Luxury Gay Group Trip: Vietnam, Laos & Cambodia vacations

Gay Group Trip: Vietnam, Laos & Cambodia

13 days From $9,200 pp

At a glance

? Our group trips are a great chance to travel with others. We also recommend adding in a few extra nights tailor-made to ensure you build the perfect itinerary.

Discover the highlights of mainland Southeast Asia on this tailor-made thirteen-day LGBTQ+ itinerary across Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia. Designed for couples and honeymooners ready to take their time, the trip moves through three countries, five distinctly different stops and a hotel collection that includes some of the best properties in the region.

You’ll start in Hanoi, the French colonial capital of Vietnam, with two nights at the Sofitel Legend Metropole, the 1901 hotel where Graham Greene wrote and Charlie Chaplin honeymooned. A private tour covers the Old Quarter, the Temple of Literature, and a cyclo ride through the streets that are this city’s whole point.

A drive east brings you to Halong Bay for an overnight on the Grand Pioneers, a 2023-launch luxury cruise that has fast become the best way to see the limestone karsts.

From there, you fly to Luang Prabang, the UNESCO-listed former royal capital of Laos, for three nights at the Sofitel. Time for the alms-giving ceremony at sunrise, the Kuang Si Waterfalls, a champagne breakfast cruise on the Mekong and a private cooking class with a local chef.

Next is Siem Reap and Angkor for three nights at the Park Hyatt, the Bill Bensley-designed property that has remained the city’s luxury benchmark since 2013. Sunrise at Angkor Wat, the jungle-overgrown temples at Ta Prohm, and a sunset cruise on Tonle Sap with cocktails.

The trip closes with three nights on the Cambodian coast at Six Senses Krabey Island, a private thirty-acre island fifteen minutes by speedboat from the mainland, with forty pool villas and the kind of slowing-down a journey like this needs to end on.

  • Days 1–3: Hanoi
  • Days 3–4: Halong Bay
  • Days 4–7: Luang Prabang
  • Days 7–10: Siem Reap
  • Days 10–13: Cambodian Coast

More Information


Cambodia’s approach to LGBTQ+ rights reflects a mixture of cultural tolerance and ongoing legal challenges. Same-sex relationships have never been criminalized, and the country displays a generally open attitude toward LGBTQ+ individuals, particularly in urban areas like Phnom Penh and Siem Reap, where younger generations and international influences are shaping a more accepting environment. However, there are no explicit legal protections against discrimination or formal recognition of same-sex unions, leaving gaps in equality under the law.

Despite the absence of robust legal protections, Cambodia has a visible and growing LGBTQ+ community. Advocacy groups like Rainbow Community Kampuchea (RoCK) and other grassroots organizations are actively working to raise awareness, challenge stigma, and promote LGBTQ+ rights. Events like Pride celebrations in Phnom Penh and community gatherings showcase the resilience and solidarity of LGBTQ+ Cambodians.

The Cambodian government has shown tentative support for LGBTQ+ issues, with public figures occasionally expressing acceptance and signaling openness to greater inclusion. However, legal recognition of same-sex marriage and anti-discrimination measures remain aspirations rather than realities. Progress has been gradual, reflecting Cambodia’s unique cultural and social context, but the direction suggests a slow but steady move toward broader acceptance and equality.

For LGBTQ+ travelers, Cambodia offers a relatively safe and welcoming experience, with queer-friendly businesses and a hospitable culture. While legal reforms are still needed, the country’s growing visibility and advocacy for LGBTQ+ issues reflect a promising trajectory.

  • 16 Feb, 2027
  • 16 Nov, 2027
    • Accommodation as listed
    • Luxury accommodation throughout
    • Daily breakfast and dinners and select lunches
    • Halong Bay overnight cruise
    • Mekong River champagne breakfast cruise
    • Private cooking class in Laos
    • Guided sightseeing and entrance fees
    • Private transportation throughout
    • Local English-speaking guides
    • Airport transfers and luggage assistance

In detail

? Don't forget that most of our itineraries can be totally customized. Our expert team will be able to talk you through all the options.

Days 1–3: Hanoi

Your Indochina adventure begins in Hanoi. You’ll be met at Noi Bai International Airport by a private transfer to the Sofitel Legend Metropole, the French colonial hotel that has been the city’s address since 1901. Past guests include Charlie Chaplin (on his honeymoon), Graham Greene (who wrote The Quiet American here) and most US presidents of the past two decades. The Bamboo Bar in the courtyard is where the trip really starts.

Day two is a private morning with an English-speaking gay-friendly guide. You’ll cover the Temple of Literature, Vietnam’s first university dating to 1070, the Single Pillar Pagoda and Tran Quoc Pagoda, the oldest pagoda in Hanoi. The afternoon takes in Hoan Kiem Lake and Ngoc Son Temple, followed by a traditional water puppet performance and a cyclo ride through the Old Quarter, where thirty-six original guild streets are still working in their original trades.

Hanoi has a small but growing gay scene if you want it. The bars are mostly clustered around the Old Quarter and Truc Bach Lake; we’ll send you the up-to-date list before you travel. Discretion is the cultural register here, regardless of orientation, and PDAs in temples and rural settings are simply less common than in Western contexts.

Days 1–3: Hanoi

Days 3–4: Halong Bay

A morning drive east brings you to Halong Bay, where you’ll board the Grand Pioneers cruise for an overnight in one of the Ocean Suites. The Grand Pioneers launched in 2023 and is the most sophisticated vessel in the bay: forty square-meter suites with floor-to-ceiling windows and private balconies, a pool, spa, sky bar and a dining room that feels closer to a boutique hotel than a cruise ship.

