Carbon Neutral 100%
Destinations
Top destinations of the moment in Asia
  • Tour Ideas
Other destinations in Asia
An update from Evaneos
Labuk

Labuk (Malaysia)

Practical information on Labuk

  • Nature Reserve / Wildlife Observation / Safari
  • Park and garden
  • Countryside
  • Essential
5 / 5 - 2 reviews
How to get there
45 minutes by car from Sandakan
When to go
From October to March
Minimum stay
Half a day

Reviews of Labuk

Seasoned Traveller
20 written opinions

Labuk Bay, a big animal reserve on Borneo , is the only park where you can see the protected proboscis monkeys.

My suggestion:
Book the park's own transport and they will come to fetch you from Sandakan and take you to all the observation sites during the day.
My review

Visiting Labuk Bay Park can work out prohibitively expensive, what with the entry cost, transport and the camera tax. Finally, I thought about it and decided that I hadn't gone all that way to miss out on seeing the rare monkeys because of the cost! For a backpacker it was exhorbitant, but we did have a really good day.

We saw proboscis monkeys up close several times in the day and could see how much they looked like humans - it was weird! And we saw a film explaining their way of life and why the species is endangered by palm tree plantations...

The added advantage is that the proboscis monkeys, and other species, aren't wild and let us get close to them.

The disadvantage is the cost of the day, but it is worth it.

Labuk Bay's proboscis monkeys
In Labuk Bay Park
Seasoned Traveller
20 written opinions

Labuk Bay, a big animal reserve on Borneo , is the only park where you can see the protected proboscis monkeys.

My suggestion:
Book the park's own transport and they will come to fetch you from Sandakan and take you to all the observation sites during the day.
My review

Visiting Labuk Bay Park can work out prohibitively expensive, what with the entry cost, transport and the camera tax. Finally, I thought about it and decided that I hadn't gone all that way to miss out on seeing the rare monkeys because of the cost! For a backpacker it was exhorbitant, but we did have a really good day.

We saw proboscis monkeys up close several times in the day and could see how much they looked like humans - it was weird! And we saw a film explaining their way of life and why the species is endangered by palm tree plantations...

The added advantage is that the proboscis monkeys, and other species, aren't wild and let us get close to them.

The disadvantage is the cost of the day, but it is worth it.

Labuk Bay's proboscis monkeys
In Labuk Bay Park