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Cycling Holidays in Asia

Asia Cycling Holidays

Vietnam

Cycling Vietnam

Cycling Holidays in Asia
Recommended
14 Days from £ 1895
£ 1770

Guided Group (Excl. Flights)

Cycling
Thailand

Cycle Southeast Asia

Cycling Holidays in Asia
14 Days from £ 3145
£ 2840

Guided Group (Excl. Flights)

Cycling
India

Southern India Coast to Coast Ride

Cycling Holidays in Asia
14 Days from £ 2849
£ 2569

Guided Group (Excl. Flights)

Cycling
Sri Lanka

Cycle the Back Roads of Sri Lanka

Cycling Holidays in Asia
14 Days from £ 2999
£ 2699

Guided Group (Excl. Flights)

Cycling
Japan

Cycling in Japan

Cycling Holidays in Asia
14 Days from £ 5949

Guided Group (Excl. Flights)

Cycling
India

Cycle the Coast of Kerala

Cycling Holidays in Asia
8 Days from £ 1449
£ 1239

Guided Group (Excl. Flights)

Cycling
India

Cycling Through Rajasthan

Cycling Holidays in Asia
15 Days from £ 2099

Guided Group (Excl. Flights)

Cycling
Thailand

Cycle Southeast Asia – Premium Adventure

Cycling Holidays in Asia
14 Days from £ 4649

Guided Group (Excl. Flights)

Cycling
Indonesia

Cycling Indonesia's Islands

Cycling Holidays in Asia
13 Days from £ 2499

Guided Group (Excl. Flights)

Cycling

One of my best ever cycling holidays lead by a brilliant local team (Vini and Arun) headed up by the amazing Safi. It was good to experience the chaos of a city in Mysore with crazy traffic and cows in the road. Fort Kochi, which is a world heritage site, was laid back with lots of interesting things to see on our day off the saddle and lovely boutique shops where there was no hassle from vendors! The night on the converted rice barge was lovely and relaxing and so nice to float past everyday life on the river. Cycling along the coast, it was good to see fishermen hauling in their catch and to paddle in those warm waters.
I particularly loved waving at friendly locals as we cycled by (and them waving back) and the school children so excited to see us and practice their English.
Apart from the climb up to Ooty which is optional, I felt this holiday should be rated a difficulty level of 3 rather than 4. Once you’ve finished the Western Ghats, the cycling is very flat.
Added to all that, we had a truly lovely group of fellow cyclists on the holiday who all helped make this such a pleasurable trip.

Alison Stent Cycle Kerala & Tropical India

We visited in Jan-Feb 2026. The trip includes interesting visits to a number of major palaces, forts and temples, and of course the fantastic Taj Mahal, but our key memory will be the chaos and cacophony of the traffic and the enthusiastic waving of the villagers as we passed along the country lanes. Our leaders took excellent care of us, enabling us to navigate our way around safely, whether on foot or by bike. Expect appalling road surfaces, litter strewn verges, and constant hooting, but expect also wide smiles, vibrant saris and a glimpse into a very different way of life to our own. I was worried about getting ill, but only one person in our group of 10 got a tummy bug (lasted 24 hours). One person came off their bicycle in a low speed collision in a village centre, with no harm done.

Pippa Dickinson Cycling Through Rajasthan

From start to finish, the trip felt thoughtfully curated rather than just ‘planned’. Routes flowed naturally through coastal roads, lush tea country, and quiet village back roads, giving a real sense of Sri Lanka’s contrasts in a relatively short time. There was a balance between time on the bike and cultural stops. Suresh chose routes that avoided the worst of the traffic and heat, favouring early starts, stops in small towns you’d never find on your own, favouring up-to-date routes. One day your riding past rice paddies and temples, the next you’re winding through ‘undulating’ tea plantations with cooler air and big views, constantly changing scenery, friendly faces at every tea stop and what incredibly tasting tea it was.
Suresh our guide set a clear standard of safety:maintained bikes, clear hand signals, calm, confident road positioning around buses, tuktuks, and the dogs. Hydration and breaks were planned at sensible pauses.
Suresh gave depth of local knowledge wherever we were and each stop became a mini-lesson in history, religion, food, wildlife: you never felt rushed away from a conversation with a local or from a viewpoint. His love for his country shone through as we too fell in love with their country.

Claire Wood Cycle the Back Roads of Sri Lanka
Cycling Holidays in Asia