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Royal Botanic Gardens, Peradeniya, Sri Lanka
Royal Botanic Gardens, Peradeniya

Central Province

Royal Botanic Gardens, Peradeniya

How to visit Peradeniya Royal Botanic Gardens from Kandy: when to go, whether to pre-book, and an honest take on the foreigner ticket price.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 10 Jun 2026

Where

Kandy, Sri Lanka

Opening hours

Open daily, roughly 07:30 to 17:00, with the ticket office closing around 16:30 (last entry). Hours are stable year-round; it stays open on public holidays. Go early for the cool, quiet hours.

Tickets

Foreigner entry about Rs 3,000 (around ยฃ6.70) for adults and roughly half that for children; Sri Lankan residents pay a small fraction. A tuk-tuk from central Kandy is ~Rs 400-600 (about ยฃ0.90-1.30) each way on the PickMe meter.

Time needed

2-3 hours to do it properly; 1.5 hours if you stick to the main avenues and the great lawn.

In short

Visiting Royal Botanic Gardens, Peradeniya

You don't pre-book Peradeniya โ€” you turn up and pay the foreigner gate price of Rs 3,000 (about ยฃ6.70), so the real planning is timing and transport, not tickets. Take a metered tuk-tuk the ~6km from Kandy first thing, walk the giant Javan fig and the palm avenues before the midday heat, and budget two to three hours. Skip it if you're tight on time and the Tooth Temple plus the lake already fill your day; come for it if you want green, shade and space away from Kandy's traffic.

How to visit without overpaying the day

Unlike Sri Lankaโ€™s big-ticket sites, Peradeniya has no timed entry and nothing to pre-book โ€” you pay the foreigner gate price of around Rs 3,000 (about ยฃ6.70) in cash when you arrive, so the only thing to plan is getting there. The gardens sit ~6km west of central Kandy, a 15-20 minute tuk-tuk away; book a metered ride on the PickMe app rather than accepting a flat tourist fare at the rank, and youโ€™ll pay roughly Rs 400-600 (under ยฃ1.30) each way. The classic mistake is going at the wrong end of the day โ€” by late morning the open lawns offer almost no shade and the foreigner ticket starts to feel steep against the heat.

So go at opening, around 07:30, when itโ€™s cool, quiet and the light flatters the palm avenues. Walk the great lawn and the giant Javan fig first while the tour groups are still in town, then drift through the orchid house and the riverside loop. Allow two to three hours if you want to do it properly, or 90 minutes for just the headline avenues.

Breathing space, or skippable?

Peradeniya is at its best as a relaxed half-morning, not a sight you race round โ€” itโ€™s 147 acres of green, shade and space, which is exactly what central Kandyโ€™s traffic-choked core lacks. Pair it with the lake loop on the same morning and save the Temple of the Sacred Tooth Relic for the 6.30pm puja, rather than trying to stack all three into a single sweaty midday.

If your Kandy time is short and the Tooth Temple plus the Ella train already fill it, this is the easiest thing to drop without regret. But if you want a genuine break from the noise โ€” cool air, big trees and somewhere to slow down before the hill-country train โ€” itโ€™s the best few pounds youโ€™ll spend in town. Treat it as breathing space, not a blockbuster, and it delivers.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Kandy city guide.

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Royal Botanic Gardens, Peradeniya FAQs

Do you need to book Peradeniya gardens tickets in advance?
No. There's no timed entry and no online booking โ€” you buy the foreigner ticket (about Rs 3,000 / ยฃ6.70) at the gate on arrival. The only thing worth sorting ahead is your transport: agree a metered PickMe tuk-tuk from Kandy rather than haggling at the rank, and have rupees in hand for the gate.
Is Peradeniya gardens worth it?
For most UK visitors, yes as a relaxed half-morning rather than a headline sight. It's 147 acres of palms, orchids and a vast Javan fig, far greener and cooler than central Kandy. If you've already got a packed day with the Tooth Temple and the Ella train, it's the easiest thing to drop; if you want shade and space, it's the best half-morning in town.
What is the best time of day to visit?
Arrive when it opens around 07:30, before the heat builds and the Kandy school and tour groups roll in. The light is softer for the palm avenues and the great lawn early, and you'll have the giant fig largely to yourself. Avoid the midday hours, when there's little shade on the open lawns and the walk back to the gate is sweltering.

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