Overview
Ta Prohm is the Angkor complex's most evocative temple — a 600 × 1,000 metre Buddhist monastery where the jungle was never fully cleared, and where spung trees (Tetrameles nudiflora) and silk-cotton trees (Bombax ceiba) have grown their root systems across and through the sandstone walls for centuries.
Built in approximately 1186 CE by King Jayavarman VII as a dedication to his mother, Ta Prohm functioned as one of the Khmer Empire's largest institutional complexes — its dedication stele records over 12,000 residents, administrative staff, and religious practitioners housed in the monastery and supported by surrounding villages. After the empire's collapse in the 15th century, the jungle reclaimed the complex over four centuries of silence.
The deliberate conservation policy of leaving the trees integrated with the structure — rather than removing them as was done at Angkor Wat and Angkor Thom — creates the distinctive half-ruin, half-living-forest atmosphere. The Indian Archaeological Survey of India, managing Ta Prohm's conservation since the early 2000s, stabilizes trees and walls in place rather than dismantling either. Some tree roots span 30 metres across the roof of the central sanctuary building.
Beyond the famous trees, Ta Prohm contains exceptionally fine carved devata figures in its galleries — female guardian deity carvings whose poses, jewelry, and facial expressions vary significantly across the complex, each considered a masterwork of Khmer figural sculpture.
When to Visit
Open: 7:30 AM – 5:30 PM daily. Best time: 7:30–9 AM for low light filtering through the canopy and fewer visitors. Mid-monsoon (July–September): The jungle is at its most intensely green; morning mist creates extraordinary atmosphere. Avoid: 9:30 AM–12 PM when tour buses concentrate here after Angkor Wat.
Admission and Costs
Included in Angkor Archaeological Park pass: $37 (1 day) / $62 (3 days). Licensed guide: Same day rate as other Angkor sites ($35–60 full day).
The Case for a Guide
Ta Prohm rewards visitors who know where to look — beyond the three or four photographic set-pieces at the famous tree roots, the temple has extraordinary carved detail in its corridors and galleries that is entirely invisible to the standard group-tour circuit.
- Devata figures: Ta Prohm's carved female guardian figures differ from those at Angkor Wat in pose, jewelry style, and expression — a guide identifies the finest examples in the eastern gopura and the central sanctuary galleries and explains the iconographic differences between devata styles across different Angkor periods
- Tree identification: The three tree species growing on Ta Prohm structures are botanically distinct and have different root systems — a guide distinguishes between the spung (the flat-rooted buttress trees most photographed), the silk-cotton (with rounded roots), and the fig species (growing downward from above)
- Conservation evidence: Indian Archaeological Survey stabilization work is visible throughout — steel supports, injected resin consolidation, controlled root trimming — a guide explains the conservation decisions and why some areas have been more aggressively managed than others
- The Tomb Raider locations: For visitors who know the film, a guide identifies the exact filming positions and explains which sections of the temple were used — a surprisingly effective way of getting visitors to actually look at the architecture carefully
Tips for Visitors
Arrive at opening: 7:30 AM is the only reliable window for photographs without tour-group crowds at the famous root-over-doorway shot in the central area. Monsoon visit: Ta Prohm in August–September with morning mist and intensely green moss is as atmospheric as the dry-season visit — if you are in Siem Reap in the wet season, do not skip it. Corridors: Many visitors rush the exterior and miss the gallery corridors — take time in the inner enclosure's passages where devata carvings are at their finest and the jungle-stone interaction is most dramatic. Exit route: Leave via the eastern gopura (opposite the main tour-bus entrance) for the least crowded route and the best view of the causeway approach from outside.
