A Traveller's Guide to Little India, Kuala Lumpur

Kuala Lumpur’s Indian community provides tourists with the chance to experience a small part of the subcontinent in Malaysia. In a prime location near KL Sentral and bursting with shops, restaurants and culture, strolling through Little India in Kuala Lumpur is often a favourite activity in the multicultural capital.
Brickfields
Historical Landmark

Brickfields District near Bangsar is the official name for Little India in Kuala Lumpur. Residents have lived in this quarter for generations making it the largest and oldest enclave in Malaysia with Indians, Sri Lankans and Bangladeshis calling the neighbourhood home. Today, it’s quickly becoming a property hotspot because of its proximity to Kuala Lumpur’s prime transport hub, KL Sentral.
Early Brickfields
Historical Landmark

Jump back a century and a half and Brickfields was full of wooden houses with thatched roofs. After a fire and flood destroyed much of the settlement in the 1880s, it was decided all property will be built using brick and tiles instead. Enterprising businessman Yap Ah Loy created a huge brickyard transforming today’s Little Indian into a gigantic clay field and produced the materials used to build early Malaysia. The British used the area for their Malayan Railway and brought Indian and Sri Lankan migrant workers. Many of the Indians here today are their descendants.
Little India
Market

A divine location
Market

Practical information
Market