The afternoon is yours to use the bay. Kayak through hidden lagoons, swim in the karst pools, or hold the sun deck and a cocktail. Dinner is on board as the sun sets over the limestone islands, followed by a night anchored among them. Sunrise on the deck the following morning, with Tai Chi if you want it, is the right way to wake up before brunch and the afternoon transfer back to the mainland for the flight to Laos.

Days 3–4: Halong Bay

Days 4–7: Luang Prabang

A short flight brings you to Luang Prabang, the UNESCO-listed former royal capital of Laos, set on a peninsula where the Mekong and the Nam Khan meet. Three nights at the Sofitel Luang Prabang, a converted French colonial governor’s residence outside the historic center, with lush gardens, a large pool and rooms that have private outdoor soaking tubs.

Day five is the town: local markets, historic temples and the former Royal Palace, now the National Museum. The afternoon takes you out to the Kuang Si Waterfalls, where turquoise pools cascade through the jungle, with a stop at a Hmong village to learn about traditional textiles and rural Laos.

Day six is the trip’s quietest morning and one of its most affecting. You’ll be up before sunrise for the Tak Bat, the alms-giving ceremony where Buddhist monks collect offerings in silence along the main street, a daily ritual that has been running here for centuries. Brunch follows on a private boat along the Mekong, with champagne as the light comes up. A private Lao cooking class with a local chef closes the day, and you’ll eat what you cook.

Days 4–7: Luang Prabang

Days 7–10: Siem Reap

A morning cruise on the Mekong to the Pak Ou Caves, a sacred site filled with thousands of Buddha statues left by pilgrims, before disembarking and flying to Siem Reap. Three nights at the Park Hyatt Siem Reap, the Bill Bensley-redesigned property that reopened in 2013 and has held its place as the city’s luxury benchmark since.

Day eight starts before dawn. You’ll be at Angkor Wat for sunrise, which is the only way to see it: around 4,000 visitors a day pass through, and the first hour is when the light works and the crowds are still arriving. The morning continues to Angkor Thom, the last great Khmer capital, the smiling stone faces of Bayon Temple, and the jungle-clad ruins of Ta Prohm, where the silk-cotton tree roots that the Tomb Raider film made famous are gradually consuming the stone.

Day nine covers the pink sandstone carvings at Banteay Srei and Banteay Samre in the morning, then the Tonle Sap floating villages in the afternoon, finishing with a sunset cruise across the lake with cocktails and canapés. Evenings in Siem Reap are best spent walking the Old French Quarter or, if you want it, the small gay scene around Pub Street.

Days 7–10: Siem Reap

Days 10–13: Cambodian Coast

A morning flight takes you to Sihanoukville on the Cambodian coast and a fifteen-minute speedboat onward to Six Senses Krabey Island, a thirty-acre private island that opened in 2019. You’ll stay for three nights in an Ocean Pool Villa Suite: 111 square meters, floor-to-ceiling glass, private infinity pool, deep soaking tub and an unbroken ocean view.

The point of these three nights is the slow finish. The resort runs an excellent spa, two restaurants with Khmer cooking sourced from its own gardens, an open-air cinema and an observatory for the kind of stargazing the bigger destinations don’t allow for. Optional add-ons include snorkeling, kayaking and boat excursions to nearby reefs and islands.

On day thirteen, a transfer back to the mainland and onward to Phnom Penh International Airport, timed to your flight home.

Ready to start planning your luxury gay Indochina trip? Speak to one of our LGBTQ+ travel experts today and we’ll build the itinerary around you.

Days 10–13: Cambodian Coast

More Information

? Don't forget that most of our itineraries can be totally customized. Our expert team will be able to talk you through all the options.

Is Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia gay-friendly for LGBTQ+ travelers?

Yes. Same-sex relationships are legal across all three countries, and the hotels and partners on this trip are professional, internationally trained and entirely accustomed to welcoming LGBTQ+ travelers. The cultural register is more reserved than in Western destinations regardless of orientation, and public displays of affection are simply less common in non-tourist contexts. In tourist hubs like Hanoi and Siem Reap, you’ll find visible queer-friendly bars and restaurants if you want them.

When is the best time to visit Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia?

November to February is the sweet spot. The dry, cooler months across all three countries: comfortable temperatures, manageable humidity, reliable sunshine and the Mekong running at its fullest. November sits at the end of the rainy season when the landscapes are at their lushest. February is the tail of the cool, dry season, with crisp mornings in Hanoi and reliably sunny days on the Cambodian coast. We’d avoid May to September across the region, when the monsoon and humidity make some sections of the trip difficult.

How many days do you need for Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia?

Thirteen days is the right length for a private trip covering all three countries without rushing. Shorter trips of ten to eleven days work well for Vietnam and Cambodia only, dropping the Laos leg. Sixteen days opens up the central Vietnam coast at Hoi An or a longer Cambodian beach finish. If you’ve only got a week, focus on one country.

How much does a luxury gay Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia trip cost?

A tailor-made Out Of Office Indochina itinerary at the level described here starts from around $9,200 per person, excluding international flights. The figure depends on hotel category, season and the experiences you build in. Six Senses Krabey Island in particular drives a meaningful share of the total. We give you a fixed price after a Trip Concierge call, no surprises.

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