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HomeItinerariesPhang Nga & Koh Yao: The Quiet Andaman
Southern Thailand (Andaman) · Private Tour

Phang Nga & Koh Yao: The Quiet Andaman — a 3-Day Itinerary

You've seen Phuket. This is what the Andaman was before the airport arrived — a Muslim fishing island between two provinces, limestone towers rising from glass-calm water, children biking barefoot on the beach at dusk. No jet skis. No shows. Just the bay.

3 days2 nights
Phang Nga & Koh YaoSouthern Thailand
Nov – Aprbest season
4–6 peopleprivate group
Forislands, kayaking & local life
Limestone karsts of Phang Nga Bay reflected in still water at dawn

The idea behind this trip

Phang Nga Bay is one of the most geologically improbable places on earth. Two hundred and forty million years ago this entire shelf was seafloor. Then tectonic pressure buckled the limestone skyward in columns and needles, and the sea moved in around them. What you see today — those sheer towers erupting from flat water, riddled with sea caves and dripping with ferns — is a drowned mountain range. We deliberately skip James Bond Island: the crowds arrive by the boatload before breakfast. The bay's real character lives in the quieter passages, the collapsed cavern ceilings called hongs where the sea floods in through a hidden arch, and the early-morning light that turns the karsts copper before the tour boats start their engines.

Koh Yao Yai sits in the middle of the bay, equidistant between Phuket and Krabi, yet it belongs to neither world. It is a working Muslim Thai fishing community — mosques rather than beach clubs, rubber trees rather than souvenir stalls, and a morning fish-landing where the catch goes from boat to market in under an hour. Package tourism never arrived here in force, and the islanders would like to keep it that way. The view east from the island toward the Krabi karsts is the view that makes guests go quiet.

Day by day

Day 1 Speedboat to Koh Yao Yai · Laem Hat sandbar · settle in by the sea

MorningBang Rong Pier — Klong Hia Pier

Your guide meets you in Phuket and drives to Bang Rong Pier on the island's quieter east coast — about 45 minutes from the airport. The speedboat crossing to Koh Yao Yai takes 30 minutes, threading between karst outcrops the whole way. This is when you realize you've left Phuket behind entirely.

Late morningLaem Hat — the sandbar

Laem Hat is the trip's defining image: a narrow crescent of white sand that extends into turquoise water at low tide, the karsts of Phang Nga Bay stacked on the horizon behind it. BLACKPINK's Lisa filmed here and the photograph went around the world — but on a weekday morning, before the day-trippers arrive, you may have it almost to yourself. We time the visit around the tide table. At high tide the spit shortens; at low tide it stretches 200 metres into the bay and the water either side is clear to the bottom.

Tide tip: we check the tide table when you confirm your dates and build the day-1 schedule around the best low-tide window. Tell us your preferred wake-up time and we will reverse-engineer the rest.
Laem Hat sandbar, Koh Yao Yai — the long white crescent into the Andaman Turquoise water and karst towers seen from Koh Yao Yai

MiddayBan Rim Nam Restaurant

Lunch at a pavilion on stilts above the water — the kitchen runs entirely on what arrived on the morning boats. Southern Thai seafood means proper heat and proper freshness: grilled barramundi, stir-fried clams with chilli and holy basil, sour curry with fresh turmeric. Eat slow, watch the longtails pass, feel the sea breeze come through the open sides.

Afternoon & eveningCheck in, first sunset

Santhiya Koh Yao Yai Resort and Spa is built into a hillside above its own bay. The architecture is carved Thai hardwood — every room a different piece, no two identical — with a private infinity pool and a 180-degree view of the bay. The afternoon is yours: swim, walk the beach below, watch the fishing boats come in at the pier as the light drops behind the karsts.

Overnight: Santhiya Koh Yao Yai Resort & Spa — masterpiece carved-teak villas on the hillside, private pool, unobstructed bay views
Day 2 Community life · batik village · the island at its own pace

Early morningKlong Son Beach & fish landing

The fishing fleet returns before most guests have ordered breakfast. Klong Son is a working beach — boats hauled up, catch sorted by hand, buyers from the mainland on mobile phones. There are no facilities, no cafe, no sign telling you what you're looking at. Just the morning routine of a community that has fished this bay for generations. Your guide explains how the catch is graded and where it goes.

MorningVillage life on Koh Yao Yai

The interior of the island is rubber plantations, coconut groves, and a string of small Muslim villages connected by a single loop road. We take this slowly — on bicycles, or in a local songthaew if the heat calls for it. Stop at the mosque during the quiet hour between prayers. Watch a woman score a rubber tree with practiced diagonal cuts. Buy something from a roadside stall and eat it there. The islanders are genuinely welcoming to visitors who arrive curious rather than entitled.

Dress note: shoulders and knees covered in the villages — bring a light layer. The gesture is noticed and appreciated.
Koh Yao Yai village life — coconut groves and rubber plantations Traditional batik workshop on Koh Yao Yai

Late morningBatik workshop, Koh Yao Yai

Batik has been made on the island for decades — a craft brought by trade routes connecting the Malay world across this stretch of coast. A local workshop shows the wax-resist process from beginning to end: the wax pen, the dye bath, the wax removal, the finished cloth. You can try your hand, or simply watch and buy a piece you have seen made. Nothing is mass-produced here.

