Frequently asked
Things agents ask.
Are clients required to be Buddhist?
No. Our positioning is explicitly "heritage and dhamma for free thinkers" — we attract secular Buddhists, mindfulness graduates, intellectually serious enquirers, and lay Buddhists from the diaspora. The Kalama Sutta frame — the Buddha's instruction to verify by reason rather than by authority — is the brand manifesto. No religious commitment is required at any point in any itinerary; meditation sessions and dhamma talks are optional throughout.
Can you arrange audiences with senior bhikkhus?
Where teacher time permits, yes. We have working relationships with senior bhikkhus at several of the named meditation centres and with scholar-monks of the Mahavihara tradition. Audiences are never promised in writing — they are requested respectfully, in advance, on the bhikkhu's terms. The success rate for serious clients with a defined practice question is high. For casual sightseers, we will not request the audience at all.
What lineage do your dhamma-led itineraries follow?
Pure Theravada throughout. Sri Lanka's lineage is the oldest continuously practised Buddhist tradition on earth (2,330 years), preserved in the Pali Canon written at Aluvihara in the 1st century BCE. The modern Vipassana methods your clients may already know — Mahasi Sayadaw, S. N. Goenka — trace through Burma directly to this source. Forest Tradition (Aranya) and lay-teacher methods are both represented in our centre partner list.
Do you operate every day of the year?
Yes, operationally. We avoid major Poya days for monument-heavy itineraries — not because the sites are closed (they aren't) but because pilgrim density changes the experience. Conversely, Poya days are sometimes requested for dhamma-led journeys, since temples are at their most authentic. We will flag this on quotation if your dates intersect.
What is the minimum group size?
Two passengers for the full Dhamma Path or Cultural Triangle itineraries. We can operate single-pax tours but at a premium. Dhamma-led tours work best in small groups (2–8) — we cap at 8 even where logistics would allow more, because forest monastery visits and meditation centre sessions degrade quickly at larger sizes.
Can we combine dhamma product with a beach or wellness extension?
Yes. The most common combination is a 7-night dhamma tour followed by 3–5 nights at a south-coast or east-coast yoga / wellness retreat for decompression. We have preferred wellness-property suppliers; we will not pretend to be specialists at standalone beach product.
How are vehicles and drivers handled?
All vehicles are owned or contracted-fleet, air-conditioned, with named chauffeur-guides for transfers and named scholar-dhamma guides for the itinerary proper. Vehicle categories: sedan (1–2 pax), SUV (3–4), Toyota Coaster (5–8). All comply with SLTDA tourist transport regulations and carry public liability insurance.
What languages do your guides speak?
English to native-speaker standard on all departures. French, German, Italian, Spanish and Japanese on request, subject to advance notice — these are arranged via SLTDA-licensed language-specialist guides and may attract a supplement. Note: most senior bhikkhus speak English; some speak no other foreign language.
Do you handle visas, flights or insurance?
Visa guidance: yes (Sri Lanka ETA is online; we provide step-by-step support). Flights: no — we are exclusively a ground-handler. Insurance: we do not sell policies but require all clients to carry travel insurance with medical evacuation cover and will recommend providers.