most major sites due to preservation concerns and falls following the 2016 earthquake β€” the famous Shwesandaw Pagoda has been closed to climbing since 2017. Designated viewing platforms (Bulethi, Nan Myint Tower observation deck) and earth mounds across the plain are the current options. Sunrise is preferable to sunset for balloon photography.

  6. Mount Popo (Day Trip) β€” Mount Popa, 50 km southeast

    A 1,518-metre extinct volcano 50 km southeast of Bagan β€” the spiritual home of the 37 nats (animist spirits) of pre-Buddhist Burmese tradition. Taung Kalat, a separate volcanic plug topped by a golden monastery, sits at the base of the main mountain and is reached by climbing 777 covered steps lined with macaque monkeys (mind your hats and snacks). Half-day tour from Bagan ~$30 per person; the road from Bagan crosses dry plain through palm-toddy villages worth pausing in.

  7. Lacquerware Workshop in Myinkaba β€” Myinkaba village, 4 km south

    The Myinkaba village south of Old Bagan has been the centre of Burmese lacquerware craft for generations β€” 12-step pieces (12 layers of lacquer over woven horsehair-and-bamboo cores) take 6+ months to produce. Several workshops in the village welcome visitors and demonstrate the full process from horsehair weaving to incised gold-leaf finishing. Buy direct from craftspeople at fair prices, and avoid the lower-quality painted-on-wood imitations sold to tour buses.

  8. Irrawaddy River Sunset Cruise β€” Old Bagan riverbank

    The Irrawaddy curves past Bagan on its western edge β€” sunset cruises depart from the Bupaya Pagoda area, drift downstream for 60–90 minutes as the temples on the bank turn gold, then return under power. Small wooden boats (4–8 person), $20–40 per boat depending on season and negotiation. The river is wide and slow-moving here; the perspective from the water is the way Bagan was approached for 1,000 years.

Frequently asked

Is 1 day enough in Bagan?

1 day is the minimum for a satisfying visit β€” you'll see the headline sights but won't have flex time. If you can stretch to 2, you unlock a day trip and the food walks that make the trip memorable.

Is 4 days too long in Bagan?

4 days is on the upper end β€” most travellers feel it once they've done the headline experiences twice. Either island-hop, take a multi-day course, or split with another base.

What's the ideal trip length for first-time visitors to Bagan?

2 days is the sweet spot for a first visit β€” long enough to cover the must-sees, eat at three good spots, take one day trip, and not feel like you're racing a checklist. Less than 1 usually feels rushed; more than 4 is into slow-travel territory.

Should I add Bagan to a longer regional trip?

Yes β€” Bagan works well as a 1-2-day stop on a longer regional itinerary. Pair it with a nearby destination via the trip planner so the transit days don't compress your time on the ground.

Plan your Bagan trip