πΊοΈ DS Travels Sri Lanka Β· Itinerary Guide Β· 2026
Sri Lanka in 7 Days: The Perfect First-Timer's Itinerary
Seven days is enough to see the best of Sri Lanka β but only if you plan the route correctly. This itinerary is designed the way we plan trips for our own guests: logical, efficient, and honest about what you can actually do well in a week.
7
Days
5
Regions
0
Backtracking
100%
Private
Your Route at a Glance
βοΈ Arrive Colombo β ποΈ Sigiriya + Dambulla β ποΈ Polonnaruwa β π΅ Kandy β π Safari (Yala or Wilpattu) β ποΈ Galle + South Coast β βοΈ Depart Colombo
Why the Route Order Matters More Than the Destinations
Most online itineraries list the same places β Sigiriya, Kandy, Ella, Galle β without accounting for the driving time between them. The road from Ella to Galle is three hours on a good day. Kandy to Sigiriya is another two. String these together poorly and you spend Day 3 in traffic wondering why you’re exhausted.
This route is structured north-to-south: fly in to Colombo, move up to the Cultural Triangle, come back through Kandy, take your safari, and finish on the south coast before flying home. It minimises backtracking, aligns with how long each destination actually needs, and gives you a natural wind-down on the beach at the end.
β οΈ One honest caveat: Sri Lanka’s roads are slower than any map suggests. A 150 km journey regularly takes 3.5β4 hours. Always confirm your driver knows the opening and closing times at each site β not just the destination.
Arrive & Head to the Cultural Triangle
Day 1
Arrival & Transfer
Most UK flights land in Colombo around 5β6 AM. Don’t attempt anything significant on arrival day β the Cultural Triangle is 3.5 hours from the airport and you’ll be running on no sleep.
β Stay near Negombo or the airport. Rest. Eat well. Early night.
Day 2
Sigiriya + Dambulla
Leave your hotel by 6:15 AM. Sigiriya opens at 7:00 AM β arriving at opening means climbing in cool air with almost no one ahead of you. After, drive 18 km to Dambulla Cave Temple. Arrive before 10:30 AM β it closes for worship at 11:30 AM.
β Best day of most trips. Guests consistently rank it their favourite.
Polonnaruwa β Sri Lanka’s Forgotten Ancient City
Most first-timers skip Polonnaruwa. We’d gently push back on this. It’s a 12th-century royal capital with standing statues, moats, and intricate carvings spread across a vast, flat site you explore by bicycle or tuk-tuk β one of the finest ancient cities in all of Asia.
Start by 7:30 AM before the heat builds. The Gal Vihara β four enormous Buddha figures carved from a single granite face β and the Royal Palace complex are the highlights. Allow 3 hours minimum and hire a bicycle at the entrance (it costs almost nothing and transforms the visit).
π‘ Insider detail: The Rankot Vihara stupa at the northern end of the site is almost always empty, even when the southern section near the entrance is busy. Walk 10 minutes further than most visitors bother β you’ll often have it entirely to yourself.
Kandy β Temple of the Tooth & the Hill Country Gateway
The drive from the Cultural Triangle to Kandy takes about 2β2.5 hours. Kandy feels immediately different β cooler, greener, slower. The city is centred on a lake surrounded by colonial buildings and the Temple of the Tooth (Sri Dalada Maligawa), Sri Lanka’s most sacred Buddhist site.
π Temple of the Tooth
Arrive before 10:00 AM for the morning puja ceremony (9:30 AM). Drummers, incense, hundreds of worshippers. The most atmospheric 30 minutes of any cultural visit in Sri Lanka. Entry: $10 per adult.
πΏ Peradeniya Gardens
60 hectares of orchids, bamboo groves, and a famous avenue of royal palms. 15 minutes from Kandy city. Perfect afternoon activity. If time allows, stop at a tea factory on the road toward Nuwara Eliya β usually free.
Wildlife Safari β Yala or Wilpattu
Day 5 is your wildlife day. Which park you choose depends on where you’re based and what kind of experience you want:
Option A
π Yala National Park
Best if you’re heading south to Galle anyway. One of the world’s densest leopard populations β we see them on ~80β85% of dry-season morning safaris. More open terrain, higher sighting frequency.
