Phuket.
Pick your beach. Pick your pace.
Thailand's largest island stretches from wild party beaches to quiet coves where the only sound is the Andaman Sea. A Sino-Portuguese Old Town that most visitors never find. And day trips to some of the most dramatic limestone seascapes on earth.
Thailand's biggest island contains multitudes. The trick is knowing which part you want.
Phuket is not one destination but several, sharing an island. Patong is loud, neon-lit, and relentlessly commercial — exactly what its fans want and exactly what its detractors flee from. Kata and Karon are family-friendly beach towns. Surin and Bang Tao are upmarket and calm. Nai Harn in the far south is genuinely beautiful and remarkably uncontrived. And Phuket Old Town, largely ignored by visitors who never leave their beach area, is one of the most architecturally interesting towns in southern Thailand.
The Andaman Sea coast gives Phuket its extraordinary visual identity — turquoise water, white sand, and the dramatic limestone karst formations that appear in every photograph of the region. The water clarity and the coral reefs make it one of Southeast Asia's best diving and snorkelling destinations, with visibility regularly exceeding 20 metres during the dry season.
The honest caveat: Phuket is the most developed tourist destination in Thailand and the most commercially assertive. The jet ski damage scam, the overpriced tuk-tuk, the gem shop detour — these are real and endemic. Knowing them in advance removes the sting entirely. The island itself, beyond the tourist infrastructure, is beautiful and worth the trip.
Every beach is different. Choose based on what you actually want.
Phuket's beaches run along the western coast facing the Andaman Sea. The northern beaches are calmer and more upmarket. The central beaches are the most developed. The southern beaches are the most beautiful and the least crowded. All are on the same island but feel like different resorts.
The most beautiful beach on Phuket — a curved bay of white sand backed by a freshwater lake and forested hills. Far from the tourist centre, which keeps it calm and largely uncommercialized. Excellent local seafood restaurants behind the beach. A favourite of long-term expats and people who have been to Phuket multiple times and know where to go. The drive there on a scooter through the southern hills is half the appeal.
Two adjoining bays in the south with reliable surf, good restaurants behind the beach, and a relaxed family atmosphere. Kata Noi (the smaller bay to the south) is quieter and more picturesque. Better restaurants, better surf school scene, and a much calmer atmosphere than Patong despite being only 15 minutes away.
A long, wide beach directly north of Kata with clearer water than Patong and a noticeably calmer atmosphere. More development than Kata but still manageable. Good for those who want beach access and reasonable restaurants without the Patong circus. The best value-for-money beach area on the island.
Phuket's party central — a long beach backed by the neon strip of Bangla Road with hundreds of bars, clubs, and restaurants. The water is decent, the beach is large, and the infrastructure is excellent. If you want nightlife and maximum convenience with everything accessible on foot, Patong delivers. If you want quiet, beautiful beaches, stay elsewhere and visit for a night out.
The upmarket northern beaches where the luxury resorts concentrate. Surin has beautiful clear water and a more local feel. Bang Tao is home to the massive Laguna resort complex. Quieter, cleaner, and more expensive than the central beaches. The best choice for visitors prioritising quality accommodation and calm beach time over nightlife or budget value.
Phuket has every tier. Location matters more than the hotel itself.
Phuket's accommodation ranges from budget guesthouses in Old Town to some of the finest resort hotels in Asia on the northern beaches. The most important decision is which beach area to base yourself in — that determines your daily experience far more than the hotel star rating.
Phuket's most acclaimed luxury resort — private pool villas on a hillside above a quiet bay, with the most beautiful beach in the north. World-class service, an extraordinary restaurant, and a sense of genuine seclusion despite being 30 minutes from the airport. The best resort experience on the island.
Check availability →A dramatic clifftop resort on Phuket's quieter east coast with views across Phang Nga Bay. Italian-designed, with an extraordinary pool that appears to float above the sea. The most architecturally striking hotel on the island and a favourite of design-conscious travellers.
