Azam's Orange Farm Campsite — Cameron Highlands Camping With a Twist - TAHAN Outdoor

Azam's Orange Farm Campsite — Cameron Highlands Camping With a Twist

Camping among orange trees on a clifftop in Cameron Highlands — Azam's Orange Farm is raw, cold, and genuinely unique. Mike's honest review.

Azam's Orange Farm Campsite — Cameron Highlands Camping With a Twist

The Vibe

Forget the usual Cameron Highlands experience — strawberry farms, crowded pasar malam, traffic crawling up the hill. Azam's Orange Farm is a completely different beast. You're camping on raised wooden platforms built into a cliffside, surrounded by actual orange trees, at altitude, with sweeping views that'll make you forget you drove two hours to get here. This is one of the most unique campsites in Cameron Highlands, full stop.

The whole setup is raw and farm-style. No glamping nonsense, no artificial lighting shows, no Instagram-bait decorations — just you, your tent, the cold mountain air, and oranges you can pluck straight off the tree and makan on the spot. Each platform is spaced apart from the others, so you get your own little pocket of quiet. Nights drop to around 14°C or lower in cold months. Solar fairy lights come on at 7pm. If the clouds roll in and the rain starts tapping on your tent roof, honestly? It's magic.

The crowd here is mostly people who know what they're looking for — experienced campers, motorbike tourers, folks who want something real rather than sanitised. Families can come but you need to be comfortable with some rough edges: uneven ground, basic facilities, flies in the daytime. If you're after a proper farm-to-tent experience with one of the best views in Cameron, this is it. Just go in with eyes open.

Azam's Orange Farm Campsite
Photo by Razi Zulkepli via Google Maps

Getting There

The campsite is in Brinchang, Cameron Highlands — address is GCH2+9Q, Brinchang, 39000 Brinchang, Pahang. When you book, the owner will WhatsApp you the exact route in. Don't skip this step, because the last 400 metres is a narrow, uneven, and sometimes muddy track that's easy to miss and easy to regret if you're not prepared.

Sedans and lowered cars will struggle on that last stretch. You can try going slow, but a 4WD or high-clearance vehicle is honestly the safer bet. Bikers handle it fine. If you're unsure about parking or entry, the owner is active on TikTok and responsive — reach out before you head up. Once you park, it's a short downhill walk to the campsite itself. The walk isn't brutal, just wear proper shoes because it can get slippery when wet. One reviewer noted it's only about 3km from the Mossy Forest entrance, so the location is very central within Cameron.

Azam's Orange Farm Campsite
Photo by Ruzlan Zakaria via Google Maps

What to Expect

The campsite sits on wooden platforms built into a cliff face, among orange tree rows. Each slot is separated, so you won't have strangers three feet from your tent. The views from here are stunning — you're looking out across the highlands, and if you stay up past 11pm or midnight on a clear night, the stargazing is legit. No direct view of sunset or sunrise since you're behind a hill, but the night sky makes up for it.

Daytime flies are a real thing. They come with the organic farming territory and they get worse if there's rubbish left around — and based on reviews, cleanliness of the grounds has been inconsistent. A few reviewers mentioned food packaging and fallen oranges left to rot. The owner does come to clear the bins, but ground-level tidiness hasn't always been great. Go expecting this and bring your own rubbish bags.

Azam's Orange Farm Campsite
Photo by Hanif Samsudin via Google Maps

This place suits experienced campers best. The terrain is hilly, the ground gets slippery when wet, and you're cooking at altitude so your stove performance matters. Hotpot in the cold Cameron air is absolutely the move. Beginners can manage, but come prepared mentally and gear-wise — this is not a resort, it's a working farm with tent spots carved into it. That's exactly what makes it special.

Facilities

Toilets

Basic at best, rough at worst. No proper screed on floors, walls look unfinished, and past visitors have complained about improvised fixtures like a cut mineral water bottle used as a gayung. Cold water only. Functional but needs serious upgrading. Bring your own toilet paper and flip flops.

Water

Ground-source water available on site. Not ideal for drinking — bring your own clean water for cooking and drinking. Don't skip this.

Electricity

Some platforms have power sockets for charging. Solar-powered fairy lights turn on around 7pm. Availability may vary by slot, so confirm when booking which platform you're getting.

Shelter

Some camp slots come with a roof over the platform. Good buffer against Cameron's unpredictable rain. Confirm this when booking.

Cooking

No BBQ pit on site. Bring your own portable stove or burner. At this altitude, use a stove with a tank heating plate or high-performance fuel mix — standard canisters can underperform in the cold and altitude.

Parking

Parking available before the final 400m stretch. The owner can advise on exact parking arrangements — contact them before arriving, especially for bigger vehicles.

Azam's Orange Farm Campsite
Photo by Yt Ong via Google Maps

What Campers Are Saying

A solo biker who's made multiple trips here, including during the rainy season, said this place stands out because it has zero fake attractions. Rain on the tent, cold nights, fresh oranges — that's the whole package and he loves it exactly as it is. He's gone back more than once, which says something.

A group who stayed one night paid RM100 and said it was worth every ringgit. They did a timelapse from their platform and noted the views were genuinely stunning. They appreciated the solar fairy lights and charging socket, but called out the flies starting around 8am and the fallen oranges piling up on the ground. Their verdict: unique and cheap, can still be improved.

Azam's Orange Farm Campsite
Photo by Yt Ong via Google Maps

One reviewer compared the orange trees to Jeju Island's orange farms — said it reminded them of that, but Malaysian. High praise. They also flagged that this works well as a pitstop before or after visiting Palas Boh Tea Centre nearby.

A camper who arrived at 3AM had nothing but good things to say about the owner — apparently Azam was helpful and responsive even at that hour. They noted no plug point at the time of their visit (owner said it was coming), mentioned the stargazing from 11pm onwards was excellent, and said they'd definitely come back.

The 2-star review is worth reading too. The scenery got full marks but the reviewer flagged rusty nails and construction materials left near the toilet area as a genuine safety concern. They also mentioned not feeling safe walking around outside at night. These aren't dealbreakers for everyone, but if you're camping with kids, it's something to keep in mind.

Azam's Orange Farm Campsite
Photo by Vy via Google Maps

TAHAN Tip

When booking, specifically ask Azam which platform you're getting and whether it has a roof and a socket. Not all slots are equal — some have better views, some have more shelter, some have charging points. You're paying for a specific spot on a cliff farm, so be picky about which one. A two-minute conversation on WhatsApp before you book can make the whole trip significantly better.

About Mike

Mike has been camping across Malaysia for over 10 years — from jungle treks in Taman Negara to beach camps in Perhentian. He writes about it so you don't have to find out the hard way. Follow along on TAHAN Outdoor's blog for honest campsite reviews, every week.

You Might Also Like

Leave a comment

All comments are moderated before being published.

This site is protected by hCaptcha and the hCaptcha Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.