Pinnawala Elephant Orphanage
"The world's largest elephant orphanage — 90+ rescued elephants, twice-daily river bathing sessions and multiple generations of a growing sanctuary herd."
90+ Resident elephants
1975
Established
2× daily
River bathing
8:30 AM
Opens
Ticket Prices
Best Time to Visit
Best — River Bathing
Low angle sunlight floods through cave openings, illuminating the paintings in warm golden light. The walk up is coolest at this hour. Minimal crowds.
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Good — General Visit
Second-best lighting window. Cooler temperatures and the caves take on a different atmospheric quality in the fading light.
Busy Period
The exposed rock path becomes very hot underfoot during dry season. Paintings are harder to photograph in harsh midday light.
Best position for river bathing:
Take the path to the café terraces on the riverbank — these elevated positions give a clear elevated view over the entire bathing herd without crowds. Arrive at least 25 minutes before bathing begins.
Gate Opens
8:30 AM
Arrive 20–30 minutes before the river bathing sessions to secure a good position on the riverbank. The walk from the ticket office to the orphanage and river takes approximately 10 minutes.
Key Highlights
The River Bathing
Twice daily (10 AM & 2 PM), the full herd is led through the village to the Maha Oya River. 40–60 elephants simultaneously wade, spray, submerge and interact with obvious joy. Young calves ride their mothers' backs.
Calf Bottle Feeding
The youngest orphaned calves are bottle-fed by mahouts within the orphanage grounds. The sight of tiny elephants drinking from oversized milk bottles is irresistible. Usually visible in the early morning.
Multi-Generational Herd
The herd spans multiple generations — original orphans from the 1970s now in their 50s, adult elephants born at Pinnawala, teenagers and young calves. Complex social bonds and foster relationships are visible.
Disabled Elephant Care
Several residents have prosthetic limbs or severe injuries. Pinnawala is internationally recognised for its rehabilitation of severely injured elephants that would not survive in the wild.
The Procession Walk
Twice daily, the herd walks through the village streets to the river. Elephants pass close enough to touch (though touching is not encouraged) — an extraordinary close encounter with the largest land animals on Earth.
Conservation Research
Pinnawala cooperates with international conservation organisations on elephant welfare research, reproductive studies and health monitoring for the wider Sri Lankan elephant population.
1975
Orphanage Founded
The Sri Lanka Department of Wildlife Conservation establishes Pinnawala Elephant Orphanage with just 5 orphaned elephants. The first home for rescued wild elephants in Sri Lanka.
1980s
Herd Grows
The orphanage receives increasing numbers of orphaned calves as development pressure on elephant habitats increases. The herd surpasses 20 elephants.
1984
First Captive Birth
A baby elephant is born at Pinnawala — the first captive elephant birth in Sri Lanka. The programme expands to include captive breeding.
2000s–present
World's Largest
Pinnawala becomes the world's largest elephant orphanage. The herd grows to 90+ individuals across multiple generations, attracting over 500,000 visitors per year.
"To walk through the caves of Dambulla is to walk through 2,200 years of continuous human devotion — each generation adding its prayers to the rock "
— UNESCO World Heritage Nomination, 1991
Visitor Guide
Essential Tips
01 River Terrace Position
Secure a café terrace position on the riverbank 25 minutes before bathing. Elevated view, shade and refreshments.
02 Weekday Visit
Significantly less crowded than weekends and public holidays.
03 Combine with Millennium Foundation
The Millennium Elephant Foundation (1 km away) offers more intimate elephant interaction for a contrasting experience.
04 Photography
The river bathing provides exceptional photography. A 70–200mm zoom lens captures individual expressions at a comfortable distance.
05 Comfortable Shoes
The walk from ticket office to orphanage and river involves uneven village paths
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06 Midway Point
Pinnawala sits midway between Colombo and Kandy — naturally slots into any itinerary as a 2–3 hour stop.