Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia on a Budget – Asia Tour 2017

Two Days in Kuala Lumpur, Backpacker Budget, Visit the top sights, Eat some good Food.  Here is how we did it!

Petronas Twin Towers - Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Petronas Twin Towers

Kuala Lumpur, a bustling city showcasing the famous Petronas Twin Towers, the KL Tower, Bukit Bintang luxury district, Asian Fusion Foods and shopping with great prices for those on a budget.  Chinatown was our hotel destination, Hop On Hop Off Bus helped us discover!

Kuala Lumpur Skyline - Malaysia
Beautiful Kuala Lumpur Skyline

We booked our flight with Air Asia from Singapore to Kuala Lumpur for SGD$178 for both of us – Euro €118.50 or €59.25 pp. The flight was approximately 30 minutes.

Chinatown is an approximate 1 hour car drive or 38 minute train ride; the train is directly at the airport. It was cloudy and raining lightly on our arrival. A friend who lives in the city picked us up with his car, so we did not need transportation, however we did learn that taking a Taxi would have been cheaper than train!

Night Market in Chinatown - Kuala Lumpur
Night Market in Chinatown

The Currency is Malaysian Ringgit (myr or RM)

On our way to the City, we stopped for some food at a highway stop. (Like a truck stop) Our friend told us the best place to eat is the booth called Satay Kajang HJ Samuri. He recommended the Beef & Chicken Satay with peanut sauce & sambal (spicy)sauce, rice and cucumbers, explaining it is authentic Malaysian food.  We ordered a large water with it and our bill came to a total of 35 myr = €7.43 / 3 People.  The satay was very good with a strong barbecue flavor and a rich sauce.

Beef & Chicken Satay - Satay Kajang HJ Samuri Food Stall
Beef & Chicken Satay – Satay Kajang HJ Samuri Food Stall

We stayed at the Hotel Rain Forest for 2 nights with a cost of €46, booked through booking.com. It was a very simple, but clean room with single beds, small tv, desk, and a separate room with toilet, sink and in toilet shower with hot water.

Simple Room in the Rain Forest Hotel - Chinatown, Kuala Lumpur
Simple Room in the Rain Forest Hotel

Very friendly staff, especially the young lady at the front desk. Included in price is free water and of course, internet. Bring adapters and be forewarned, electricity works with key only; if you leave, devices quit charging.  You may take gadgets to front desk while you are gone and they will charge them for you. The hotel is a perfect location for the bus station, food stalls, market & shopping. Hop On Hop Off bus picks up and stops around the corner at Hotel 5th Element.

Do not miss the crazy shopping at the Jalan Petaling Street Market where everything is for sale, bargaining is a must and food is your end reward!

Entrance to Jalan Petaling Street Market - Chinatown, Kuala Lumpur
Entrance to Jalan Petaling Street Market

Day 2 we bought a ticket for the Hop On Hop Off bus around the corner at the Hotel 5th Element for MYR 45 pp. In retrospect, perhaps we should have checked into booking a taxi driver for the tour? Make sure you check that and let us know! Unlike past experiences, the stops are long (sometimes 15 minutes), allowing people the time to hop off, run and take pictures and hop back on. There are 23 stops with supposedly 70+ attractions.

Sultan Abdul Samad Building - Kuala Lumpur
Sultan Abdul Samad Building

We stopped for lunch under the KL Tower, where assumedly the prices are higher as are the shops fancier. At the restaurant Fathima Food Corner, we ordered: 
– Teh 3 Layer 3.80 myr (iced coffee tea) yum
– Green Apple Juice 3.80 myr good
– Goreng Ayam 8.80 myr (chicken noodles wit fried chicken leg) yum
– Sup 8.80 myr (soup) ok
– Char Kuey Teow 6.50 myr (broad noodle with seafood) ?not so good
Total Cost: $29 myr for 2
Side note ladies: the toilets are standing toilets

Char Kuey Teow / Broad Noodles with Seafood - Kuala Lumpur
Char Kuey Teow / Broad Noodles with Seafood

For Dinner, we were recommended Kedai Makanan Lim Kee chinese restaurant with plastic stools, wooden tables, pots & bowls topped with chopsticks sanitized at the table and an open kitchen.
Food style: Chinese / Bakut Teh
Food we ate:
– Dumplings Fried (side) 4 myr
– Soy dumpling (side) 6 myr
– Soup 1.50 myr
– Butter Prawns 38 myr
– White rice 4.50 myr
– Sweet Potato leaf 15 myr
– Pork rib soup 32 myr
– Sides of fresh chopped garlic and hot green chilis
– 2 large Tiger beer 18 myr ea., 1 tiger radler 5 myr
Food for 3, too much leftover: 140.50 myr
Excellent Food!!!