Gate opens: 6:00 AM sharp
Option B
πΏ Wilpattu National Park
Best if you’re based in Colombo or Negombo. Rarely more than 20 jeeps in the entire park. When a leopard appears at Maradanmaduwa Villu with no other vehicles β genuinely unforgettable.
3.5 hrs from Negombo Β· Closed 1 Sepβ15 Oct
β° Either way: The morning session (6β9 AM) is the only session worth doing. Gates open at 6:00 AM β arriving even 30 minutes late in peak season means joining a queue and missing the best activity.
South Coast β Galle Fort & the Beach
The drive from Yala to Galle takes about 2 hours along the southern coastal highway. Galle Fort is the most intact colonial fortification in Asia β a UNESCO World Heritage site where Dutch ramparts overlook the Indian Ocean and the streets inside are a mix of boutique hotels, independent cafes, and jewellery workshops.
Spend the morning exploring the Fort on foot. The real pleasure is wandering the quieter residential streets behind the main drag β where locals hang laundry between 400-year-old buildings and school children walk past crumbling Dutch gateways.
ποΈ Beach options for the afternoon:
- Unawatuna β 10 min from Galle Fort. Sheltered bay, calm NovβApr.
- Mirissa β 40 min east. Best beach on the south coast. Worth the extra drive.
- Tangalle β 1 hour east. Quieter, more local. Good for a final evening.
β οΈ Between MayβSeptember the southwest monsoon makes surf rough β not ideal for swimming. Check conditions before planning a beach afternoon.
Transfer Back to Colombo & Depart
Galle to Bandaranaike Airport is 2β2.5 hours on the Southern Expressway β one of Sri Lanka’s genuinely good roads. Most UK-bound flights depart late evening, so you have a full morning and early afternoon free.
Colombo is underrated as a half-day stop: the Pettah Market, Galle Face Green along the seafront, and the Dutch Hospital shopping precinct near Fort are all interesting for a few final hours of wandering.
β οΈ Don’t cut it close. Bandaranaike Airport has long check-in queues for UK-bound flights. Arrive 3 hours before departure minimum. If flying on a Friday night, build in an extra 45 minutes β the expressway gets congested.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is 7 days enough for Sri Lanka?
Seven days covers the key highlights β Cultural Triangle, Kandy, a wildlife safari, and the south coast β but you won’t have time to slow down or go deep anywhere. If you can stretch to 10β14 days, you can add the Hill Country (Ella, Nuwara Eliya) or the east coast. For a first visit, 7 days is a solid foundation.
What is the best route for 7 days in Sri Lanka?
North-to-south is the most efficient route from Colombo airport: Cultural Triangle (Sigiriya, Dambulla, Polonnaruwa) β Kandy β wildlife safari β south coast (Galle, beach). This avoids backtracking and aligns with natural driving distances between each region.
Can I do Sri Lanka in 7 days without a driver?
Technically yes, using trains and buses β but you’ll spend a significant amount of each day in transit and miss the early-morning starts that make the best experiences possible (Sigiriya at 7 AM, Yala at 6 AM). A private driver makes the timing of each day far more manageable and the trip considerably less stressful.
How much does a 7-day Sri Lanka trip cost from the UK?
Flights from the UK typically cost Β£500βΒ£900 return depending on season and airline. Accommodation runs $30β$200+/night depending on style. Day tours with DS Travels start from $95 per person for a private full-day trip. A comfortable mid-range week including flights, accommodation, tours, and food typically runs Β£1,500βΒ£2,500 per person.
100% Private Β· English-Speaking Driver Β· Government Registered Β· Free Cancellation
Ready to Book Your Cultural Triangle Days?
If you want to take the hassle out of planning the Cultural Triangle days β Sigiriya, Dambulla, and Polonnaruwa β see our private day tours from Colombo. Each tour is 100% private, led by an English-speaking driver who knows the opening times, crowd patterns, and local details that make the difference between a good day and a great one.
