REVIEW · SIHANOUKVILLE
Discovery Tour: Caving, Climbing, Via Ferrata and Abseiling in Kampot
Book on Viator →Operated by Climbodia · Bookable on Viator
This tour is for people who want real action, fast. In about four hours, you’ll move from hands-on rock climbing to via ferrata, then add abseiling and cave time around Phnom Kbal Romeas in Kampot.
I really like that it’s built for beginners. The description says it requires no previous experience, and the vibe is all about doing this safely with proper guidance. I also like that the group stays small, with a maximum of 12 travelers, so you’re not just watching someone else have fun.
One thing to consider: you’ll need a moderate physical fitness level. It’s also minimum age 6, so if you’re traveling with younger kids, you’ll want to plan carefully.
In This Review
- Key highlights you’ll actually care about
- Why Phnom Kbal Romeas feels like a step up
- What no prior experience means in real life
- The 4-hour flow: how the adventure usually plays out
- Rock climbing and via ferrata: learning by doing
- Abseiling in Kampot: when confidence changes quickly
- Cave exploration: seeing Kampot’s underworld up close
- Gear, shoes, and what to wear for comfort
- Group size and attention: why max 12 matters
- Price and value: what $53 buys you
- Who should book this adventure day
- Practical start-to-finish tips for your day
- Should you book this Kampot caving, climbing, via ferrata, and abseiling tour?
- FAQ
- Do I need climbing or caving experience to join?
- How long is the tour?
- Where do I meet, and when does it start?
- What activities are included?
- What is the minimum age?
- What fitness level do I need?
- What should I wear?
- How big is the group?
- How does ticketing work?
- Can I cancel for a full refund?
Key highlights you’ll actually care about

- No experience required: the tour is designed to be learn-as-you-go.
- Big scenery, big variety: you get climbing, via ferrata, abseiling, and caving in one half-day outing.
- Phnom Kbal Romeas caves: the cave exploration takes place around this mountain area in Kampot.
- Small group size: capped at 12 travelers for more attention and better pacing.
- Safety-focused gear-based fun: abseiling and via ferrata are included, but this is presented as safe and exciting.
- Strong track record: 4.9 rating (172 reviews) and 98% recommended.
Why Phnom Kbal Romeas feels like a step up
Kampot has a way of surprising you. This is one of those rare activity days where you’re not choosing between scenery and adrenaline. You get both: outdoor climbing and rope work, plus cave exploration in the same session.
The tour centers on Phnom Kbal Romeas. That matters because caves aren’t just a backdrop here. You’re actively moving through cave spaces during the climbing/caving mix, which makes the whole thing feel like you’re exploring a system rather than just passing through a single tunnel.
One more practical win: it’s a morning start. The tour begins at 8:45am at Climbodia in Kampot, and it ends back at the meeting point. That keeps your day from turning into a whole logistics project.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Sihanoukville.
What no prior experience means in real life
No previous experience is stated right in the overview, and that’s not a small promise. It usually means you’ll be taught the basics instead of being thrown onto something technical with zero instruction.
You can also take the age and fitness notes seriously. Minimum age is 6, and the tour asks for a moderate physical fitness level. Translation: you don’t need athlete training, but you do need to handle climbing/cave movement for a few hours without burning out.
Dress code is part of how they make beginner days work. Expect to show up ready to move in basic summer clothing—T-shirt, shorts or leggings, plus lace-up shoes—so you can climb and walk safely without improvising.
The 4-hour flow: how the adventure usually plays out

The official duration is about 4 hours, and the activities listed are rock climbing, via ferrata, abseiling, and caving. That combo tells you the day will switch gears several times.
Here’s the typical pattern you should expect from a tour like this: you start with gear and safety guidance, then tackle the easier climbing segments, then move into via ferrata and abseiling, and finish with cave exploration time. The order can shift depending on conditions and group pace, but the main idea stays the same: you’ll keep moving.
Also note the pacing. Small group size (max 12) supports shorter waits and more time actively participating. For a beginner-focused rope-and-cave day, that’s a big deal—waiting around while everyone else gets clipped in is not the goal.
Rock climbing and via ferrata: learning by doing
Rock climbing here is described as easy. That’s the key word for most people deciding whether to book. You’re not signing up for a technical climbing trip that assumes you already know how to place feet and manage grip under pressure.
Via ferrata is the other half of the above-ground mix. Even without prior experience, the structure of via ferrata (fixed routes with support) helps you focus on technique instead of route-finding. You’ll likely spend time practicing movement and balance on the route with the guide(s) keeping things organized.
From the feedback, the climbing moments are often the top highlight. People specifically tied the mountain climb and internal rock climbing as their favorites, and that fits the overall structure: you’re not just walking into caves—you’re using climbing skills to get deeper into the experience.
Abseiling in Kampot: when confidence changes quickly
Abseiling (also called repelling) is one of the activities that makes this tour stand out on paper. It turns a scary idea—going down a vertical section—into a controlled skill.
The practical value is confidence. Once you understand how you’re secured and how you move your body to control the descent, the whole experience stops feeling like a gamble and starts feeling like a technique you can manage. Even if you’re nervous at first, this type of structured abseiling is built for a safe learning curve.
A review highlight called repelling great. That lines up with what you should expect: it’s often the moment people remember most because it’s the clearest test of whether you’re having fun or thinking too hard.