Kitchen in Kedai Makanan Lim Kee Restaurant - Kuala Lumpur
Kitchen in Kedai Makanan Lim Kee Restaurant

Day 3 and already we are on our way out the door.  Quick stop at trusty McDonalds for:
– 1 spicy deluxe chicken burger 8.95 myr
– 1 Big Mac w/ fries & sprite 13.44 myr
and a Coke from the convenience store for rm1
Total: 23.39 myr

For Formula 1 fans, the F1 track is very close to airport KLIA and it is worth a quick stop for a look around. Entrance is free and there are often events going on.  While we were there, they were racing motorbikes.  Our Taxi from Chinatown to Airport KLIA was 90 myr + we offered an extra 30 myr to go to F1 track.

We at at the Airport: Dim Sum Restaurant
– Steamed Honey Glazed Chicken Bun rm8
– Steamed Vegetarian dumpling rm8
– Egg Noodle Won Ton Soup rm17

How to sum up Kuala Lumpur? Where old meets new, an Eclectic mix of fancy, trashy, rats and glamour. Definite must see!

Street Graffiti - Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Magnificent Street Graffiti

Costs (Euro/per person):
Flight from Singapore to Kuala Lumpur: €59.25 per person (pp)
Highway food: €2.47 pp
Lodging (Rainforest Hotel): €33 per night
Hop On Hop Off: €9.55 pp
Fathima Food Corner lunch: €3.08 pp
Kedai Makanan Lim Kee Restaurant: €9.95 pp
McDonalds: €2.50
Taxi to Airport KLIA: €19.12 + €6.37 for F1 Track
Airport Food: €4.35 pp
Total Cost per person for 2 nights: €84.02 plus the flight

Next Stop: Langkawi Island, Malaysia

Rainforest Hotel: Address: 122, Jalan Petaling, City Centre, 50000 Kuala Lumpur, Wilayah Persekutuan Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Kedai Makanan Lim Kee Restaurant – No. 54, Lorong Haji Taib Satu, Jalan Raja Laut, 50350 Kuala Lumpur. Tel: 03-2692 6915

Kuala Lumpur Hop On Hop Off Map

Check out our other Asia Travels!

Singapore on a Budget, Cruise Destination, Island City – Asia Tour 2017

Singapore and Chinese New Year – Can it be done on a budget? Our must see list includes Temples, Chinatown, Markets, Bayfront, Gardens by the Bay and of course, Food!!!

View of beautiful Chinatown - Singapore
View of beautiful Chinatown

After Phuket, this was the last stop of our cruise and we decided to cautiously dedicate 3 days to Singapore. This is how we managed to stay in one of the most expensive destinations in the world on a shoestring budget, and still manage to do everything on the Top See List.

Super Trees - Singapore Gardens
Super Trees – Singapore Gardens

At the cruise port terminal, we exited the building in search of a taxi to take us to our hotel. We did the usual walk to get as far away from the crowds as possible when a man approached us and offered his taxi service.  We said yes, he turned out to be a limo service and charged us SGD$50. For any cruisers finishing here or visiting here: Walk completely out of the terminal where there are actually a string of bored taxi drivers waiting.

Chinatown Street Market - Singapore
Chinatown Street Market

As it was Chinese New Year, we decided the best place one could celebrate and soak up the atmosphere would be Chinatown. It doesn’t hurt that this area is probably the most affordable tourist area in Singapore.  We checked into the Chinatown Hotel on Tech Lin Road.  If you choose this hotel, keep in mind some rooms do not have a window and many rooms have bunk beds. Our room had a window, a large bed, and the very asian bathroom – think powder room with a shower in it; wet toilet and sink when you shower. It is located very well, close to food, markets, temples, subway and right in the middle of Chinatown. Cost for 3 nights: SGD$217.32  or SGD$72.44 (USD$51.18) per night, including taxes. Not bad considering it was Chinese New Year.

