Richseen Private Journeys · Asia

Asia Cultural Journey by Private Jet

Japan · Thailand · Cambodia · Bhutan · Private Jet
12–16 Days · Multi-Destination
From USD 80,000+ per person
"Tokyo to Bhutan by private jet — the journey that connects Japan's precision with Cambodia's Angkor at dawn and Bhutan's Tiger's Nest at altitude, in the sequence that no commercial routing makes possible."
The Journey

Asia,
Tokyo to Bhutan, Without Compromise

Asia contains the world's oldest living civilisations, its most rapidly transforming cities, and its most spiritually demanding landscapes — and the distances between them, measured in flight hours on commercial routes that rarely connect directly, have historically made the continent's full cultural range inaccessible in a single journey of reasonable duration. Tokyo to Siem Reap requires a connection through Bangkok or Hong Kong; Siem Reap to Paro (Bhutan) requires connections through Bangkok, Delhi, or Kathmandu. The commercial routing whose complexity makes each segment feel like a separate trip is the single constraint that has prevented the Asia cultural journey — the one that moves from Japan's precision through Southeast Asia's warmth to the Himalayan spirituality of Bhutan — from becoming the canonical luxury itinerary its cultural range deserves to be.

The Asia Cultural Journey by Private Jet removes this constraint entirely. The private jet from Haneda to Suvarnabhumi takes the same time as the commercial flight but departs when the Japan programme is complete rather than when the airline schedule permits; the Siem Reap to Paro routing is direct in four hours rather than the eight-to-twelve hours of the commercial alternative through multiple hubs. The result is an itinerary whose cultural range — the Aman Tokyo's 33rd-floor view of the city grid at night; the Kyoto koyo in Aman Kyoto's garden; the Capella Bangkok's Chao Phraya riverfront at dusk; the Angkor Wat sunrise from Amansara; and the Tiger's Nest monastery above Paro visible from the Amankora suite — is assembled in the 12-to-16-day framework that the private jet's routing efficiency makes possible.

This itinerary is built around the Aman Asia portfolio — Tokyo, Kyoto, Siem Reap (Amansara), and Bhutan (Amankora across five lodges) — whose specific design philosophy, whose relationship with the natural and cultural landscapes the properties occupy, and whose operational culture across four very different countries provides the most coherent single luxury framework available for the Asia cultural journey. Capella Bangkok provides the Thailand programme's most considered riverfront address; and the journey's final departure is from Paro International Airport, one of the world's most technically demanding commercial landing strips, in conditions that make the private jet's departure flexibility most practically significant.

Signature Moments

Six Encounters
with Asia

The Angkor Wat at first light, Bhutan's Tiger's Nest above Paro, and the Kyoto koyo garden — connected by private jet across the cultural range that no commercial routing assembles in a single journey.

