REVIEW · SIEM REAP
Siem Reap Countryside Sunset Vespa Tour / Tuk Tuk Available
Book on Viator →Operated by Vespa Backstreet · Bookable on Viator
A sunset ride on a Vespa beats maps. You get a guided run from busy Siem Reap out into working countryside, with hotel pickup and a driver who handles the road while you focus on people, pagodas, farms, and that last slice of daylight. It’s also the kind of tour where stops feel planned but not rigid, so the countryside can actually look lived-in, not staged.
What I really like is the emphasis on how things work—from village livelihoods to temple and farm sights explained in plain English by guides such as Bunsom and drivers like Heng. One consideration: this is a motorcycle-focused experience, so if you have back issues, or you’re traveling with elderly folks or young children, you may want the private car option instead.
In This Review
- Key Things I’d Prioritize on This Siem Reap Sunset Vespa Tour
- The Big Idea: A Siem Reap Countryside Sunset Tour That Feels Local
- Pickup and the Ride Setup: When Logistics Stop Being Your Job
- Stop 1: The Intro Around Siem Reap (and Why It Sets the Tone)
- Stop 2: Chreav Village Break (Rural Life in Plain Terms)
- Stop 3: Wat Po Banteaychey (Temple + Pond + Farm-Route Variety)
- Stop 4: Phnom Krom Sunset in the Rice Fields
- Price and Value: What $30 Buys You in Siem Reap
- The Human Factor: Guides and Drivers Make It Land
- Motorcycle vs Private Car: Choosing What Fits Your Body
- What’s Included (So You Don’t Forget the Basics)
- Pace and Timing: A 4.5-Hour Plan That Doesn’t Feel Like a Sprint
- Who This Vespa Sunset Tour Is Best For
- Should You Book This Siem Reap Countryside Sunset Vespa Tour?
- FAQ
- Will I be picked up from my hotel?
- How long is the Siem Reap countryside sunset Vespa tour?
- What is the price per person?
- Are admission tickets included?
- What do I get during the tour?
- Do I ride a Vespa the whole time?
- What are the main stops on the route?
- What time does the tour start?
- How large is the group?
- Is the tour in English?
Key Things I’d Prioritize on This Siem Reap Sunset Vespa Tour

- Easy pickup from your hotel so you’re not hunting transport when the afternoon starts
- English-speaking guide with detailed explanations, including topics like rice wine production
- Wat Po Banteaychey stop along the route, adding temple + pond + countryside variety
- Chreav village break to see day-to-day rural life beyond the main tourist circuit
- Phnom Krom sunset photo moment with drinks served while the sky cools down
- Small group size (up to 12), which helps the pace feel personal rather than rushed
The Big Idea: A Siem Reap Countryside Sunset Tour That Feels Local

This is a Siem Reap tour for people who want more than temples in neat rows. You’re not just getting from point A to point B. You’re moving through real neighborhoods, market areas, fields, and villages at the hour when everything softens—light, noise, even people’s energy.
The practical genius here is the setup: you don’t have to drive. You sit on the back of a Vespa while the driver navigates, and your guide keeps the context going. That matters in rural areas where roads can be uneven and directions can feel like a puzzle. With the logistics handled, you can actually look around.
It also helps that the tour is timed for sunset. Instead of cramming temples during midday heat, you finish with a classic countryside view and a relaxed drink stop while the sun drops. That’s a simple difference, but it can make the whole day feel more rewarding.
You can also read our reviews of more evening experiences in Siem Reap
Pickup and the Ride Setup: When Logistics Stop Being Your Job