Chinatown Hotel - Singapore
Chinatown Hotel

Our go to food destination for the 3 days was the Maxwell Road Hawker Center which dedicated the massive 3rd floor to food stalls – literally hundreds of food stalls, all hawking their own style of homemade street food. An adventurous foodies paradise featuring things I had never heard of and concoctions ranging from temptingly delicious to “I will absolutely not eat that“. The levels below featured clothing and other necessities, and the bottom level was mostly fish and seafood.  Fruit was being sold at the outdoor markets.

Line up at a Hawker Food Stall - Chinatown, Singapore
Early Line up at a Hawker Food Stall

All of Chinatown was decked out in red for the festivities, lanterns swayed from the buildings and outdoor markets and shops were selling all sorts of wonders. We bought a breakfast pomelo for a shocking SGD$9 and savoured every bite.  Then we visited the Buddha Tooth Relic Temple and Museum; no entry charge, very pretty and surprisingly quiet.

Buddha Tooth Relic Temple - Chinatown, Singapore
Buddha Tooth Relic Temple

Starting to feel hungry, we headed to the Maxwell Road Hawker Center to begin the odyssey of the search for lunch.  It was 13:30 (1:30 pm) in the afternoon and the place was packed with locals.

Vegetable Market - Chinatown, Singapore
Vegetable Market

After a lot of searching and changing our minds several times, we settled on a place called Hang Kee Cantonese Cooked Food where we ordered 2 Spicy Chicken fried Vermicelli noodles with chicken for a total of SGD$12. The cook was rude, and the chicken was questionable, but the noodles were very good. Note to self: do not return to that booth. Check out my Maxwell Road Hawker Stalls – Eating on a Budget in Singapore blog for more on the several vendors we tried in this mind boggling place.

Chinatown Nightlife - Singapore
Chinatown Nightlife

We took the opportunity to wash our laundry while there.  Easy Wash is a chain of DIY laundromats; easy to find they offer coin operated washers and dryers. We simply through the wash into the machine and went for a walk around the market! If you don’t understand how it works, just ask someone else who is using the facility. Cost for one load: SGD$14

Easy Wash Laundromat - Chinatown, Singapore
Easy Wash Laundromat – DIY

Keep in mind, the night markets are amazing as well, as they are all lit up and so pretty. Disadvantages are the shoulder to shoulder crowds.  If you are not so adventurous with food, there is an upscale open air street food market in the heart of Chinatown, aptly called Chinatown Food Street. Prices are minimum double as much – 2 plates of rice with Abalone, 3 big prawns, a pork with noodles dish, 1 diet coke and 2 wet wipes: SGD$63.00 (for street food ? ).

Buddha Tooth Relic Temple at Night - Chinatown, Singapore
Buddha Tooth Relic Temple at Night

We discovered that you should not ask people for directions. They put smiles on their faces and then proceed to tell you anything that sounds good; ideally, you should be well aware of where you want to go! Which brings us to the subway, known as the MRT. Great system – very clean. You buy your ticket at a ticket machine. Make sure you have SGD$5 as it seems everybody with SGD$10 were having complications. From Chinatown to Bayfront it was SGD$1.40 each way ($2.80 total pp).

MRT Subway Tickets - Singapore
MRT Subway – Tickets

Gardens by the Bay – Super Tree Grove (free) – 25 to 50 meter tall vertical living gardens designed to look like futuristic trees, unique plants from around the world, children’s water play area, the Sun Pavillion (desert landscapes and plants), art sculptures and lakes. Extra for a fee: OCBC Skyway catwalk ($8), the Flower Dome and Cloud Forest conservatories ($28 for both)

Singapore Skyline from Gardens by the Bay
Singapore Skyline from Gardens by the Bay

The famous Marina Bay Sands Hotel towers against the Singapore skyline. This 5 star resort boasts some of the best views in the city from it’s observation deck ($23 for non guests), an incredible infinity pool in the sky, a casino, lounges, shops, bars and restaurants. Often sold out, prices to stay start at around $450 per night. We did not go into the building, but there is a beautiful view from the Gardens by the Bay.

