Healey Tourist Inn

Dambulla


This family-run shoestring place, halfway between the caves and bus station, has five basic, clean-if-spartan rooms that have mosquito nets and a piece of furniture or two set in a family house. Try to get one of the rooms away from the noisy road. The owners have been doing this for 30 years and are helpful and welcoming.


Lonely Planet's must-see attractions

Nearby Dambulla attractions

1. Dambulla Produce Market

0.11 MILES

Even if you’re not looking to buy a truckload of bananas, this huge wholesale market south of the centre offers a fascinating look at the vast range of…

2. Cave II (Maharaja Viharaya)

0.44 MILES

The Temple of the Great King is arguably the most spectacular of the caves. It measures 52m from east to west and 23m from the entrance to the back wall;…

3. Cave I (Devaraja Viharaya)

0.44 MILES

The first cave, the Temple of the King of the Gods, has a 15m-long reclining Buddha. Ananda, the Buddha’s loyal disciple, and other seated Buddhas are…

4. Cave III (Maha Alut Viharaya)

0.44 MILES

This cave, the New Great Temple, was said to have been converted from a storeroom in the 18th century by King Kirti Sri Rajasinghe of Kandy, one of the…

5. Cave IV (Pachima Viharaya)

0.45 MILES

The relatively small Western Cave is not the most westerly cave – that position belongs to Cave V. The central Buddha figure is seated under a makara…

6. Cave Temples

0.45 MILES

The beautiful Royal Rock Temple complex sits about 160m above the road in the southern part of Dambulla. Five separate caves contain about 150 absolutely…

7. Cave V (Devana Alut Viharaya)

0.45 MILES

This newer cave was once used as a storehouse, but it’s now called the Second New Temple. It features a reclining Buddha; Hindu deities, including…

8. Golden Temple

0.47 MILES

At the foot of the cave temples hill stands this modern temple, a kitschy structure and Buddhist museum completed in 2000 using Japanese donations. On top…