
Angkor Wat at sunrise
Leave at 4:45. We pack you coffee in a flask and a small breakfast in a tin.
Plan the day →Come in. Take your shoes off. The light is on for you.
Phteah Yeay means grandmother's house. Yeay is the Khmer word for grandmother — a maternal elder who keeps the kettle warm, the door open, and a plate ready for whoever walks in.
Six rooms around a courtyard of banana palms, ten minutes from Angkor. One long table, three meals a day, and the way Yeay made them.

A long room opening to frangipani, a deep tub, and slow morning light.
Sleeps 21 king32m²

A quiet corner upstairs, soft cotton sheets, the courtyard breathing below.
Sleeps 21 queen24m²

A wide upstairs room under the palms, with a daybed for the long afternoon.
Sleeps 31 king + 1 daybed38m²
Sour soups in the morning. Slow curries by candlelight. Nothing rushed, nothing fancy, everything in season.

Leave at 4:45. We pack you coffee in a flask and a small breakfast in a tin.
Plan the day →
Market in the morning, mortar in the afternoon, dinner you cooked yourself by candlelight.
Plan the day →
Two hundred and sixteen stone faces, all of them smiling at something only they remember.
Plan the day →Birthdays, vows renewed, a long-postponed family table.
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Every stay and every gift goes back to Grandma's House — Sunday family meals open to all, fair wages and education for our team, free CPR and swim lessons for neighborhood children, and a future free clinic for Cambodia's elders.
100% reinvested in the community