The Marina Bay Sands Hotel, view from the Gardens - Singapore
The Marina Bay Sands Hotel, view from the Gardens

The Shoppes at Marina Bay Sands luxury shopping mall. Great place to bide some time if it is raining or to browse and buy in upscale shops with names like Armani, Dior, Tiffany, Louis Vuitton to name a few. Over 60 high priced restaurants will keep the hunger at bay or help quench your thirst while watching the good life pass by.

Mall, Marina Bay Sands - Singapore
Mall, Marina Bay Sands

Chinese New Year was jammed full of people; you could literally not move. We had made plans to meet with friends in the Marina Bay district for drinks, snacks and the firework display. After trying for almost 2 hours to negotiate the 2 blocks to the subway, we were presented with a controlled entrance (due to high volume) and a never ending line up. Unfortunately, we had to cancel our plans and instead found a spot where we watched the unimpressive fireworks and then fought our way back to our hotel. The next day, almost everything in the city was closed.

Decked out streets for CNY - Singapore
Decked out streets for CNY

Note: Singapore is known as the cleanest city in the world and with that comes many false claims and illusions. There are cigarette butts on the ground, there are rats and there is dirt and garbage. That being said, in the posh tourist areas, like Marina Bay, you will probably not see any butts, garbage or dirt – consider it tourist dollars hard at work. ? Here, you will also pay $28 for a Singapore Sling at Raffles!

Laundry in the Sky - Chinatown, Singapore
Laundry in the Sky

Curreny: Singapore Dollars SGD

Cost: Taxi (limo)from cruise port $50, Hotel $217.32, Food $148.50, Laundry  $14, Subway $2.80, Taxi to airport $20.

Total Cost: $452.62 (2 persons, 3 nights) or $150.87 per day – USD$106.66

CLICK FOR MORE PHOTOS of Singapore including Subway, Laundromat, Hotel, Opening Hours, and more.

Click for info on the Food Hawker Stalls

NEXT STOP:  Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

 
Check out our other Asia Travels!

Maxwell Road Hawker Stalls – Eating on a Budget in Singapore

Budget eating in Singapore. Maxwell Road Hawker Food Center. Endless stalls presenting food from all over Asia at affordable prices. How we did it.

Spicy Cashew Chicken, White Rice and Sour Soup - Singapore
Spicy Cashew Chicken, White Rice and Sour Soup

Three nights in Singapore with a tight budget, surrounded by ultra expensive restaurants and bars. Here is how we survived.

Hawker Food Aisle, Singapore
Hawker Food Aisle, Maxwell Road Hawker Centre

Maxwell Road Hawker Food Centre

Foodies rejoice! Here you will find literally hundreds of food stalls lined up beside each other with endless

Visual guide to Ho Chi Minh Vietnam

A quick glimpse of the fabulously entertaining Ho Chi Minh, otherwise known as Saigon.

Visit my blog, Ho Chi Minh Saigon | Food and History | Vietnam on a Budget, to read all the details and prices, but in the meantime, enjoy the sights and history of this incredibly fascinating place with a sad past through my photo album below. Highlights include the War Remnants museum, Ben Thanh Street Market, Notre Dame Cathedral, Cu Chi Tunnels, the Reunification Palace also known as the Independence Palace, the Post Office, Bui Vien Street pub street and more!

 

Check out our other Asia Travels!
 

Phuket Thailand | Cruise Stop | Asia Tour 2017

Tender cruise destination – Phuket Thailand. No big plans other than Patong Beach, but a rainy sky threatens the day. Time to find some good eats!

Food to Go - Phuket, Thailand
Food to Go

Unfortunately, the weather did not co-operate for our Phuket, Thailand stop.  We tendered to land under a very overcast sky. Decidedly, instead of the original plan of hitting Patong Beach for drinks and massages, this was a perfect day to try