The Bangladesh Traveller is the companion website to Bangladesh: The Bradt Travel Guide. Here, you’ll find a number of resources to help you prepare, plan and progress your Bangladesh journey.
After you arrive, you’ll soon discover there isn’t much published information available, especially when it comes to tourism/travel related information. We want to fill that gap by helping you:
- Find Bangladesh’s hidden secrets – Learn about the country’s not-to-be-missed experiences, ranging from relaxing river journeys to rigorous hill treks
- Avoid the travel potholes – Don’t suffer all the mistakes we did when as we researched this guide
- Get real-time info and travel guidance – The website offers a live support forum for posting your questions about travel in Bangladesh
The website also uses multimedia to help you prepare for Bangladesh. We offer:
- Travel podcasts – These include readings from the guidebook plus audio stories that help you become knowledgeable and conversant in Bangladeshi affairs
- Live Maps – Regularly updated Google Maps that you help you get around more easily in Bangladesh
- Go Mobile – Through Grameen Phone, Bangladesh offers unlimited broadband connectivity over the mobile network, which means you can access the website’s information from anywhere in Bangladesh
Are you ready for Bangladesh? After using The Bangladesh Traveller, you soon will be.

Bangladesh has a reputation for being poor and beset by flooding, but this 'republic of rivers' rewards those willing to look beyond the headlines. Search for Royal Bengal tigers in the Sundarban forest, spend time with the indigenous communities of the Chittagong Hill Tracts, see endless stretches of emerald countryside and laze on the world's longest natural beach at Cox's Bazaar. Leave luxuries behind and embark on the richest of travel experiences among some of the sub-continent's friendliest people.
Travel Journalist Mikey Leung volunteered for VSO in Bangladesh, writes for various magazines and covered current affairs for various worldwide radio outlets. Belinda Meggitt spent a year in Chittagong as an Australian Youth Ambassador for Devleopment before taking up travel photography.