Cave exploration: seeing Kampot’s underworld up close
Caving in this tour happens around Phnom Kbal Romeas. The overview also describes it as Cambodia’s largest caving complex. Whether you come for the science angle or the thrill angle, the payoff is the same: you’re going inside a natural system instead of doing a short, surface-only stop.
What makes this kind of caving valuable is perspective. Caves change how you experience a place. Light levels drop, shapes get unfamiliar, and your sense of direction comes more from your movements and the route plan.
Also, this isn’t listed as a passive cave walk. It’s paired with rock climbing elements, including internal rock climbing. That combination is why people often rate cave time as a top part of their trip. You’re active underground, not just observing.
Gear, shoes, and what to wear for comfort
The dress code is simple and practical: T-shirt, shorts or leggings and lace-up shoes. Follow this. Lace-up shoes matter because you’ll need foot control on climbing and uneven cave surfaces.
You can also plan your clothing like you’ll be active. Go for breathable layers, nothing that restricts movement, and avoid anything that’s too loose around your feet. If your shoes are new and stiff, consider breaking them in before the tour—because once you’re concentrating on safety and movement, you don’t want foot pain adding stress.
If you’re the type who hates getting dirty, that’s a personal call. The tour includes caving and climbing, so expect some nature contact. You’ll want to bring your best attitude and keep your focus on what the guide is teaching.
Group size and attention: why max 12 matters
At maximum 12 travelers, this tour has enough space to stay social but still small enough to stay hands-on. For beginner activities like via ferrata and abseiling, that matters. You want guidance when you need it, not a line of people waiting their turn.
The description also says it requires no previous experience. Small group size supports that goal because instructors can spend more time adjusting pace and coaching technique.
There’s also a less obvious benefit: it helps you feel normal if you’re nervous. If everyone is close in skill level, you spend less time comparing and more time learning. That’s the best way to enjoy rope work and caves without turning the day into performance pressure.
Price and value: what $53 buys you
The price is $53 per person for about 4 hours. On paper, that’s not a “tiny add-on” cost. But this isn’t a single activity either. You’re getting a bundled experience: climbing plus via ferrata plus abseiling plus cave exploration.
Value comes from two places here:
- You’re paying for instruction across multiple skills, not just entry into one attraction.
- You’re getting a full half-day that’s set up to keep you moving, not just waiting.
It also helps that this tour has strong social proof: a 4.9 rating with 98% recommended. High ratings are never a guarantee of a perfect day, but they do suggest the format works for a wide range of people, including beginners.
If you’re already in the Kampot area and you want one action-packed morning instead of piecing together multiple tours, this price can feel like a smart shortcut.
Who should book this adventure day
This is a great match if you want:
- A beginner-friendly introduction to climbing-adjacent skills
- A half-day with variety (above ground and inside caves)
- A small group experience with active participation
It’s also a solid choice if you’re traveling with mixed comfort levels. People can be excited but nervous, and the combination of guided support plus fixed-route structure (via ferrata) plus controlled abseiling tends to help beginners get momentum.
I’d be cautious if someone in your group cannot handle a moderate fitness requirement. The tour isn’t described as extreme, but it is still climbing and moving in cave environments for several hours.
Minimum age is 6, so families should think about kids’ comfort with heights, ropes, and staying focused during instruction.
Practical start-to-finish tips for your day
Here are the details you should plan around based on the provided info:
- Start at Climbodia in Kampot at 8:45am
- Meet at the location and return there at the end
- Wear T-shirt/shorts-or-leggings and lace-up shoes
- Expect a max of 12 travelers, so be on time and ready to move
- Bring a calm mindset—this is safety-and-skill work, not a solo stunt
If you like structure, this tour likely fits your style. The day is built around guided progress through different activity types, which keeps the half-day from feeling like random chaos.
And yes, a mobile ticket is included. That means less paper and fewer surprises when it’s time to check in.
Should you book this Kampot caving, climbing, via ferrata, and abseiling tour?
If you want one memorable morning that mixes skills, scenery, and real cave time, I think this tour is an easy yes. The combination of beginner access, small group size, and multiple disciplines in one session makes it a strong value.
Book it if you’re curious about climbing-adjacent activities but don’t want to start from scratch on your own. Book it if you like the idea of learning safety skills while exploring Phnom Kbal Romeas from the inside.
Skip it—or at least reconsider—if moderate physical fitness is a stretch for you, or if your group needs a gentler, all-walking day. Otherwise, this is the kind of experience that tends to become the story people tell afterward, especially when repelling and the cave exploration hit as the top moments.
FAQ
Do I need climbing or caving experience to join?
No. The tour says it requires no previous experience, and it’s designed so you can participate safely and learn the activities.
How long is the tour?
It runs for about 4 hours.
Where do I meet, and when does it start?
You meet at Climbodia, Kampot 07401, Cambodia. The start time is 8:45am, and the tour ends back at the meeting point.
What activities are included?
The experience combines rock climbing, via ferrata, abseiling, and caving, including time in and around the caves of Phnom Kbal Romeas in Kampot.
What is the minimum age?
The minimum age is 6 years.
What fitness level do I need?
You should have a moderate physical fitness level.
What should I wear?
Dress code is T-shirt, shorts or leggings, and lace-up shoes.
How big is the group?
The tour has a maximum of 12 travelers.
How does ticketing work?
You receive a mobile ticket.
Can I cancel for a full refund?
Yes. Cancellation is free, and you can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

