AfternoonTransfer to mainland & The Hotspring Beach Resort

A boat back to the mainland brings you to a completely different register of Phang Nga: the province's Andaman coast, where a geothermal spring reaches the surface warm enough to ease every muscle the sea kayaking loosened. The Hotspring Beach Resort has private hot-spring soaking pools alongside a quiet private beach — the end of a full day that started at a fish landing.

Overnight: The Hotspring Beach Resort & Spa — natural hot-spring pools, private beach, large sea-view rooms
Day 3 Beyond Skywalk Nang Shi · Phang Nga street art · departure

MorningBeyond Skywalk Nang Shi (Samet Nangshe Viewpoint)

The view from Nang Shi is the aerial shot of Phang Nga Bay that belongs on no travel agency's banner — precisely because it is not the helicopter shot, it is the standing-on-the-ridge shot, and you earned it. A glass-floored skywalk extends over the cliff edge: below, the bay unfolds in every direction, limestone towers rising from silver water, the channel to Koh Yao visible on the left, open Andaman on the right. Open from 06:00; arrive early to beat the light and the minibuses.

Early bird: the skywalk opens at 06:00 and the first hour — before 08:00 — is when the morning mist still clings to the karsts. We build the schedule around this window.

Late morningPhang Nga Town — street art & Lak Mueang Shrine

Phang Nga town is not on many itineraries, which is exactly why it belongs on ours. The old streets around the Lak Mueang Shrine have been given over to a serious street-art project: murals that document the province's history in real pigment on real walls — tin miners at work, the animals of the Andaman, traditional desserts rendered in three-metre detail. Photographers will need time. The Shrine walls themselves, built during the royal cadastral survey era, are a separate photo opportunity entirely.

Street art murals on the walls of Phang Nga town depicting local history Beyond Skywalk Nang Shi viewpoint overlooking Phang Nga Bay

AfternoonDeparture — or keep going

Transfer back to Phuket Airport (approximately 1.5 hours), or extend south to Khao Lak, east to Koh Lanta, or add sea kayaking through the hongs of Phang Nga Bay for a full fourth day. Your guide helps you work out the logistics — we handle the rest.

What it costs

from $1,020 / person (฿35,000)
Private group of 4–6 · smaller groups possible with surcharge · international flights not included
TierWhat changesFrom (pp)
EssentialQuality boutique stays on Koh Yao, all touring as described$1,020
Comfort4-star stays, Santhiya garden-pool villas, private speedboat$1,320
BoutiqueTop sea-view suites, sea-kayaking hong tour, private chef dinner, premium dining throughout$1,890

Included

  • Private car and driver throughout
  • Licensed English-speaking guide, all 3 days
  • Speedboat transfers to and from Koh Yao Yai
  • 2 nights accommodation (boutique island resort + hot-spring resort)
  • All entrance fees listed in the itinerary
  • Daily breakfast + 2 featured meals
  • Airport transfers in Phuket

Not included

  • International and domestic flights
  • Travel insurance (required)
  • Sea kayaking hong tour (add-on, recommended)
  • Meals not listed, personal spending
  • Gratuities (at your discretion)

This is a starting point — make it yours.

Every We Go Round trip is private and built to order. Popular ways guests reshape this route:

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Good to know

How do we get to Koh Yao Yai?

The standard route is a speedboat from Bang Rong Pier on Phuket's east coast — roughly 30 minutes to Klong Hia Pier on Koh Yao Yai. We handle all transfers, including your airport pickup in Phuket and the boat connection. Slow ferries also run from the same pier if you prefer a gentler crossing and don't mind 45 minutes on the water.

Is this trip suitable for non-swimmers?

Yes. The island touring, community walks, batik workshop, skywalk visit, and street-art stroll require no swimming at all. If you add sea kayaking through the hongs, life vests are always worn and our guides paddle alongside you — no swimming ability is needed. Let us know when you book and we will brief you fully before departure.

What should we know about visiting during Ramadan?

Koh Yao Yai is a Muslim community and Ramadan is observed sincerely. Some food stalls open only after dusk during the fasting month, but resort restaurants serve guests as normal. We ask that visitors dress modestly (shoulders and knees covered) in the villages — the gesture is noticed and appreciated. The island remains genuinely welcoming to visitors year-round, and the atmosphere of the Iftar gathering by the bay at sundown is unlike anything else in southern Thailand.

What is the difference between best season and shoulder season?

November to April is peak Andaman season: flat seas, reliable sunshine, the Laem Hat sandbar at its most dramatic at low tide. May to October is the southwest monsoon; seas can be choppy and the speedboat crossing rough on some days, but the island turns a vivid deep green, rates drop significantly, and you may have entire beaches to yourself. We run this trip year-round and will advise on current sea conditions when you confirm your dates.

Keep exploring

Phang Nga & Koh Yao · 3 days · from $1,020 pp Plan this trip