Plan Dhaka with ATLAS AI itinerary, visa info, hotels & budget — free in seconds
Plan Now →
Atlas
Sundarbans Travel Guide: World's Largest Mangrove Forest & Royal Bengal Tigers (2026) Destinations

🐅 Sundarbans Travel Guide: World's Largest Mangrove Forest & Royal Bengal Tigers (2026)

April 19, 2026 9 min read
🐅 Royal Bengal tigers🌳 UNESCO mangroves🚢 Liveaboard safari🦌 Deer & crocodiles🌅 Sunset at Kotka
VisaRequired (except SAARC)
Budget$40–200/day
CurrencyBDT (Bangladeshi Taka)
LanguageBengali
Must-seeKotka, Karamjal, Hiron Point
Best seasonNovember–February
⚠️ Visa rules vary by passport. The info above is a general overview — requirements differ significantly by nationality. Use Atlas AI to get accurate visa rules for your specific passport.
🇬🇧 English
🇬🇧 English
🇧🇩 বাংলা
🇸🇦 العربية
🇨🇳 中文
🇯🇵 日本語
🇰🇷 한국어
🇪🇸 Español
🇫🇷 Français

Picture this: dawn breaks over a tangle of mangrove roots so dense they look like a green labyrinth stitched together by the tides. A muddy creek curls between the trees. Somewhere in that shadow sits a Royal Bengal tiger — the only tiger on Earth that can swim from island to island, and whose kingdom is 10,000 square kilometres of salt-swamp forest shared between Bangladesh and India. This is the Sundarbans, and it is unlike anywhere else you will ever travel.

The name means "beautiful forest" in Bengali, though locals will tell you the beauty here is of a particular, moody kind — the kind that requires you to pay attention. You do not stumble through the Sundarbans. You float through it, slowly, on wooden boats, listening for the rustle that might be a deer or might be something with very different teeth.

Why the Sundarbans Is Like Nowhere Else

The Sundarbans is the largest contiguous mangrove forest on the planet and a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1997. Roughly 60% sits in Bangladesh and 40% in India's West Bengal. It is the only mangrove habitat in the world that still hosts tigers — somewhere between 100 and 114 Royal Bengal tigers patrol the Bangladeshi side alone. These are genetically distinct from their jungle cousins: smaller, leaner, better swimmers, and, unfortunately, more prone to stalking fishermen.

The forest also shelters saltwater crocodiles, Ganges river dolphins, spotted deer, wild boar, pythons, and more than 300 bird species, including the stunning collared kingfisher and white-bellied sea eagle. Every six hours, the whole landscape drowns and re-emerges as the tides rise and fall — which is why the honey collectors, woodcutters, and fishermen who work here have built an entire folk religion around Bonbibi, the forest goddess said to protect those who enter with respect.

Best Time to Visit

Plan for November through February. The weather is dry, temperatures sit between 15–25°C, humidity is bearable, and the cool air draws animals — tigers included — out to the riverbanks to sun themselves. Tiger sightings are still rare (this is wilderness, not a zoo), but winter gives you the best odds. March to May is hot and steamy, June to October is monsoon — boats still run, but storms are frequent and deer are scattered.

How to Get There

From Dhaka, the standard route is a night bus or flight to Khulna (6–8 hours by road, ~1 hour by air), followed by a 90-minute drive to Mongla, the main departure port. Most travellers join a 3-day, 2-night liveaboard boat tour that leaves from Mongla and sleeps you onboard. Solo entry is not permitted — you must travel with a licensed guide and carry a Forest Department permit (your tour operator handles this).

Typical Itinerary

What It Costs in 2026

Tour TypePer Person (USD)Per Person (BDT)
Budget 3-day group tour$120–180৳14,000–21,000
Mid-range (private cabin)$220–320৳26,000–38,000
Luxury liveaboard (MV Bawali, MV Aalor Kole)$400–650৳47,000–77,000
Day trip from Khulna$40–60৳4,700–7,000

Packages typically include meals, boat, guide, forest permits, and armed forest guard (mandatory on walking trails). Foreign passport holders pay a slightly higher forest entry fee (~৳2,000 vs. ৳70 for locals).

The People, the Honey, and Bonbibi

Long before it was a tourist destination, the Sundarbans was — and still is — a workplace. The Mawali honey collectors enter the forest each April wearing backward-facing masks to confuse tigers, climbing into wild beehives the size of tabletops. The Bawali woodcutters harvest golpata palm for roofing. Fishermen train otters to herd fish into their nets, a 400-year-old tradition that still survives in a few villages near Mongla.

Every one of them prays to Bonbibi, the goddess who, according to legend, defeated the greedy demon-tiger Dakkhin Rai and granted safe passage to the poor. Hindu and Muslim forest-workers worship her together — a rare piece of shared folk religion you will see painted onto shrine boats deep in the creeks.

What to Eat On Board

Sundarbans boat cooks are famously good. Expect fresh river fish — hilsa if you're lucky, rui, tengra, or chital fish curry — served with steamed rice, shorshe bata (mustard paste), and piles of crisp aloo bhaja (fried potatoes). Breakfast is usually paratha with egg bhuji and sweet milky cha. Bring your own snacks if you're fussy; the cook does not do Western food.

Packing Essentials

Hidden Gems Most Tours Skip

Is It Safe?

Tiger attacks on tourists are extremely rare — almost all incidents involve fishermen or honey-collectors deep in restricted zones. Stick with your guide, never wander off alone, and the biggest real threat is mosquitoes. Piracy in the outer channels has been essentially eliminated since 2018 thanks to the RAB crackdown.

Quick Tips

The Sundarbans won't hand you a tiger on your first visit. What it gives you instead is the rare, quiet thrill of a landscape that still belongs to itself — a forest that breathes with the tide, where a goddess is still prayed to, and where the most powerful creature in the room is almost certainly watching you from somewhere behind the leaves.

Ready to plan your trip to Dhaka?

ATLAS builds your full itinerary in seconds — day-by-day schedule, visa info, hotel picks, and budget estimate. Free to use.

Plan with ATLAS — It's Free →

🎟 Book Tours & Activities

Skip the queue and book the best experiences in Dhaka — guided tours, day trips, transfers, and more.

Browse Activities on GetYourGuide →

Comments

Leave a Comment
0/1200
← Back to Blog