πΊοΈ DS Travels Sri Lanka Β· Itinerary Guide Β· 2026
Sri Lanka in 7 Days: The Perfect First-Timer's Itinerary
Seven days is enough to see the best of Sri Lanka β but only if you plan the route correctly. This itinerary is designed the way we plan trips for our own guests: logical, efficient, and honest about what you can actually do well in a week.
7
Days
5
Regions
0
Backtracking
100%
Private
Your Route at a Glance
βοΈ Arrive Colombo β ποΈ Sigiriya + Dambulla β ποΈ Polonnaruwa β π΅ Kandy β π Safari (Yala or Wilpattu) β ποΈ Galle + South Coast β βοΈ Depart Colombo
Why the Route Order Matters More Than the Destinations
Most online itineraries list the same places β Sigiriya, Kandy, Ella, Galle β without accounting for the driving time between them. The road from Ella to Galle is three hours on a good day. Kandy to Sigiriya is another two. String these together poorly and you spend Day 3 in traffic wondering why you’re exhausted.
This route is structured north-to-south: fly in to Colombo, move up to the Cultural Triangle, come back through Kandy, take your safari, and finish on the south coast before flying home. It minimises backtracking, aligns with how long each destination actually needs, and gives you a natural wind-down on the beach at the end.
β οΈ One honest caveat: Sri Lanka’s roads are slower than any map suggests. A 150 km journey regularly takes 3.5β4 hours. Always confirm your driver knows the opening and closing times at each site β not just the destination.
Arrive & Head to the Cultural Triangle
Day 1
Arrival & Transfer
Most UK flights land in Colombo around 5β6 AM. Don’t attempt anything significant on arrival day β the Cultural Triangle is 3.5 hours from the airport and you’ll be running on no sleep.
β Stay near Negombo or the airport. Rest. Eat well. Early night.
Day 2
Sigiriya + Dambulla
Leave your hotel by 6:15 AM. Sigiriya opens at 7:00 AM β arriving at opening means climbing in cool air with almost no one ahead of you. After, drive 18 km to Dambulla Cave Temple. Arrive before 10:30 AM β it closes for worship at 11:30 AM.
β Best day of most trips. Guests consistently rank it their favourite.
Polonnaruwa β Sri Lanka’s Forgotten Ancient City
Most first-timers skip Polonnaruwa. We’d gently push back on this. It’s a 12th-century royal capital with standing statues, moats, and intricate carvings spread across a vast, flat site you explore by bicycle or tuk-tuk β one of the finest ancient cities in all of Asia.
Start by 7:30 AM before the heat builds. The Gal Vihara β four enormous Buddha figures carved from a single granite face β and the Royal Palace complex are the highlights. Allow 3 hours minimum and hire a bicycle at the entrance (it costs almost nothing and transforms the visit).
π‘ Insider detail: The Rankot Vihara stupa at the northern end of the site is almost always empty, even when the southern section near the entrance is busy. Walk 10 minutes further than most visitors bother β you’ll often have it entirely to yourself.
Kandy β Temple of the Tooth & the Hill Country Gateway
The drive from the Cultural Triangle to Kandy takes about 2β2.5 hours. Kandy feels immediately different β cooler, greener, slower. The city is centred on a lake surrounded by colonial buildings and the Temple of the Tooth (Sri Dalada Maligawa), Sri Lanka’s most sacred Buddhist site.
π Temple of the Tooth
Arrive before 10:00 AM for the morning puja ceremony (9:30 AM). Drummers, incense, hundreds of worshippers. The most atmospheric 30 minutes of any cultural visit in Sri Lanka. Entry: $10 per adult.
πΏ Peradeniya Gardens
60 hectares of orchids, bamboo groves, and a famous avenue of royal palms. 15 minutes from Kandy city. Perfect afternoon activity. If time allows, stop at a tea factory on the road toward Nuwara Eliya β usually free.
Wildlife Safari β Yala or Wilpattu
Day 5 is your wildlife day. Which park you choose depends on where you’re based and what kind of experience you want:
Option A
π Yala National Park
Best if you’re heading south to Galle anyway. One of the world’s densest leopard populations β we see them on ~80β85% of dry-season morning safaris. More open terrain, higher sighting frequency.
