REVIEW · SIEM REAP
Sky Venture Microlight Siem Reap
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Angkor Focus Travel · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Flying over Angkor feels personal and quiet. Sky Venture Microlight turns Siem Reap into an aerial point of view, with peaceful air time over temples and countryside that you just do not get from the ground.
I like the private, one-guest setup (pilot plus you), because it feels calm and unhurried. I also like that the pilot, Eddie, is an American expat with 10 years in Cambodia and thousands of hours in microlight/ultralight flying around Siem Reap.
One consideration: the in-flight microphone system can be hit-or-miss. On at least one flight, Eddie shared spots by hand signals when audio info wasn’t working.
In This Review
- Key things that make this microlight flight worth your time
- Sky Venture Microlight and the calm factor (pilot + you only)
- What you really see in 30 minutes over Angkor
- Angkor in a different format: why microlight beats a helicopter for many people
- The route possibilities: temples, jungle edges, and water-country options
- Pickup, timing, and how the flight day usually runs
- Sunrise or sunset flights: what changes and why it matters
- What’s included (and what to bring) for a better flight
- Small details that can affect your experience (the microphone issue)
- Price and value: is $270 for 30 minutes fair?
- Who should book Sky Venture Microlight in Siem Reap?
- Should you book this microlight flight or skip it?
- FAQ
- How long is the Sky Venture Microlight flight?
- Where does the pickup happen, and where do you return to?
- What is the price per person?
- Is the flight private?
- What language does the pilot speak?
- Is pickup from your hotel included?
- What isn’t included in the price?
Key things that make this microlight flight worth your time
- One passenger at a time: you’re not sharing the view with a crowd.
- Eddie the pilot: an American expat with years of local microlight experience.
- Temple-hopping from the air: you may pass small temples before finishing with a big Angkor moment.
- Sunrise or sunset options: you can plan the sky trip for softer light.
- Different than a helicopter: it’s a more direct, “you’re flying” feeling.
- Bring the right outfit: pants/shorts are a safer bet than skirts.
Sky Venture Microlight and the calm factor (pilot + you only)

This is a microlight flight built around the simplest luxury in travel: quiet time in the air. The aircraft is small—just the pilot and one guest—so the experience doesn’t feel like a packaged ride. It feels more like a guided flight with a front-row seat.
I also like that the flight is designed around clarity. You’re flying over a place most people visit with tour schedules and temple clocks, but from the sky you get a different rhythm. Rows of roofs, winding paths, and the way greenery spreads between temple grounds become easy to understand in one look.
Then there’s Eddie. He’s an American expat living in Cambodia for 10 years, with thousands of hours flying microlight/ultralight aircraft around Siem Reap. That experience matters because it shows up as smooth operations: calm handling in the air and a steady, confident presence in the cockpit.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Siem Reap.
What you really see in 30 minutes over Angkor

A 30-minute flight is short enough that it stays fun, not stressful. But it’s also long enough to get real “from-above” meaning, especially around Angkor where temple placement is everything. You’ll get close views of structures, and you’ll also see how the temple zone sits inside farmland and forested areas.
In practice, your route often includes several smaller temple points before hitting the signature payoff: flying over Angkor Wat. Even when the plan is tight, that ordering helps. The “warm-up” views help you recognize shapes and alignments, then the final pass gives you the big wow moment.
You’re also likely to notice the countryside texture that doesn’t show up on ground-level tours. From above, you can pick out patterns like rice fields, palm trees, and patches of green stretching toward the horizon. One flight is not just “seeing temples”; it’s seeing how the whole region fits together.
And because it’s a microlight rather than a larger aircraft, it can feel more immediate—like you’re riding the motion of flight itself rather than watching it from a distance. One reviewer described it as feeling like a scooter in the sky, and that matches the overall vibe: quick, close, and personal.
Angkor in a different format: why microlight beats a helicopter for many people

Helicopters get you speed. Microlights get you closeness and a more human-scale experience. With a microlight’s smaller setup, the trip often feels less mechanical and more like a guided tour of the region from a low, changing perspective.
Another advantage is how you can experience routes. Helicopter sightseeing often blurs into a broad “look around.” With a microlight, the pilot can guide attention to specific spots, and you’re right there to see them as they appear—especially around temple rooftops and connecting causeways.
There’s also a psychological difference. When there’s only you and the pilot, you’re not trying to see over shoulders or angle for the perfect photo with a stranger hovering beside you. You can watch in a calmer way, taking in shape and spacing. That’s a big deal at Angkor, where the ground-level experience can be packed.
The route possibilities: temples, jungle edges, and water-country options

Sky Venture’s flights can run from 30 minutes up to one hour, and the longer timing can add more variety. That means you might see multiple temple complexes, plus water-related scenery like flooded forests or floating villages, depending on the route that day.
For the 30-minute experience, think of it as a concentrated temple circuit. You’ll likely cover several temple highlights and then finish with a major Angkor moment like Angkor Wat. Even if you do not get the farthest reaches that a longer flight might include, you still get something most other tours can’t: direct aerial context.
If you’re the type who loves matching what you’ve seen on foot to what it looks like from above, this is a good way to do it. A ground visit shows you details. The microlight adds the “how it all connects” view—temples within fields, temple zones inside broader rural patterns, and the way green spreads around built spaces.
Pickup, timing, and how the flight day usually runs