Check availability →The best mid-range resort in the Kata area — directly on the quieter Kata Noi bay, multiple pools, good restaurant, and the most beautiful beach position in the mid-price category. Consistently strong reviews and genuinely excellent value for the quality delivered.
Check availability →Phuket's most famous heritage hotel, in a 1929 Sino-Portuguese building in the Old Town that appeared in The Beach (2000). Atmospheric, characterful, and genuinely historic. The best base for exploring Old Town and the Sunday Walking Street. No beach but excellent value and unmatched local character.
Check availability →The best hostel in Phuket from one of Thailand's best hostel brands. Rooftop pool, social bar, clean dorms, and excellent location for Patong's beach and nightlife. Private rooms available from 1,200 THB. Perfect for budget travellers who want to be in the centre of the action.
Check availability →A well-designed boutique hotel in Karon with a rooftop pool, good breakfast, and a short walk to the beach. The best mid-range boutique option outside the luxury resorts — clean, modern, and genuinely good value for the location and facilities.
Check availability →Find and compare hotels across Phuket's beaches and areas.
Phuket has its own cuisine. Most visitors eat at tourist restaurants and miss it entirely.
Phuket cuisine is a distinct tradition shaped by the island's Chinese immigrant history and its position on the Andaman Sea. Hokkien Chinese techniques applied to Thai ingredients, fresh seafood from boats that docked that morning, and dishes you will not find elsewhere in Thailand. The Old Town morning market and the wet market behind the fresh produce stalls are where this food is found.
Thick yellow egg noodles stir-fried with pork, shrimp, squid, and bean sprouts in a dark soy-based sauce — a Phuket original with clear Hokkien Chinese roots. Not found elsewhere in Thailand in this form. The morning coffee shops in Phuket Old Town serve this alongside strong kopi (coffee) and kaya toast. Roti Chaofa near Dibuk Road is one of the most praised.
Phuket rock lobster, grilled mud crab, steamed barramundi, and tiger prawns from boats that morning. The Rawai Seafood Market on the southeast coast lets you select your fish and seafood directly from vendors, then take it to adjacent restaurants to be cooked. A completely different experience from the tourist restaurants on the beach. Best done for lunch or early dinner.
Fresh oysters and bean sprouts folded into a crispy-edged egg batter with spring onions, served with a sweet chilli sauce. A Phuket hawker classic with Hokkien origins, found across Phuket and the rest of southern Thailand. A genuinely excellent street dish that most tourists walk past in search of pad thai.
Thin fermented rice noodles served with a choice of southern Thai curry sauces — kaeng tai pla (intense fermented fish curry), kaeng som (sour orange curry), or a milder coconut-based sauce. Eaten at breakfast and early lunch at the morning market. Very spicy, very local, and completely absent from tourist menus. One of the most authentic food experiences in Phuket.
Every Sunday evening, Thalang Road in Phuket Old Town closes to traffic for the Walking Street market. The food stalls serve Phuket specialties alongside general Thai street food — kanom buang (crispy crepes with coconut cream), mango sticky rice, satay, fresh coconut ice cream, and the full range of southern Thai snacks. Better food and more local atmosphere than any of the beach tourist markets.
Phi Phi Islands first. Phuket Old Town second. Everything else in the gaps.
Phuket's activities divide between the beach and water experiences (diving, snorkelling, island hopping) and the cultural and culinary experiences that most visitors skip. The island day trips are genuinely extraordinary. Old Town is a revelation for those who bother. The beach itself can be the main activity on a slow day.
Phi Phi Don and the uninhabited Phi Phi Leh — dramatic limestone cliffs dropping into turquoise water, the famous Maya Bay (filmed as The Beach), and snorkelling in water of extraordinary clarity. The most visited day trip from Phuket and deservedly so. Go on a speedboat tour for more time at each stop. Book early morning departures to reach Maya Bay before the crowd of boats arrives.
