O’Cheuteal Beach:

O’cheuteal Beach is located in Sangkat No 3 large and long with white sand and shallow water, it is the most popular beach in Sihanoukville.

Ocheuteal Beach,

popular with locals, was lined with stalls selling local food and all sorts

of other things like necklaces, sarongs, shorts, corals and other ornaments. It's a great place of mingle and get a taste of local life.

Sokha or Serendipity Beach:

Sokha Beach adjoins O’Cheuteal Beach. It is also long, though the water is deeper here.

The beach was once more crowded than O’Cheuteal Beach, beacause Cambodians prefer it to the beaches.

However, Oknha Sok Kung’s Sokha Hotel Company recently took over operations at the beach, The company is building up the area in hopes of attracting more tourists to Sihanouk Ville.

Koh Pors

Koh pors is an island about 1 kilometer from Loum Hekay beach, off the coast of Sihanoukville.

The beach is flat and very quite.

 

because it is undevelo.It attracts few visitors, ped. Those tourists who do visit the island travel in groups and bring their own food.

Phnom Leu:

Phnom Leu is a nature and cultural site. There is a pagoda on the mountaintop, which offers visitors a panoramic view of the beaches and Sihanoukville international port. Most visitors are local people who visit the site during national festivals.

Kbal Chhay Waterfall:

Kbal Chhay Waterfall is located in Khan Prey Nup, about 16 kilometers north of downtown Sihanoukville.

To reach the site from Sihanoukville, take National Road 4 toward

Phnom Penh. About 7 kilometers outside of town, there is a sign announcing the site. Turn left and go 9 kilometers along a trail.The water at kbal chhay comes from many sources along the mountain range,

although only three of these sources are visible. The waterfall, which is 14 meters high, is at the point where those three sources join. Kbal Chhay was discovered
in 1960. There years later, it was developed into a reervoir to supply clean water to the city of Sihanoukville. The reservoir construction, however, was interrupted due to civil war, and the site became a hide-out for Khmer Rouge. In 1997, Kbal Chhay was marked for development, and a year later Kok An Company was awarded a contract to construct a road and develop the site for tourism.