A 130-million-year-old primary rainforest in the heart of Sabah — wild orangutans, pygmy elephants, and a forest floor no logging truck has ever reached. Plan your visit to Danum Valley.
Danum Valley Conservation Area protects 438 square kilometres of lowland dipterocarp forest in eastern Sabah — one of the few places on the island that has never had a permanent human settlement. That absence of people is exactly why the wildlife here is so dense: wild orangutans, Bornean pygmy elephants, and — if you're lucky — the elusive clouded leopard.
There's no way to drive yourself in. Access is limited to two research-and-tourism outposts, both reached by a two-and-a-half-hour 4WD transfer from Lahad Datu, which keeps visitor numbers — and impact — deliberately low.
No zoo, no guarantees — this is a wild forest. But few places on Earth put you this close to this much of it.
Regularly seen feeding in fruiting ficus trees near both lodges, sometimes right at camp.
The world's smallest elephant. Herds cross the river trails — best spotted at dawn.
Elusive and nocturnal. A night-drive sighting is rare — and genuinely once-in-a-trip.
One of Southeast Asia's most sought-after birds. Danum is among the best places to find it.
Same wildlife, same conservation area — very different experiences and budgets.
Private chalets, guided treks, a private canopy walkway, and full-board dining — the comfortable way to experience primary rainforest.
View packages →A working research station with simple rooms and dorms — same forest, same guides, a fraction of the cost.
View packages →Buffer-zone rehabilitated forest bordering the conservation area — quieter, cheaper, still wild.
View packages →Flights, transfers, and the 4WD route from Lahad Datu, step by step.
Leeches, humidity, and the shoes every guide actually recommends.
What you're actually paying for, and why you can't visit without a guide.
Compare lodges, check availability, and lock in your dates.
See Danum Valley Packages