01
Angkor Wat at First Light — The Temple Whose Scale the Dawn Reveals
The Angkor Wat sunrise — the 12th-century Khmer temple complex whose western orientation was designed by its architects to produce the specific sight that occurs at 5:40am: the sun rising directly behind the central tower, the reflection pool before the main causeway producing a vertical composition, and the silence of the archaeological site in the hour before the day-visitor circuit begins. From Amansara, the private tuk-tuk to the Angkor Wat western entrance takes 15 minutes in the pre-dawn darkness; the arrival at the reflection pool in the conditions that the Amansara guide's knowledge of the site makes possible at the moment the sky begins to lighten.
02
Tiger's Nest Monastery — Bhutan at 3,120 Metres Above Paro
The Taktsang Palphug Monastery (Tiger's Nest) above the Paro Valley — the 8th-century temple complex built into the cliff face at 3,120 metres, accessible only by a 2.5-hour trek from the valley floor whose elevation gain and the specific quality of the Himalayan light at altitude make it the most physically demanding single cultural experience on the itinerary and the one whose arrival is most immediately rewarding. The monastery that Guru Padmasambhava is said to have flown to on the back of a tigress from Tibet in 747 CE; the view from the cliff edge terrace back across the Paro valley and the Bhutanese highlands whose cultural isolation has preserved the tradition that the Tiger's Nest visit makes most legible.
03
Aman Tokyo — The City Grid at Night from the 33rd Floor
Aman Tokyo in the Otemachi Tower — the hotel whose 33rd-floor rooms look across Tokyo's 13.96 million residents from the position above the Imperial Palace's East Garden that makes the city's scale most comprehensible as a single visual composition. The specific quality of the Tokyo night view from this elevation: the grid of the low-rise residential districts visible to the northwest, the Shinjuku skyline to the west, and the specific atmospheric haze that the city's density produces at night in conditions that make the light pattern most vivid. The spa's onsen pool at the same elevation for the thermal experience whose quality the urban landscape below makes most dramatically contextualised.
04
Capella Bangkok — The Chao Phraya at Dusk
Capella Bangkok on the Chao Phraya riverfront — the hotel whose Dhawa spa, the river-view suites, and the riverside restaurant produce the most considered luxury address on the Bangkok waterfront. The Chao Phraya at dusk from the hotel's terrace: the river whose boat traffic (the rice barges, the long-tail ferries, the tourist vessels, and the private hotel cruises) makes Bangkok most legible as a city built on water whose identity the landlocked commercial transformation of the Sukhumvit district has not yet replaced. The sunset behind the Wat Arun spires across the river — the temple whose 82-metre prang covered in Chinese porcelain fragments produces the most distinctive single skyline element in the city at the hour when the evening light on the river is most vivid.
05
Amankora Bhutan — Five Lodges Across the Kingdom's Valleys
Amankora — Aman's five-lodge Bhutan circuit (Paro, Thimphu, Punakha, Gangtey, Bumthang) whose movement through the kingdom's valleys follows the traditional pilgrimage routes that connect Bhutan's most significant dzongs and monasteries. The architectural language (the rammed-earth construction, the traditional timber details, and the furnishings whose Bhutanese textile programme makes each lodge most legible as a place in the kingdom rather than a luxury hotel that happens to be located there) and the guide programme whose knowledge of the valley's specific religious and cultural sites makes the Amankora circuit the most complete single luxury experience of Bhutanese culture available.
06
Private Jet — The Route That Commercial Aviation Cannot Provide
The private jet routing that makes the Asia cultural journey feasible as a single coherent programme: Haneda to Suvarnabhumi (6 hours direct, departing when the Japan programme is complete); Suvarnabhumi to Siem Reap Angkor Airport (1 hour, direct); Siem Reap to Paro (4 hours direct, versus 8–12 hours via multiple commercial hubs); and Paro to the departure city (direct to Hong Kong, Singapore, or Delhi for onward connections). The aircraft that connects the civilisational range of the Asia cultural journey — the Confucian precision of Japan, the Theravada warmth of Thailand, the Khmer archaeological tradition of Cambodia, and the Vajrayana Buddhist spirituality of Bhutan — in the sequence that the distances require and at the pace that the programme's depth demands.
Key Highlights

What Makes This Journey

01 ✈️
Private Jet — The Asian Cultural Range Without the Routing Penalty
The private jet that connects Tokyo, Kyoto, Bangkok, Siem Reap, and Paro in the direct routing that commercial aviation does not offer — Siem Reap to Paro in 4 hours rather than 8–12; departing Japan when the cultural programme is complete rather than the airline schedule requires. The infrastructure that transforms the Asia cultural journey from an ambition whose logistical complexity defeats the experience to a coherent 12-to-16-day programme whose civilisational range is the most complete available in Asia.
02 🛕
Four Civilisations — Japan, Thailand, Cambodia, Bhutan
The Asia cultural journey's civilisational programme — Japan's Confucian precision and aesthetic tradition (the Tokyo omakase, the Kyoto temple garden, the tea ceremony); Thailand's Theravada warmth and culinary culture (the Chao Phraya at dusk, the floating market, the Thai cooking tradition); Cambodia's Khmer archaeological tradition (Angkor Wat at sunrise, the Bayon's stone faces, the Ta Prohm jungle ruins); and Bhutan's Vajrayana Buddhist spirituality (the Tiger's Nest, the dzong fortresses, the Amankora valley circuit). The four civilisational traditions whose combination in a single journey is unique to the Asian continent.
03 🏨
Aman Asia Circuit — Tokyo, Kyoto, Amansara, Amankora
The Aman Asia portfolio across the journey — Aman Tokyo in the Otemachi Tower (33rd-floor city grid view, onsen at altitude); Aman Kyoto in the Kitayama forest (stone-and-moss garden, private path to the Kinkaku-ji); Amansara in Siem Reap (former residence of King Sihanouk, private tuk-tuks to Angkor); and Amankora across Bhutan's five valleys (Paro, Thimphu, Punakha, Gangtey, Bumthang). The single luxury brand whose Asia footprint provides the most coherent framework for the cultural journey's four-country arc.
Sample Itinerary

