Visit Mawlamyine Myanmar

Travel to Mawlamyine is more than holiday . It is because Mawlamyine was believed to be one of the colonial town which is jsut Six or so hours drive south-east of Yangon, on the Andaman coast, Mawlamyine – formerly Moulmein – is Myanmar’s third largest city, and the capital of the Mon State. Situated on the Salween river delta as it meets the Andaman sea, the city is flanked by lush countryside and pagoda-dotted hills, and is famous for its excellent cuisine, but is usually considered to be off the trail for most tourists in Myanmar.

Formerly a busy teak port, not to mention the first administrative capital of British Myanmar, the city features many faded Colonial buildings amidst its gleaming Buddhist stupas and monasteries – some say it has a stronger sense of post-Colonial decay than rapidly modernizing Yangon and Mandalay. But the city thrives in its own way, with fascinatingly diverse ethnicities including Mon (the majority), Myanmese, Kayin, Chinese, Tamil, Indian and others making up its population of 350,000 or so.

What to do in Mawlamyine

The Mon State Cultural museum offers much insight into the state’s history and people. There are many Buddhist monuments worth visiting, here, including the enormous and brightly painted reclining Buddha at Win Sein monastery, but there was also a Christian influence in earlier times – the Judson Baptist Church, Myanmar’s first Baptist church, can be found on the corner of Dawei Jetty Road and Upper Main Road.  The infamous “death railway”, built by Japan (using POWs) to carry troops and supplies into Myanmar during WWII, passes close to the city. One of the POW cemeteries, paradoxically beautiful, is also near.

Beyond Mawlamyine

As well as being a lovely destination in its own right, Mawlamyine makes a convenient stopping point if you’re travelling even further south, to the beautiful Myeik region and its excellent diving.   

visit mawlamyine myanmar
Sunset view
visit mawlamyine myanmar
Win Sein Taw Ya Monastery