Quick Answer
Is Koh Samui worth visiting?
The Gulf's most cosmopolitan island — luxury resorts, Chaweng's energy, and year-round accessibility
Koh Samui is Thailand's second most visited island and one of Southeast Asia's most polished resort destinations — an island of 228 km² that has evolved from coconut-exporting backwater to international tourism powerhouse without entirely losing the tropical island atmosphere that made it famous. The island has its own international airport (the most beautiful in Thailand — open-air check-in surrounded by coconut palms), five-star resorts running the full spectrum from intimate boutique to sprawling beachfront palace, and a range of beach environments from the frenetic party scene of Chaweng to the secluded luxury of Maenam and the family-friendly calm of Bophut.
Chaweng Beach remains the island's beating heart — a 6-kilometre arc of white sand backed by the island's densest concentration of restaurants, bars, shops, and hotels, with a nightlife strip (Chaweng Beach Road and Central Road) that ranks among Thailand's most active outside Bangkok. North of Chaweng, Bophut's Fisherman's Village offers a counterpoint: a charming street of converted fishing-village shophouses with boutique restaurants, wine bars, and the excellent Friday night Walking Street market. Lamai, to the south, has a similar energy to Chaweng but slightly more budget-friendly. The north coast around Maenam and the west coast at Lipa Noi are quieter, particularly popular with luxury resorts and long-stay visitors.
The island's interior adds another dimension: the Na Muang waterfalls in the jungle-covered hills, the excellent Ang Thong Marine National Park (42 virgin islands accessible by day trip or camping), and the 12-metre-tall Big Buddha at the North Cape are all legitimate half-day excursions. Koh Samui is also the ferry gateway to Koh Phangan (30 minutes) and Koh Tao (90 minutes), making it the natural hub for exploring the Samui Archipelago.
Top Highlights
Chaweng Beach
6 km of white sand with clear Gulf water, backed by Thailand's best island beach resort infrastructure. Busiest but genuinely beautiful, especially early morning.
Ang Thong Marine National Park
42 untouched islands in a marine national park — jade lagoons, limestone formations, sea caves, and pristine coral. Accessible only by organised day trip or camping permit from Koh Samui.
Fisherman's Village, Bophut
Historic fishing village with converted shophouses, excellent restaurants, boutique hotels, and the best Friday night walking street market on the island.
Big Buddha (Wat Phra Yai)
12-metre gilded Buddha at the north of the island; best at sunrise or sunset when golden light hits the statue. Free entry; donate modestly.
Gateway to Koh Phangan and Koh Tao
30-minute ferry to Full Moon Party island, 90-minute ferry to Koh Tao diving — Koh Samui is the perfect central base for the Samui Archipelago.
Things to Do
- Ang Thong Marine National Park day trip
- Chaweng Beach day and evening
- Fisherman's Village walking street (Friday night)
- Big Buddha temple at sunrise
- Snorkelling day trip to Koh Tao or Koh Nang Yuan
- Na Muang waterfalls in the interior
- Muay Thai boxing show (multiple venues)
- Cooking class in Bophut
Getting There
| Method | From |
|---|---|
| plane | Bangkok (BKK) |
| ferry | Surat Thani (via train or bus from Bangkok) |
| ferry | Koh Phangan |
| ferry | Koh Tao |
plane: Bangkok Airways monopoly makes it expensive; ferries via Surat Thani are much cheaper
ferry: Overnight bus-ferry combo is classic backpacker route; comfortable and cheap
ferry: Multiple ferry companies; very easy island hop
ferry: Direct high-speed ferry
Getting Around
Songthaew (shared truck)
50–100 THB/ride6 AM–10 PM on main ring road
Circulate the ring road; flag down and tell driver destination
Motorbike/scooter rental
200–350 THB/dayDaily; everywhere
Best way to explore the island independently
Taxi (metered and unmetered)
200–600 THB24 hours
Meter taxis are honest; unmetered private taxis are expensive — negotiate
Grab
150–400 THBGood coverage
Reliable for Chaweng and Bophut area
Food Highlights
- Grilled seafood at the evening beach restaurants in Chaweng and Bophut — whole fish, tiger prawns, and crab
- Khao yam (southern rice salad with herbs and toasted coconut) at local market stalls
- Roti with massaman curry at Muslim-owned restaurants near the Nathon ferry pier
- International fine dining at beachfront hotels — consistently excellent Thai-European fusion
- Coconut ice cream served inside a fresh coconut shell at market stalls
Nightlife
Chaweng Beach Road is the island's main nightlife strip — Green Mango and ARK Bar are the landmark clubs, with beach parties, live music, and dancing until 4–5 AM. Ark Bar on the beach has a well-known Sunday afternoon pool party. Lamai has its own strip of beer bars and clubs around the roundabout. Bophut and Maenam are much quieter — wine bars and beach restaurants rather than clubs. Full Moon Party on nearby Koh Phangan is a ferry ride away.
Safety Notes
Koh Samui is safe but standard island precautions apply. Motorbike accidents are the leading cause of tourist injuries — wear a helmet, especially on the steep ring road north of Chaweng. Fake jewellery and overpriced tours are common in Chaweng tourist strip. Jellyfish are present in the water October–December. The northeast monsoon (October–November) can bring serious flooding and rough seas — check conditions before booking any boat trips.
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Senior Travel Writer · Bangkok · 12+ years in Thailand
James has lived in Bangkok since 2014 and has visited all 77 Thai provinces. He specialises in destination guides, itinerary planning, and transport logistics. Before moving to Thailand, he worked as a travel journalist in Hong Kong and Singapore. He speaks conversational Thai and is a certified PADI divemaster.
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