Key Segments & Movements

The Asia Cultural Journey operates year-round; the optimal period is October to March when the Japanese autumn foliage (October–November), the Cambodian dry season (November–March), and the Bhutanese festival season (October–December, February–March) coincide. The private jet routing is Tokyo (Haneda) → Bangkok (Suvarnabhumi) → Siem Reap → Paro → departure city. Total flight time approximately 14 hours across the circuit.

Every Richseen Asia Cultural Journey is individually crafted. Amankora Bhutan and Amansara require advance booking of six months or more. The Bhutan tourism programme requires the Sustainable Development Fee (USD 200 per night) and all visits are managed through the Bhutan Tourism Corporation's licensed operator framework. The private jet routing is confirmed at the time of booking.

Days 1–2
Tokyo — Aman Tokyo · Tsukiji · Ginza · Shibuya
Arrive at Haneda International Airport with private transfer to Aman Tokyo in the Otemachi Tower. The 33rd-floor arrival: the view of the Tokyo grid extending in every direction, the Imperial Palace's East Garden directly below, and the specific quality of the city that the altitude makes most immediately legible. Day 1: the Tsukiji outer market at 7am (the tuna sashimi breakfast whose quality the proximity to the allocation determines); the Ginza Itoya for the most considered stationery and craft object selection in the city; and the Shibuya crossing at rush hour for the urban scale encounter that no other city replicates. Day 2: the private cultural programme — the Nezu Museum in Aoyama and the teamLab Borderless digital art installation.
Aman Tokyo
Days 3–4
Kyoto — Aman Kyoto · Arashiyama · Tea Ceremony · Kaiseki
Shinkansen from Tokyo to Kyoto (2 hours 15 minutes); private car to Aman Kyoto in the Kitayama area. The stone-and-moss garden; the private path to the Kinkaku-ji (Gold Pavilion) and Ryoan-ji whose rock garden constitutes the most studied single composition in Japanese aesthetic history. Day 3: the Arashiyama programme with a private guide — Tenryu-ji garden at dawn, the bamboo grove, the hidden temples of Jojakko-ji and Nison-in accessible before the standard tourist programme begins. Day 4: the private tea ceremony (the chado practice in the ro season); the Fushimi Inari Taisha 10,000 torii gates at dawn; and the kaiseki dinner at the Aman's own restaurant whose seasonal menu makes the Kyoto culinary tradition most legible.
Aman Kyoto
Days 5–7
Bangkok — Capella Bangkok · Chao Phraya · Floating Market · Temple Circuit
Private jet from Osaka Kansai or Kyoto (transfer) to Bangkok Suvarnabhumi (3 hours direct). Private car to Capella Bangkok on the Chao Phraya riverfront. Day 5: the Chao Phraya at dusk from the hotel terrace — the Wat Arun spires across the river in the evening light; the hotel's private longtail boat for the canal network tour at the hour when the Bangkok waterway traffic is most animated. Day 6: the Wat Phra Kaew (Temple of the Emerald Buddha) and the Grand Palace complex; the Jim Thompson House for the Thai silk and the American businessman whose disappearance in 1967 is the most enduring single mystery in Bangkok's social history. Day 7: the Damnoen Saduak floating market at 6am; and the private Thai cooking class in a traditional riverside sala.
Capella Bangkok
Days 8–10
Siem Reap — Amansara · Angkor Wat Dawn · Bayon · Ta Prohm
Private jet from Suvarnabhumi to Siem Reap Angkor International Airport (1 hour direct). Private car to Amansara — the former residence of King Norodom Sihanouk converted to a 24-suite boutique property whose private tuk-tuks and the resident Angkor guide provide the most considered access to the archaeological complex available in Siem Reap. Day 8: Angkor Wat at 5:30am for the sunrise — the western causeway reflection pool, the first light on the central tower, and the one-hour observation before the first visitor groups arrive. Day 9: the Bayon (the 54 towers of King Jayavarman VII's face sculptures, the most psychologically immediate single structure at Angkor) and Ta Prohm (the jungle temple whose fig tree roots growing through the stone galleries Lara Croft occupied in 2001). Day 10: the lesser-visited Banteay Srei and the Beng Mealea jungle temple.
Amansara, Siem Reap
Days 11–14
Bhutan — Amankora · Paro · Tiger's Nest · Valley Circuit
Private jet from Siem Reap to Paro (4 hours direct — one of the world's most technically demanding commercial landings, performed by a handful of certified pilots whose knowledge of the Himalayan valley approach is required). Amankora Paro: the lodge above the Paro valley with the Tiger's Nest visible from the terrace. Day 11: the Tiger's Nest trek (2.5 hours ascent, 3,120 metres, the 8th-century monastery built into the cliff face). Day 12: Thimphu — the Dzong, the National Memorial Chorten, and the Textile Museum whose Bhutanese weaving tradition the Amankora properties reference in their interiors. Day 13: the Punakha Dzong (the 17th-century fortress at the confluence of the Pho Chhu and Mo Chhu rivers, the most dramatically sited single building in Bhutan) and the suspended bridge. Day 14: the Gangtey valley for the black-necked crane sanctuary (October to February migration season) and the Gangtey Gompa monastery.
Amankora, Bhutan
Days 15–16
Departure — Paro to Hong Kong, Singapore, or Delhi
Final morning at Amankora Paro — the archery practice (Bhutan's national sport, which every visitor to the kingdom eventually watches at the village level and whose social function in Bhutanese community life the Amankora guide explains most directly); the Rinpung Dzong for the final dzong visit before the Paro valley departure. Private jet from Paro International Airport to Hong Kong (4 hours), Singapore (4.5 hours), or Delhi (2 hours) for onward international connections. The journey's cultural arc completed — from Tokyo's contemporary urban precision through the Himalayan kingdom whose constitution mandates Gross National Happiness as a policy objective and whose tourist access policy ensures the experience remains uncrowded.
Paro International Airport
Luxury Stays