You start in Krong Siem Reap, with round-trip hotel pickup and drop-off included. Your driver comes about 30 minutes before departure, so you have time to get sorted without rushing.
From there, the operation tends to be smooth. Reviewers highlighted punctual pickup, quick communication, and a run-of-show that doesn’t waste your time. That’s especially helpful in Siem Reap, where schedules can get knocked around by traffic and heat.
The total package is built for simplicity: you’re picked up, you fly for the planned duration, and you return to your hotel in Krong Siem Reap. No long transfers to remote airfields. No confusing steps. Just the sky experience, with your ground plan staying intact.
Sunrise or sunset flights: what changes and why it matters

Sky Venture lists the option to do sunrise or sunset flights. Timing matters because Angkor and the countryside look very different with softer light. From above, temple stone and surrounding greenery can shift from bright and flat to warm and dimensional.
Also, you’ll likely enjoy the calm factor. Early or late air sessions tend to feel less “tour day” and more like a personal moment. And because the flight is only 30 minutes, you’re not spending your whole day waiting around.
If you’re aiming for the best light and the most relaxed atmosphere, you’ll usually prefer sunrise or sunset over midday. If your schedule is tight, 30 minutes still delivers the “air view” payoff even when you cannot chase perfect timing.
What’s included (and what to bring) for a better flight

Included in the experience:
- Hotel round-trip pickup and drop-off in Krong Siem Reap
- English-speaking pilot (Eddie)
- A unique view over Siem Reap and the temples
- Sunrise or sunset flight timing options
- A private format (pilot + you)
- Skip the ticket line
Not included:
- Personal expenses like drinks
- Anything not listed in the program
What you should bring: comfortable clothes and shoes. One practical tip from a female reviewer is to wear pants or shorts rather than skirts. If you’re planning to sit in a small aircraft and adjust your outfit for comfort and coverage, that advice is worth following.
Also, bring a small bag you can manage easily. You won’t want to juggle bulky items while you’re waiting for boarding. Keep it simple and you’ll enjoy the flight more.
Small details that can affect your experience (the microphone issue)

In an ideal world, the pilot talks you through key sights using a microphone system. On at least one flight, the microphone didn’t work, so Eddie pointed out the spots by hand instead of speaking.
This isn’t a deal-breaker, but it is worth knowing. If you care about spoken commentary, assume that it might be limited on some days. The upside: even with hand signals, you’re still flying over the sights, and the visual guidance seems to work well in practice.
If you want the most out of your flight regardless, watch Eddie’s gestures and look for the obvious landmarks he’s drawing your attention to. The point is the aerial view, not a lecture.
Price and value: is $270 for 30 minutes fair?
At $270 per person for a 30-minute private microlight flight, you’re paying for three main things: privacy, a specialized aircraft experience, and ground logistics.
First, you’re not booking a packed sightseeing ride. You get the one-guest format, which helps the experience feel personal instead of rushed or crowded. Second, you’re paying for a highly specific kind of flying over Angkor—one that’s different from standard temple tours and different from bigger aircraft.
Third, the value improves because hotel pickup and drop-off in Krong Siem Reap are included. When transportation is handled, you spend less time coordinating and more time showing up ready to fly.
If you’re deciding between a temple tour by car and an aerial Angkor moment, this is the kind of splurge that makes sense if you truly want that perspective shift. If you’re trying to minimize cost and you don’t care much about flying, you might prefer a ground-based itinerary. But for people who want a once-per-trip “wow view,” the price can feel easier to justify.
Who should book Sky Venture Microlight in Siem Reap?

This flight fits best if you:
- Want a different Angkor experience beyond temple walking
- Like the idea of being guided by an expert pilot with local flying hours
- Prefer a calm private setup rather than a group ride
- Are aiming for a sunrise or sunset plan
- Enjoy aerial photography and spatial understanding
It may not be the best fit if you want long airtime. Thirty minutes is focused. It gives you temple and countryside context, but it doesn’t promise a full-length aerial tour of everything possible in one go.
Also, if you’re very sensitive to noise or want lots of spoken explanation, plan for the possibility that the microphone system may not always work as expected.
Should you book this microlight flight or skip it?
I’d book it if your trip goal includes seeing Angkor from above and you value privacy and smooth ground handling. The one-guest format, Eddie’s local flying background, and the frequent route ending with a major Angkor pass make this a strong “best perspective per minute” choice.
I’d hesitate if you’re mainly after a low-cost sightseeing option or if you’d be disappointed by limited verbal commentary during the flight. In a 30-minute session, the visuals do the heavy lifting—so go in knowing it’s about the sky view more than a narration-heavy tour.
If your schedule allows flexibility, you can typically make this plan with fewer worries because the experience includes a cancellation window in the event your plans shift. If the sky experience is high on your list, this is the kind of activity that tends to become a trip highlight long after you land.
FAQ
How long is the Sky Venture Microlight flight?
The experience is listed as 30 minutes.
Where does the pickup happen, and where do you return to?
Pickup and drop-off are in Krong Siem Reap.
What is the price per person?
The price is $270 per person.
Is the flight private?
Yes, it’s a private group with a microlight setup that holds the pilot and one guest.
What language does the pilot speak?
The pilot provides an English-speaking experience.
Is pickup from your hotel included?
Yes, hotel round-trip pickup and drop-off are included.
What isn’t included in the price?
Personal expenses such as drinks, and any other services not mentioned in the program, are not included.
























