Blog

Download the app

Download on the App StoreGet it on Google Play
← Back to Blog
Destination Guides

Cameron Highlands & Kuala Lumpur: Two Very Different Sides of Malaysia

15 Mar 2025·6 min read
Tea plantations in the Cameron Highlands, Malaysia

The Cameron Highlands and Kuala Lumpur sit about three hours apart by road and feel like different countries. One is cool, green, and quiet. The other is a modern megacity with temples, towers, street food, and one of the better nightlife scenes in Southeast Asia.

Cameron Highlands

The Highlands sit at around 1,500 metres and stay cool in a way that feels genuinely unusual after weeks at sea level in the tropics. Tea plantations cover the hillsides — the BOH Tea Plantation is the most visited and worth the trip for the factory tour and the views over the valley.

Beyond tea, the other main draws are the strawberry farms (odd, but they exist and they work), the Mossy Forest on the summit of Gunung Brinchang, and Land Rover tours into the surrounding countryside. The Mossy Forest requires a guide or a ranger — the ecosystem is fragile and most of the access is controlled.

Two nights is enough to do the Highlands properly. Three if you want to slow down and actually rest.

Kuala Lumpur

KL is easier to navigate than its reputation suggests. The main tourist infrastructure is solid, English is widely spoken, and the city is big enough to have genuinely different neighbourhoods without being so spread out that getting between them becomes a project.

The Petronas Towers are the obvious landmark — worth seeing at dusk when the lights are on. Batu Caves, about 20 minutes north of the city centre, combine Hindu temple architecture with limestone formations in a way that's hard to categorize but straightforward to enjoy. Go on a weekday if you can; weekends are busy.

Jalan Alor is the food street most people end up at. It delivers on the promise — hawker stalls, strong iced coffee, street food that runs from excellent to fine. Bukit Bintang around it has the nightlife.

Chinatown (Petaling Street) and Little India (Brickfields) are worth an afternoon each for the food and atmosphere rather than any specific sight.

Practical tips

  • Bus between KL and the Cameron Highlands runs several times daily; book ahead in peak season
  • KL has two main transit systems (LRT and MRT) that together cover most tourist areas
  • Grab (Southeast Asia's Uber equivalent) works well throughout KL
  • Modest dress for temples and religious sites; the Batu Caves climb involves steps, not just walking