Book Phi Phi tour →The limestone karst formations of Phang Nga Bay are among the most dramatic seascapes in Southeast Asia. Ko Tapu (James Bond Island from The Man with the Golden Gun) is the most famous feature. Sea kayaking through the caves and hongs (enclosed lagoons) accessible only by paddling through low tunnels is genuinely extraordinary. The kayaking tour is far better than the standard boat tour.
Book Phang Nga tour →The historic centre of Phuket Town has some of the finest Sino-Portuguese architecture in Thailand — pastel-coloured shophouses with elaborate facades, ornate clan houses, Chinese shrines, and the best street art in southern Thailand. The Sunday Walking Street on Thalang Road is the best time to visit. A half-day spent here is one of the most rewarding things you can do in Phuket.
Walking tours →Phuket is one of Southeast Asia's best diving bases. The nearby Similan Islands (9 of them, November–April only) are rated among the world's top dive sites for visibility and marine life. Racha Yai and Racha Noi are excellent for day trips. Shark Point and Anemone Reef are accessible on day boats from Chalong. Multiple PADI dive schools offer open water courses from $350.
Book diving →A 45-metre white marble Maravija Buddha on the highest hill in southern Phuket, visible from across the island. The panoramic views from the hilltop at sunset — the whole island, the Andaman Sea, and the islands of Phi Phi on the horizon — are genuinely spectacular. Free to visit. Dress code applies (sarongs available at entrance). Best at sunset.
Combined tours →The Similan Islands are regularly rated among the world's top ten dive destinations — exceptional visibility, whale sharks, manta rays, hawksbill turtles, and extraordinary coral formations. A 2–3 night liveaboard from Chalong pier is the best way to experience them. Only accessible November to April when the park is open.
Book liveaboard →Rent a scooter or use Grab. Never get in an unmetered tuk-tuk without agreeing the price first.
Phuket has no metro and limited public bus service. Getting around requires either renting transport or using app-based rides. The island is large enough that choosing the wrong beach area as a base means spending significant time and money on daily transport.
The most flexible option. Automatics rent for 150–300 THB per day. Gives complete freedom to explore all beaches, Old Town, the Big Buddha, and the south coast. Thai roads require attention — always wear a helmet, drive on the left, and take mountain roads slowly. Travel insurance must cover motorbike riding.
150–300 THB/dayWorks well in Phuket Town and most beach areas. The most reliable and transparent option for point-to-point journeys without the hassle of price negotiation. More expensive than a scooter but far more convenient for longer distances or rain days. Essential for airport transfers without being overcharged.
100–400 THB depending on distanceThe best option for families or groups of three or more. Air-conditioned, safe, and easier for carrying beach gear. International licence required. Budget and Avis operate at the airport. Daily rates from 800 THB. Parking at most beaches is straightforward. Traffic in Patong can be slow.
800–1,500 THB/dayPhuket tuk-tuks are not metered and have a reputation for overcharging. Always agree the price before getting in. Local songthaews run fixed routes between Phuket Town and the beaches at 40–80 THB but are infrequent. Tuk-tuks between beach areas cost 200–500 THB negotiated. Grab is often cheaper and always more transparent.
200–500 THB (negotiate first)Phuket International Airport (HKT) is in the far north, 35km from Patong and 45km from Kata. A Grab to Kata costs 500–600 THB. Metered airport taxis (buy inside the terminal) cost 600–800 THB depending on destination. The official Smart Bus runs from the airport to Patong and Kata for 100 THB but runs infrequently.
100 THB (bus) / 500–800 THB (taxi/Grab)AIS and DTAC tourist SIMs available at the airport. A 30-day unlimited data SIM costs 299–399 THB. Coverage is reliable across all tourist areas. An Airalo eSIM for Thailand also works well and can be activated before arrival.
SIM from 299 THB / eSIM from $5More expensive than Chiang Mai. Still outstanding value by international standards.
