Western Province
Gangaramaya Temple
How to visit Colombo's Gangaramaya Temple: the Rs 400 ticket that includes the magpie's-nest museum, why the lakeside Seema Malaka shrine is the better photo, and the dress code that gets tourists turned away.
Where
Colombo, Sri Lanka
Opening hours
Roughly 06:00-22:00 daily; the museum rooms keep slightly shorter hours, generally winding down by around 21:00. It's busiest in the late afternoon and around the evening puja, and far quieter if you arrive soon after it opens.
Tickets
Rs 400 (~£0.90) for the foreigner ticket, which covers the temple grounds and the museum (Sri Lankan residents pay less). It's cash in rupees at the small booth by the entrance; the nearby Seema Malaka shrine on the lake is a separate, smaller donation. As a single sight it's effectively free in UK terms — the cost, if any, is the half-day Colombo city tour that bundles it with Pettah and the Fort.
Time needed
45 minutes to an hour for the temple and museum together; add 15-20 minutes for the Seema Malaka shrine a few minutes' walk away on the lake.
In short
Visiting Gangaramaya Temple
Gangaramaya is Colombo's busiest working Buddhist temple, on the edge of Beira Lake in Colombo 2 — and the surprise is that the ticket buys you a museum as much as a shrine. The Rs 400 (~£0.90) foreigner entry covers the temple, the relic stupa and a magpie's-nest museum of vintage cars, gifted Buddha statues, ivory, coins and curiosities crammed into every case. Allow 45 minutes to an hour, cover your shoulders and knees and remove your shoes at the door, and walk five minutes to the separate Seema Malaka shrine — Geoffrey Bawa's three pavilions floating on the lake — which is the calmer, more photogenic half most rushed visitors skip.
What the Rs 400 ticket actually gets you
The thing to understand about Gangaramaya is that it isn’t really one sight — the Rs 400 (~£0.90) foreigner ticket buys you a working temple and a museum, and the museum is the part people remember. Past the shrine hall and the relic stupa, the side rooms are crammed floor to ceiling with the gifts the temple has accumulated over a century: vintage cars including a donated Rolls-Royce, thousands of Buddha figures in every material, ivory, coins, watches and oddments behind glass. It’s closer to an eccentric collector’s attic than a place of quiet contemplation, and that’s the point of coming. Pay in rupees at the small booth by the entrance — there’s no advance ticket and no real queue.
Treat it as a 45-minute to one-hour stop, not a half-day. It sits on the edge of Beira Lake in Colombo 2, a short tuk-tuk (use the PickMe app for a metered fare) from Galle Face or Fort, so the natural move is to fold it into a morning that also takes in the Pettah bazaar and the colonial Fort district rather than building a trip around it. Go soon after the 06:00 opening if you can: it’s busiest in the late afternoon and around the evening puja, when tour groups and worshippers fill the courtyard.
The shrine on the lake most people miss
A few minutes’ walk away, out on Beira Lake, is the Seema Malaka — three low pavilions designed by the architect Geoffrey Bawa, sitting on platforms over the water and lined with rows of Buddha statues. It’s a separate, smaller donation rather than part of the Gangaramaya ticket, and it’s the calmer, more photogenic half of the visit that rushed coach-tour itineraries skip. If you only have time to photograph one thing here, make it the Seema Malaka at the quieter end of the day.
Mind the dress code, because it’s enforced. Cover your shoulders and knees, take your shoes and hat off at the door, and don’t count on a borrowed sarong getting you in over shorts. GOV.UK is blunt that immodest dress at Buddhist temples causes offence, and — more seriously — never pose with your back to a Buddha statue for a photo: in Sri Lanka that has had tourists arrested, not just told off.
Is it worth it?
Come for a short, cheap, genuinely odd stop on a Colombo day — no more than that. At under a pound it’s effectively free in UK terms, so the only real cost is the half-day city tour some people book to bundle it with Pettah and the Fort. Don’t arrive expecting the serene grandeur of a hill-country temple; Gangaramaya’s appeal is the magpie’s-nest clutter and the lakeside Bawa shrine next door, not architecture. If it’s a tranquil, sacred temple you’re after, save that for the Temple of the Sacred Tooth Relic up in Kandy, and let Gangaramaya be the quick, characterful hour it does best.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Colombo city guide.
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