Gate opens: 6:00 AM sharp
Option B
πΏ Wilpattu National Park
Best if you’re based in Colombo or Negombo. Rarely more than 20 jeeps in the entire park. When a leopard appears at Maradanmaduwa Villu with no other vehicles β genuinely unforgettable.
3.5 hrs from Negombo Β· Closed 1 Sepβ15 Oct
β° Either way: The morning session (6β9 AM) is the only session worth doing. Gates open at 6:00 AM β arriving even 30 minutes late in peak season means joining a queue and missing the best activity.
South Coast β Galle Fort & the Beach
The drive from Yala to Galle takes about 2 hours along the southern coastal highway. Galle Fort is the most intact colonial fortification in Asia β a UNESCO World Heritage site where Dutch ramparts overlook the Indian Ocean and the streets inside are a mix of boutique hotels, independent cafes, and jewellery workshops.
Spend the morning exploring the Fort on foot. The real pleasure is wandering the quieter residential streets behind the main drag β where locals hang laundry between 400-year-old buildings and school children walk past crumbling Dutch gateways.
ποΈ Beach options for the afternoon:
- Unawatuna β 10 min from Galle Fort. Sheltered bay, calm NovβApr.
- Mirissa β 40 min east. Best beach on the south coast. Worth the extra drive.
- Tangalle β 1 hour east. Quieter, more local. Good for a final evening.
β οΈ Between MayβSeptember the southwest monsoon makes surf rough β not ideal for swimming. Check conditions before planning a beach afternoon.
Transfer Back to Colombo & Depart
Galle to Bandaranaike Airport is 2β2.5 hours on the Southern Expressway β one of Sri Lanka’s genuinely good roads. Most UK-bound flights depart late evening, so you have a full morning and early afternoon free.
Colombo is underrated as a half-day stop: the Pettah Market, Galle Face Green along the seafront, and the Dutch Hospital shopping precinct near Fort are all interesting for a few final hours of wandering.
β οΈ Don’t cut it close. Bandaranaike Airport has long check-in queues for UK-bound flights. Arrive 3 hours before departure minimum. If flying on a Friday night, build in an extra 45 minutes β the expressway gets congested.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is 7 days enough for Sri Lanka?
Seven days covers the key highlights β Cultural Triangle, Kandy, a wildlife safari, and the south coast β but you won’t have time to slow down or go deep anywhere. If you can stretch to 10β14 days, you can add the Hill Country (Ella, Nuwara Eliya) or the east coast. For a first visit, 7 days is a solid foundation.
What is the best route for 7 days in Sri Lanka?
North-to-south is the most efficient route from Colombo airport: Cultural Triangle (Sigiriya, Dambulla, Polonnaruwa) β Kandy β wildlife safari β south coast (Galle, beach). This avoids backtracking and aligns with natural driving distances between each region.
Can I do Sri Lanka in 7 days without a driver?
Technically yes, using trains and buses β but you’ll spend a significant amount of each day in transit and miss the early-morning starts that make the best experiences possible (Sigiriya at 7 AM, Yala at 6 AM). A private driver makes the timing of each day far more manageable and the trip considerably less stressful.
How much does a 7-day Sri Lanka trip cost from the UK?
Flights from the UK typically cost Β£500βΒ£900 return depending on season and airline. Accommodation runs $30β$200+/night depending on style. Day tours with DS Travels start from $95 per person for a private full-day trip. A comfortable mid-range week including flights, accommodation, tours, and food typically runs Β£1,500βΒ£2,500 per person.
100% Private Β· English-Speaking Driver Β· Government Registered Β· Free Cancellation
Ready to Book Your Cultural Triangle Days?
If you want to take the hassle out of planning the Cultural Triangle days β Sigiriya, Dambulla, and Polonnaruwa β see our private day tours from Colombo. Each tour is 100% private, led by an English-speaking driver who knows the opening times, crowd patterns, and local details that make the difference between a good day and a great one.