Phuket is the most expensive destination in Thailand — accommodation, food in tourist areas, and transport all cost more than Bangkok or Chiang Mai. But the absolute numbers remain low by European or Australian standards. Eating local food, renting a scooter, and staying away from Patong's tourist restaurants can make a week in Phuket genuinely affordable.
| Category | Budget (1,000–1,800 THB/day) | Mid-range (3,000–5,500 THB/day) | Comfortable (8,000+ THB/day) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Accommodation | 400–800 THB Hostel or budget guesthouse |
1,800–3,500 THB Mid-range hotel or resort |
6,000+ THB Luxury resort (Trisara, COMO) |
| Food | 300–500 THB Local food, markets, street stalls |
700–1,500 THB Beach restaurants + sundowners |
2,000+ THB Seafood restaurants, resort dining |
| Transport | 200–300 THB Scooter rental |
400–800 THB Grab rides + scooter |
1,000+ THB Car rental or private transfers |
| Activities | 200–500 THB Beach, Big Buddha (free), Old Town |
1,200–2,500 THB Phi Phi day trip or diving |
3,000+ THB Phang Nga kayak, liveaboard diving |
November to April for the beach. May to October for empty beaches and lower prices.
Phuket's seasons are driven by the monsoons. The dry season (November–April) has calm seas, excellent visibility for diving, and reliable sunshine. The wet season (May–October) brings the southwest monsoon with strong winds and heavy rain — the west-facing beaches can have rough and occasionally dangerous surf, though the east coast remains calmer. December and January are the driest and busiest months.
Safe overall. Three specific risks to know before you arrive.
Overall safety score — Low Risk
Phuket is safe for tourists in general. The specific risks — motorbike accidents, beach drownings, and tourist scams — are all preventable with awareness. Violent crime against tourists is rare.
The leading cause of tourist death and injury in Phuket. Roads are busy, signage is poor, and roads in hilly areas can be steep and winding. Always wear a helmet. Do not ride after alcohol. Check that your travel insurance covers motorbike accidents — many standard policies do not, and hospital bills are significant.
Rip currents on Phuket beaches, particularly during the wet season, are powerful and have caused multiple tourist drownings. Always swim on patrolled beaches, between the yellow and red flags. If caught in a rip current, do not fight it — float, signal for help, and swim parallel to shore once the current weakens.
The jet ski damage scam (detailed in the transport section) is the most financially damaging. Tuk-tuks quoting inflated prices, gem shop tours that earn drivers commission, and overpriced tour packages sold through hotel lobbies are all common. Book tours through reputable operators, use Grab for transport, and photograph rental vehicles before use.
Phuket is generally safe for solo female travellers in the main tourist areas. Kata, Karon, and the Old Town are comfortable at all hours. Patong after midnight has a rougher atmosphere and more unsolicited attention. Use Grab rather than street taxis. The beach resort areas have a large international tourist population that creates a familiar, manageable environment.
What Phuket locals never think to tell tourists.
Phi Phi is 2 hours. Similan Islands are 3 hours. Both are worth the early alarm.
Phi Phi Don and the uninhabited Phi Phi Leh with Maya Bay. The most popular day trip from Phuket. Speedboats depart from Chalong and Ao Po piers. Go early to reach Maya Bay before the crowds. The snorkelling around Phi Phi Leh has excellent visibility and reef fish.
The limestone karst formations of Phang Nga Bay and James Bond Island. The sea kayaking tour through cave hongs is significantly better than the standard boat tour. Half the price and twice the experience of any Phi Phi trip if scenery rather than beaches is the priority.
Nine protected islands with world-class diving and snorkelling — whale sharks, manta rays, turtles, and 20+ metre visibility. The park is closed May to October. Day trips are long (5am departure, 9pm return) but the diving quality is outstanding. A liveaboard is better if diving is the priority.
The dramatic limestone cliffs and beach of Railay (accessible only by boat) and the limestone towers of Krabi. Possible as a day trip but much better as a 2–3 night stay. The Four Islands tour from Krabi departing Ao Nang is excellent for snorkelling and beach hopping.