The tour includes round trip Vespa transport, experienced drivers, and a professional English-speaking guide. You’ll be picked up from your hotel lobby in Siem Reap in the late afternoon window, with the itinerary indicating a 3:00pm meeting, while the listed start time shows 2:30pm. In real life, that gap usually just means check your confirmation and be ready a little early. You want to settle in before the ride starts.
Here’s what you should expect from the experience style:
- You’ll get a guide intro and a plan for the stops.
- You’ll travel through a mix of city edges and country roads.
- The guide handles the talking, so you’re not trying to translate on the move.
- You’ll have built-in snack and drink time later, rather than it happening only if you remember to buy something.
One more detail worth noting: the tour caps at 12 travelers. That’s not a tiny group, but it’s small enough that you can usually hear explanations and keep the flow moving without feeling like cattle.
Stop 1: The Intro Around Siem Reap (and Why It Sets the Tone)
The tour begins with a meet-up at your hotel lobby in the afternoon. The first stop is designed less like a museum visit and more like an orientation to how locals live and work around Siem Reap.
Think of it as your mental warm-up. You’re introduced to local livelihood and the types of everyday places you’ll see again later, but now you’re learning what you’re looking at. This kind of start pays off when you hit the villages and farms. You’re not just passing fields; you understand why someone might grow what they grow, or how daily routines fit the landscape.
You can also expect free admission ticket coverage for the listed stops (where applicable). That helps keep the experience smooth. You won’t be dealing with random entry costs mid-ride.
Stop 2: Chreav Village Break (Rural Life in Plain Terms)

Next comes Chreav, a small village stop built around learning. This is the point where the tour shifts from city-adjacent sights to something quieter and more grounded.
What makes this stop valuable is the way it’s framed: you’re not only seeing buildings and fields. You’re taking a break in a village setting and learning more about the local people and their livelihoods. In practice, that means conversation and context—how life looks day-to-day, how rural work shapes schedules, and how the countryside supports families.
The time allocation is about two hours, which is long enough to feel like more than a quick photo stop. You can ask questions. You can watch how people move through the village. And you’re not trapped in the kind of stop where you’re constantly being nudged along.
If you like travel moments where you’re a student for a while—eyes open, listening, asking—this is a great fit.
Stop 3: Wat Po Banteaychey (Temple + Pond + Farm-Route Variety)

Then you head toward Wat Po Banteaychey, with the ride through countryside elements in between. The route is described with a nice spread of sights you might not catch on foot in this region: villages, a local market area, a Buddhist temple, lotus pond, plus farm scenes such as mushroom farms and vegetable farms.
That mix is the real value of adding a temple stop on a countryside route. You’re not just looking at one landmark. You’re seeing the connections around it—water features, cultivation work, and the religious spaces that sit inside everyday life.
For this stop, you hop on the Vespa and travel through those areas, then spend about an hour at Wat Po Banteaychey. It’s a reasonable length: you get time to look around without losing the sunset payoff later.
A balanced note: if you’re a temple purist who wants long, detailed temple time, an hour may feel short. But if your goal is the countryside storyline—villages, farms, then spiritual sites—an hour keeps momentum and fits the tour’s pacing.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Siem Reap
Stop 4: Phnom Krom Sunset in the Rice Fields

This is the finale. You end the tour finding a good spot in the rice fields for a photo opportunity with countryside views, and then drinks are served while you watch the sunset.
Phnom Krom is one of those “end it right” places. The point isn’t just the view—it’s the timing. By late afternoon, you get softer light and an easier atmosphere. It also feels like the tour returns you to the core theme: rural Siem Reap as a working place, not a postcard.
The stop is about one hour, which includes both the scenic time and the drink service. That means you can slow down, take photos, and just enjoy the moment without thinking about where you’ll find a cafe later.
Practical tip: bring a small camera strap or secure phone grip. When you’ve been on the back of a Vespa, you’ll likely want to shoot photos quickly when the view opens up.
Price and Value: What $30 Buys You in Siem Reap

At $30 per person, this isn’t trying to be a budget “ride only” deal. You’re paying for:
- Vespa transport round trip
- Experienced drivers
- An English-speaking guide
- Snacks plus bottled water
- A soft drink or beer
- A guided route that stitches together village life, a temple, farm-route sights, and sunset
For most visitors, the biggest value isn’t the transport itself. It’s the ability to do a countryside day without spending the whole time figuring it out. The guide explanations can turn ordinary scenery into something you actually understand. And your finish includes drinks, which is a nice touch for a sunset tour.
If you compare this with piecing together your own countryside visits, you’d usually need to coordinate transport, timing, and ticket logistics on your own. Here, the structure is already in place. That structure is exactly what you want when you’re only in Siem Reap for a few days.
The Human Factor: Guides and Drivers Make It Land

