Let me be real with you: most Kuching folks hear "Fairy Cave" and just go "oh yeah, went there ages ago..."
And that's it.
But if you actually give it a proper visit — pick the right time, take the right trails — this place hits way harder than you'd expect.
Located in Bau, about 40-45 minutes from Kuching city. A four-storey green staircase takes you up to the cave entrance. The moment you step inside and see natural light flooding down from the massive opening above — your phone camera won't know what hit it.
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Source: Malaysia-Traveller
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Source: Malaysia-Traveller
What people are saying:
Here's the thing — Fairy Cave reviews are surprisingly stacked. Out of 2,423 ratings on Wanderlog, it averages 4.7/5. Not bad for a cave that costs RM1 for locals.
One reviewer on Wanderlog put it perfectly:
"The caves are truly breathtaking, with stunning formations, beautiful plants, and well-maintained paths. The staff were also friendly — it's easily one of the highlights of a trip to Kuching."
Another traveler on Trip.com didn't hold back:
"These caves are a class of their own. I have seen caves in Australia and these are beyond comparison."
And this Trip.com review says it best:
"By far this was my favourite thing to do in Sarawak, beats Bako park. I spent the majority of this on my own on the dark trail, just me and the drips, absolutely loved it."
Cool local detail from Malaysia-Traveller: inside the cave there's a stalagmite that looks uncannily like Guan Yin (Goddess of Mercy). Locals actually leave joss sticks there ️
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Source: CPH Travel
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Source: DayakDaily
🧗 Three trails, three levels:
1️⃣ Twilight Trail (main route) — Concrete paths & steel rails. Most people handle this fine. You'll see the cave transition from dark to sunlit
2️⃣ Dark Trail — Bring a torch. Bats, swiftlets, and at the deepest platform... reportedly the occasional viper
3️⃣ Gunung Kapor Summit Trail — 2-hour trek, needs a permit. Less trafficked but worth it if you're fit
️ Heads up: the entrance passage is narrow — claustrophobic folks, be warned. Some metal stair sections are seriously steep.
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Source: CPH Travel
Quick Info:
Malaysian adult: RM1
Foreign adult: RM5
Senior (60+): FREE
Child (6-17): RM2
Under 6: FREE
Hours: 8:30am — 4:30pm (Tue-Sun)
Closed-toe shoes MANDATORY (rentals RM3)
Torch rental: RM5
Getting there: Self-drive is easiest. Grab works too (~RM30-40 one way). Tour packages usually bundle Fairy + Wind Cave for RM200 half-day with lunch.
Pro tips:
• Go early morning — fewer people + best natural lighting for photos
• Bring water & wear light sports attire. Humidity inside is real
• Hit Wind Cave right after — it's literally 5 minutes away
• Headlamp > handheld torch for the Dark Trail
Been to Fairy Cave? Drop your best photo in the comments!
Team Fairy Cave or Team Wind Cave? Let's hear it