I Love Sarawak
Express boats and the pagoda at Sibu's Rejang River wharf
Rivers

The Rejang River

Sibu

Malaysia's longest river — still the main road for upriver longhouses beyond Sibu.

The Rejang is Malaysia's longest river, cutting more than 560km through the heart of Sarawak from the interior highlands out to the South China Sea. Sibu, the river's main port town, grew wealthy on the timber trade that once moved down it by the raft-load, and its wharf — busy with boats, cargo barges and a riverside pagoda — still shows that history.

The express boats that once ran the full route from Kuching stopped during the COVID-19 pandemic and have not resumed, so getting to Sibu today means a bus or a short flight rather than the classic river journey. But upriver from Sibu, the Rejang is still very much a working highway: boats continue running the 130km stretch to Kapit, alongside a 160km road opened in 2021 that now offers an alternative for the same trip.

Highlights

  • Sibu's historic wharf, once the hub of the timber trade
  • Boats still running upriver from Sibu to Kapit, one of the last places to see it done this way
  • A river 560km long — the longest in Malaysia

Getting there

The old Kuching–Sibu express boat no longer runs (discontinued since the COVID-19 pandemic); reach Sibu by bus from Kuching, or by a short domestic flight. From Sibu, several companies run boats up to Kapit — economy class RM17–20, first class RM25–30, roughly four hours, with departures between about 5:45am and 4:45pm. The alternative is the 160km Sibu–Kapit road, opened in 2021.

Good to know

  • There is no longer a Kuching–Sibu boat service — don't plan around one
  • Sibu–Kapit boats depart early; get to the terminal with time to spare, as schedules are first-come, first-served

Photo: SpOt ON (Public domain), via Wikimedia Commons.