The strongest praise in the feedback centers on the people—guides and drivers who make you feel safe and informed.
Names that stood out include Bunsom and Heng, with praise for how knowledgeable they were in day-to-day topics, including plants and explanations about how rice wine is made. Other staff names that came through positively were Ravy and Sömbath, with notes about punctual pickup, effort to keep the tour pleasant, and clear answers to questions.
Why you should care: in a countryside ride, safety and clarity matter. You want someone who can explain what you’re seeing and also handle questions without brushing you off. When the explanations are strong, you come away with more than photos—you come away with a sense of how the region works.
Motorcycle vs Private Car: Choosing What Fits Your Body
This tour strongly suggests taking the motorcycle option because it offers freedom to stop wherever it makes sense—like a quick butt break or a roadside pause. That’s a real advantage in rural areas where “one roadside pull-off” can be the perfect place to pause.
But they also flag a practical truth: motorcycle riding may not suit everyone. If you have back problems, or if you’re traveling with elderly relatives or young children, the private car option is recommended.
If you’re deciding, be honest with yourself about comfort and timing. You don’t want your sunset moment overshadowed by discomfort during the ride.
What’s Included (So You Don’t Forget the Basics)
Included in the tour:
- Snacks
- Bottled water
- Soft drink or beer
- Free admissions are listed for the stops included in the itinerary
- Professional English-speaking guide
- Round trip Vespa and an experienced driver
Not included:
- Personal expenses
- Travel insurance
So what should you bring? The tour data doesn’t list a packing list, but for this style of evening ride, you’ll want basics like sunscreen, light layers for late-day cooling, and a bag you can keep secure. If you’re bringing a phone for photos, consider a secure way to carry it.
Pace and Timing: A 4.5-Hour Plan That Doesn’t Feel Like a Sprint
The tour runs about 4 hours 30 minutes. That length is important because it gives time for a real arc:
- Early part of the afternoon to orient around Siem Reap
- Village learning time
- Temple and farm-route variety
- Sunset finish with drinks
If you only have a short window before dinner, this fits well. If you want a low-stress day, it also works because the schedule is built around guided stops rather than you driving yourself around.
Also, because pickup is from your hotel, you don’t lose time navigating. That can be the difference between a tour that feels relaxed and one that feels like a scramble.
Who This Vespa Sunset Tour Is Best For
You’ll likely love this tour if you:
- Want a guided countryside day, not just a temple checklist
- Prefer short explanations and real-world context at multiple stops
- Like sunsets and want them to be part of your travel plan, not an afterthought
- Enjoy small-group tours where you can hear your guide
You might choose the private car option if you:
- Have mobility or back issues
- Travel with elderly family members
- Have young children and need extra comfort on the ride
If you’re the kind of visitor who wants long, slow museum-style visits, you might find the stop lengths feel brisk. But for countryside storytelling with an excellent sunset payoff, the pacing is strong.
Should You Book This Siem Reap Countryside Sunset Vespa Tour?
I’d book it if your ideal day in Siem Reap includes real villages, farm-route sights, and a sunset finish where you can actually sit and enjoy a view with a drink in hand. The value is in the full package: transport, guide, and a sequence of stops that makes rural life understandable without turning it into homework.
If you’re sensitive to motorcycle rides, choose the private car option. If you’re comfortable on a Vespa, this is the kind of tour that can make Siem Reap feel more like a lived place and less like a tourist bubble.
FAQ
Will I be picked up from my hotel?
Yes. Pickup is offered from your hotel lobby for ease.
How long is the Siem Reap countryside sunset Vespa tour?
It runs about 4 hours 30 minutes (approx.).
What is the price per person?
The price is $30.00 per person.
Are admission tickets included?
The stops list admission tickets as free for the included sightseeing areas.
What do I get during the tour?
The tour includes snacks, bottled water, and a soft drink or beer, plus a professional English-speaking guide.
Do I ride a Vespa the whole time?
The tour is described as a Vespa ride with round trip transportation. A private car option is available if you prefer that.
What are the main stops on the route?
You’ll visit areas around Siem Reap, stop at Chreav village, see Wat Po Banteaychey, and end at Phnom Krom for sunset views and drinks.
What time does the tour start?
The itinerary lists a 3:00pm hotel meeting time, while the start time shown is 2:30pm. Check your confirmation for the exact pickup timing.
How large is the group?
The maximum group size is 12 travelers.
Is the tour in English?
Yes. It includes a professional English-speaking guide.






























