Skip to content
Departly.
Kandy, Sri Lanka
Kandy

Where to stay in Kandy

Trade walkability for the Hantana hillside above the lake, where views and cool quiet beat the centre's horns; sleep in town only for an early Ella train.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 9 Jun 2026
Find hotels in Kandy

Ad ยท affiliate link โ€” at no extra cost to you.

In short

Where to stay in Kandy

For a first Kandy trip, stay on the hillside above the lake โ€” the Hantana and Aniwatte slopes โ€” unless you have a clear reason not to. You get lake-and-jungle views, cool night air and a 5-10 minute tuk-tuk down to the Temple of the Sacred Tooth, instead of the horns and exhaust of the centre. Pick the city centre by the lake only for a single night when you want to walk to an early Ella train, and Peradeniya near the botanic gardens if you want greener, cheaper rooms and don't mind relying on a tuk-tuk for everything.

The short version

  • Best all-rounder: the Hantana/Aniwatte hillside above the lake, 5-10 min tuk-tuk from the Tooth Temple.
  • Best for an early Ella train: the city centre by the lake, within walking distance of Kandy station.
  • Best value and greenery: Peradeniya, by the Royal Botanic Gardens, ~6km west.
  • Don't pick a hotel for centre walkability alone โ€” Kandy's core is gridlocked and noisy day and night.
  • Tuk-tuk on the PickMe app for a metered fare (a city hop is ~ยฃ0.70-1.10) rather than haggling at the rank.

Best areas to book

Hillside above the lake (Hantana, Aniwatte, Lewella)

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The first-timer sweet spot: guesthouses terraced into the slopes south and west of Kandy Lake, with views over the water and the jungle, genuinely cool air after dark and a 5-10 minute tuk-tuk down to the Tooth Temple and station. You trade walkability for quiet and a view, which is the right trade in a town this noisy. The Hantana road climbs steeply, so confirm your guesthouse arranges pick-ups.

Best for: First-timers, couples, views and quiet

Browse hotels 5-10 min tuk-tuk to centre

City centre (around Kandy Lake and the temple)

ยฃ value

The square kilometre between the lake, the Temple of the Sacred Tooth and Kandy railway station: you can walk to the 6.30pm puja, the markets and the platform, but expect horns, exhaust and crowds from morning to night. Worth it only for a single fast night when you want to be on an early Ella train without a dawn tuk-tuk.

Best for: One-night dashes, early trains

Browse hotels Central, walk to the station

Peradeniya (south-west, by the botanic gardens)

ยฃ value

Out around the Royal Botanic Gardens and the university, ~6km west of the lake and a 15-20 minute tuk-tuk from the temple. Greener, calmer and cheaper than the centre, and handy if the gardens are your morning. The catch is you rely on a tuk-tuk for everything, so it suits longer stays and drivers more than a first-timer who wants to walk to the temple.

Best for: Value, the gardens, longer stays

Browse hotels ~6km / 15-20 min tuk-tuk

Katugastota road (north, towards the river)

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The Kandy-Katugastota road heads north out of town towards the Mahaweli river, where a string of mid-range hotels and a few boutique stays get you off the lakeside gridlock for less than the hillside view rooms. Convenient if you're driving on to Dambulla and the Cultural Triangle afterwards, since you skip the city snarl, but it's a 10-15 minute tuk-tuk back to the temple and short on evening atmosphere.

Best for: Drivers heading to the Cultural Triangle, value

Browse hotels ~10-15 min tuk-tuk to centre

The simple choice

If you are booking in a hurry, filter for the Hantana/Aniwatte hillside first, then check the centre only if you have a sunrise train to Ella. That one rule keeps most first-timers out of the common trap: booking a room right by the temple for the walkability, then losing every night to traffic noise and tuk-tuk horns. Kandy is a two-night staging post โ€” base yourself for the view, not the convenience.

Compare Kandy hillside stays

Safety, noise and the temple dress code

Kandy is a calm, religious town and broadly safe, but the country-wide cautions apply: GOV.UK flags card fraud, so draw rupees from ATMs inside banks or hotels rather than street machines, and harassment of women in crowds has been reported. The bigger day-to-day issue for choosing a base is noise โ€” a hillside street in Aniwatte sleeps far better than a room on the lake circuit by the temple. Wherever you stay, take socks for the Tooth Temple: you cross its marble courtyards barefoot and the stone scorches by midday.

Book the essentials

Where to stay

Browse staysvia Booking.com

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide

Keep planning Kandy

Where to stay in Kandy FAQs

Where is the best area to stay in Kandy for first-timers?
The hillside above the lake โ€” the Hantana and Aniwatte slopes โ€” is the sweet spot. You get lake-and-jungle views, cool night air and a 5-10 minute tuk-tuk down to the Temple of the Sacred Tooth, instead of the traffic noise of a central room. Use the PickMe app for metered tuk-tuk fares rather than haggling at the rank.
Should I stay in the centre of Kandy to walk to the temple?
Only for a single night, and really only if you have an early Ella train and want to walk to the station. The centre between the lake, the Tooth Temple and the railway station is walkable but loud with horns and exhaust from morning to night. For a calmer base you'll lose nothing by staying on the hillside and tuk-tukking the 5-10 minutes in.
Is Peradeniya a good area to stay in Kandy?
It's good for value and greenery, not for walking to the temple. Peradeniya sits ~6km west by the Royal Botanic Gardens and the university โ€” quieter and cheaper than the centre, and ideal if the gardens are your morning, but you rely on a tuk-tuk for everything, so it suits longer stays and drivers more than a quick first visit.

Ready to book?

Find hotels in Kandy

Go