Thousands of islands. Ancient temples. Food that costs almost nothing and tastes like everything. Eleven countries, a hundred million ways to get lost. This is the guide to all of it — not the packaged tour version. The real one.
Deep-dive guides for each country — not just the highlights, but the real stuff. Transport, costs, culture, what to avoid, and why it's worth it.
Some things don't belong in a single country guide. These are the big-picture pieces — how to plan a multi-country trip, how the seasons work, what nobody tells first-timers.
The honest answer to the most common question. Not "it depends" — a real framework for deciding between Thailand, Philippines, Vietnam, and Bali based on what you actually want from a trip.
SEA has two seasons and about fourteen microclimates. This guide breaks down exactly when to go where — so you don't plan a beach trip during monsoon season and wonder why it rained every day.
You can move between countries by boat more often than most people realise. Routes, ferries, transport connections, and the multi-country itineraries that actually work without a tour company.
The unwritten rules — temple dress codes, how tipping actually works, haggling etiquette, when "no" means no, and the small things that make locals either warm up to you immediately or dismiss you entirely.
Budget, mid-range, and "I want a pool" breakdowns across five countries. What changes, what stays the same, and why your $50-a-day estimate might be off by a lot depending on where you go.
Budget airline hacks. Night bus realities. Ferry schedules that are more suggestions than facts. How transport actually works across the region — not the romanticised version.
The region spans hemispheres and climate zones. The trick is knowing which country to target in which season.
Peak season across most of SEA. Clear skies, calm seas, and crowds at the big destinations. Book ahead.
Fewer tourists, lower prices, and dramatic skies. Not everywhere rains all the time — know where to go.
Affects the Philippines, Vietnam, and parts of southern China. Travel is possible but watch the forecasts.
Before the wet hits hard. Good prices, manageable heat, and the crowds have gone home. Often the best time to go.
SEA's geography rewards travellers who think regionally. Some of the best routes cross borders by boat — no airports, no check-in lines.
Rarely taken, increasingly possible. A route for serious explorers willing to go off the grid.
AdvancedCross the land border through one of the world's oldest rainforests. Orangutans optional but recommended.
Land borderOne of SEA's easiest cross-border routes. Night train or ferry, arrive in Penang for breakfast.
EasyMekong Delta boat or bus — one of the classic backpacker routes, still worth doing right.
Classic routeEvery country in this region has festivals that stop traffic, fill streets with colour, and open doors to strangers without question. These aren't tourist events staged for cameras. They're the real thing — and showing up for one changes how you understand the place entirely.
Each of these countries has dozens more festivals worth knowing about — full cultural calendars coming in the individual country guides.
Not the scary stuff. The practical stuff that changes how the whole trip feels.
Tuk tuks, street food, tricycles — almost nobody can break a large note. You'll lose money in change, or lose the ride entirely. Stock up at ATMs and ask for small denominations.
Every SEA country has cheap, fast mobile data. Don't rely on roaming. A local SIM with 10–30GB costs less than a coffee at home. Grab it before you leave the arrivals hall.
Tuk tuks, pedicabs, unmetered taxis — price first, ride second. This is not rude. It's expected. Smiling while you negotiate makes everyone comfortable with the transaction.
Shoulders and knees covered. Shoes off at the entrance. No selfies in front of the altar. Pack a light scarf or sarong — useful in mosques, temples, and anywhere the AC is brutal.
When someone says "a little spicy" in SEA, recalibrate your expectations. If you have a low tolerance, say "no chilli" and point to your mouth looking distressed. Works better than polite requests.
Buses leave when full. Ferries depend on the weather. Restaurants bring food when it's ready. Building your itinerary around tight connections will make you miserable. Build in buffer time.