Where You Rest Matters

Otemachi Tower, Tokyo & Kitayama, Kyoto
Japan — 4 Nights (2 Tokyo + 2 Kyoto)
Aman Tokyo & Aman Kyoto
1-5-6 Otemachi, Tokyo · Okitayama Washimine-cho, Kyoto
Aman Tokyo in the Otemachi Tower — the 33rd-floor hotel above the Imperial Palace whose spa onsen at altitude and the view of the city grid at night provide the most considered urban luxury experience in Japan. Aman Kyoto above the Kitayama forest — the 24-suite property whose stone-and-moss garden and the private path to the Kinkaku-ji and Ryoan-ji make it the most quietly distinguished address in the ancient capital. Two properties whose shared design language — the natural materials, the Japanese spatial philosophy, and the service culture — makes the transition between Tokyo and Kyoto most coherent as a single Japanese journey rather than two separate stays.
Siem Reap, Cambodia
Cambodia — 3 Nights
Amansara
Road to Angkor, Siem Reap, Cambodia
Amansara — the former retreat of King Norodom Sihanouk converted to a 24-suite boutique property on the Road to Angkor, whose private tuk-tuks and the resident Angkor archaeological guide provide the most considered access to the Angkor complex available in Siem Reap. The circular pool whose design references the Cambodian lotus; the open-plan suites whose teak and sandstone interiors reference the Angkor architectural vocabulary; and the kitchen's Khmer tasting menu whose ingredients and preparation methods make the Cambodian culinary tradition most legible as a distinct Southeast Asian practice. The property from which the Angkor Wat pre-dawn departure is most straightforwardly managed.
Paro, Thimphu, Punakha, Gangtey, Bhutan
Bhutan — 4 Nights (Circuit)
Amankora
Five lodges across Bhutan's valleys
Amankora — Aman's five-lodge Bhutan circuit across the Paro, Thimphu, Punakha, Gangtey, and Bumthang valleys, whose movement through the kingdom follows the traditional pilgrimage routes connecting the most significant dzongs and monasteries. The rammed-earth construction and the Bhutanese textile programme that make each lodge most legible as a place in the kingdom; the resident guides whose knowledge of the valley's specific religious and cultural sites makes the Amankora circuit the most complete single luxury experience of Bhutanese culture available. The Gangtey lodge above the Gangtey valley (pictured) whose outdoor dining terrace at 2,900 metres provides the most panoramically Himalayan single dining position on the itinerary.
Exclusive Experiences

