Loading city...
Loading city...

5 neighborhoods selected in this guide.

Brickfields, commonly known as Little India, is KL's vibrant Indian quarter adjacent to KL Sentral station. Its streets overflow with sari shops, banana-leaf restaurants, flower garlands, Bollywood music, and the aroma of freshly ground spices.

Petaling Street is the bustling heart of KL's Chinatown, a covered market street flanked by pre-war shophouses, Chinese medicine shops, and hawker stalls. The green-roofed arcade protects vendors and shoppers from afternoon downpours.
Bangsar is one of KL's most cosmopolitan neighborhoods, a leafy enclave of colonial-era bungalows, modern condos, independent cafés, and buzzing bars. The main strips—Jalan Telawi and Jalan Maarof—are the nucleus of KL's brunch and nightlife scene.

Kampung Baru is a remarkable anomaly—a traditional Malay village (kampung) of wooden stilt houses and narrow lanes sitting in the shadow of the Petronas Towers. Established in 1899, it remains a Malay Reserve area offering a glimpse of pre-modern KL.

Bukit Bintang (Star Hill) is KL's premier shopping, dining, and entertainment district, a seemingly endless stretch of malls, street-food stalls, and neon-lit bars. Its pedestrianised stretches connect Pavilion KL, Lot 10, and the Jalan Alor food strip.