(Estimated reading time: 8 minutes – enough to hear the hooves before the dust settles.)
Every Khmer New Year, Cambodia’s countryside comes alive with one of its most thrilling traditions: ox cart racing. These high-speed contests, rooted in agricultural life, transform quiet rice fields into roaring tracks. More than a spectacle, they reveal a deep connection between community, skill, and heritage – where tradition still runs at full speed.

Khmer New Year, or Chaul Chnam Thmey, is Cambodia’s most important celebration, marking the end of the harvest season and the start of a new year. While visitors often picture temple visits and joyful water fights, rural Cambodia tells a more kinetic story – one of speed, skill, and dust-filled excitement.
Among the most captivating traditions are ox cart races (Khmer: ប្រណាំងរទេះគោ), a unique form of competition that blends agricultural heritage with adrenaline. This article explores how these races work, where to see them, and why they remain one of the most authentic expressions of Khmer New Year.
The Cultural Heart of Khmer New Year
For generations, Khmer New Year has been a time of rest and renewal for farming communities. After months of labor in the rice fields, families gather to celebrate, reconnect, and enjoy a well-earned pause.
The festivities typically include:
- Temple visits and offerings
- Traditional games played in village courtyards
- Music, dancing, and shared meals
- Local competitions that showcase strength and skill
These competitions, especially races, reflect the rhythm of rural life. They are not staged for tourists – they exist first and foremost for the community.
Ox Cart Races: Cambodia’s Rural Grand Prix
A Tradition Rooted in Daily Life
Before tractors and modern transport, ox carts were indispensable across Cambodia. Farmers relied on them to carry rice, tools, and goods across long distances. Over time, these working animals became central not only to survival but also to celebration.
Racing ox carts during Khmer New Year is a natural extension of this relationship – part competition, part tribute to rural life.
The principle is simple, but the execution requires real expertise:
- Each cart is pulled by two oxen (or water buffalos) trained to run together
- The driver stands on the wooden cart, balancing at high speed
- Races take place on straight dirt tracks, often improvised in rice fields
- Speeds can reach up to 40-50 km/h
Guiding the oxen is the real challenge. Drivers use a mix of voice commands, reins, and instinct. A slight mistake can send the cart veering off course – or into the dust.
The Skill Behind the Spectacle
What looks chaotic at first glance is actually highly controlled. Successful racers spend weeks preparing:
- Training oxen to run in sync
- Adjusting carts for balance and speed
- Practicing starts, which are often decisive
In many villages, certain families become known for their racing skill, adding a layer of local rivalry to the event.
Ox carts used for racing are often specially designed for speed and balance, lighter and more refined than everyday working carts. In some villages, these racing carts are carefully preserved after the event and stored in the local pagoda, where they remain throughout the year. Quietly waiting in the shade of sacred grounds, they become part of the community’s shared heritage until the next Khmer New Year brings them back to life.

Race Day: Dust, Noise, and Community Spirit
If you arrive at an ox cart race during Khmer New Year, you will not need directions – the sound will guide you.
Crowds gather along both sides of the track, often just a few meters from the action. There are no barriers, no grandstands, and no digital timers. Instead, you get something far more engaging:
- The thunder of hooves hitting dry earth
- Clouds of dust rising behind each cart
- Cheers, laughter, and shouted advice from spectators
- Vendors selling grilled snacks and cold drinks
Children climb trees for a better view. Elders comment on the quality of the oxen. Every race feels immediate, unpredictable, and deeply human.
Where and When to Experience Ox Cart Races
Ox cart races are most common in:
- Kampong Speu
- Takeo
- Kandal
These provinces, close to Phnom Penh yet still deeply rural, are known for maintaining strong New Year traditions.
- Khmer New Year usually falls between April 13 and 16
- Races often take place on the second or third day
- Events are rarely advertised online – local knowledge is key
- Arrive early to secure a good viewing spot
- Bring sun protection and water – the April heat is intense
- Keep a safe distance from the track
- Ask locals before taking close-up photos
Why Ox Cart Races Still Matter
In a rapidly changing Cambodia, ox cart races offer something rare: continuity.
They preserve:
- Traditional knowledge of animal handling
- Community-based celebration rather than commercial spectacle
- A direct link to Cambodia’s agricultural roots
At the same time, they are not frozen in time. Each year brings subtle changes – new participants, slight variations in rules, evolving village dynamics.
And at the very edge of these traditions, one can occasionally notice newer, more modern forms of racing (e.g. tuk tuk races) beginning to appear, hinting at how Khmer New Year continues to evolve.
Ox cart races remain one of the most vivid and authentic expressions of Khmer New Year in Cambodia. They combine speed, skill, and community spirit in a way that feels both timeless and immediate – offering a glimpse into a rural world that still moves, quite literally, at full gallop.
Pascal Médeville is a writer and digital publisher based in Cambodia. He focuses on cultural heritage, local traditions, and the subtle ways Cambodian society evolves over time. Through his work, he documents both the enduring and changing faces of the Kingdom.
Watch a few seconds of an ox cart race on Youtube:



