Moments Designed for You

🛕
Angkor
Sunrise at Angkor Wat — The Temple Whose Dawn Is Its Defining Moment
The Angkor Wat sunrise from Amansara — the private tuk-tuk to the western causeway at 5:15am, the reflection pool in the pre-dawn darkness, and the light appearing behind the central tower at 5:40am in the conditions that the Amansara guide's knowledge of the site makes most productive. The Angkor complex over two full days: Angkor Wat for the gallery bas-reliefs and the upper sanctuary; the Bayon for the 216 stone faces of Jayavarman VII; Ta Prohm for the fig tree roots growing through the gallery walls; and the lesser-visited Banteay Srei for the finest sandstone carving in the Angkor tradition, 25 kilometres north of the main complex.
🏔️
Tiger's Nest
Taktsang Monastery — The 2.5-Hour Trek to Bhutan's Most Sacred Site
The Tiger's Nest trek from the Paro valley floor — 2.5 hours ascending through the blue pine and rhododendron forest to the monastery built into the cliff face at 3,120 metres. The Amankora guide's knowledge of the trail's cultural significance at each level of ascent; the view from the monastery's cliff edge terrace back across the Paro valley; and the specific quality of the Himalayan light at altitude in October to March conditions when the air clarity makes the surrounding peaks visible at their most distinct. The most physically demanding single experience on the itinerary and the one whose arrival — the monastery's prayer hall, the sacred spring, and the Guru Rinpoche's meditation cave — produces the most immediate encounter with Bhutanese spiritual culture.
🍱
Culinary
Four Asian Food Traditions — Sushi, Thai, Khmer, and Ara
The Asian culinary programme across four countries — the Tokyo omakase counter whose chef's seasonal programme in November makes the kaiseki logic most directly accessible in the city idiom; the Kyoto kaiseki dinner whose matsutake and persimmon courses represent the Japanese agricultural tradition at its most precisely seasonal; the Capella Bangkok's Khao kitchen for the Thai tasting programme whose river-view setting makes the cooking most legible as a riverfront culture; and the Amansara's Khmer tasting menu in the lotus pool setting that frames the traditional Cambodian cuisine most atmospherically. The Amankora's Ara (Bhutanese butter tea and the red rice cultivation that the kingdom's altitude and climate make most distinctive).
✈️
Private Jet
Tokyo to Bhutan — The Route Commercial Aviation Cannot Provide
The private jet routing across the Asia cultural circuit — Haneda to Suvarnabhumi (6 hours, departing when the Japan programme is complete); Suvarnabhumi to Siem Reap (1 hour direct); Siem Reap to Paro (4 hours direct, versus 8–12 hours via commercial hubs); and Paro to Hong Kong, Singapore, or Delhi for onward connections. The routing whose specific value is most visible on the Siem Reap to Paro segment — the flight that makes the Bhutan programme accessible from the Angkor circuit without the two-day commercial transit detour that makes the combination impractical in commercial travel. The private jet as the argument that Asia's civilisational range is accessible as a single coherent journey.
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Through the Lens

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Private Journey

Every detail — from your first morning above Tokyo to your final afternoon in the Bhutanese highlands — is composed entirely around you. Speak with your dedicated Richseen journey consultant today.

From USD 80,000+ per person

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