Day one, sink your toes into Chaweng sand and climb to a golden Buddha above the sea. Day two, take a boat out to Ang Thong Marine Park — 42 islands hiding an emerald lake. Day three, collect Lamai, the famous Hin Ta Hin Yai rocks and the Na Muang waterfalls. Three days is exactly right for a first round of Samui.
Plenty of people come to Samui and never leave the resort pool — and that is a fine holiday. But give the island three days and you see it has more than the beach in front of your hotel: a seaside temple where a 12-metre golden Buddha sits on its own islet off the north coast, Ang Thong Marine Park — 42 limestone islands out in the Gulf of Thailand hiding an emerald-green lake — and waterfalls and oddly shaped rocks on the south side that most visitors drive straight past.
This plan is built for a first visit to Samui, one clear theme per day: beach and temples on day one, a full day at sea on day two, the south and the interior on day three. You will pick one area as your base (Chaweng, Lamai or Bophut) and move along the 4169 ring road by songthaew or chartered car, because Samui has no metro or train — and island taxis do not use meters, so agree the fare before every ride.
Still choosing your island? Compare them all in the Thailand islands guide or read Phuket vs Samui · check the monsoon calendar in best time to visit Samui · want longer, with Koh Tao and Koh Phangan added? See the 5-day plan.
A long ribbon of white sand · a golden Buddha on its own islet · an old fishing lane for dinner — the day that eases you into island mode.
Start the first morning without rushing. Chaweng is the island's main beach — roughly 7 kilometres of white sand along the east coast, with shallow water you can simply wade into. Early morning is the best swim of the day: soft light, quiet sand, gentle heat. Behind the beach runs Chaweng's main street, lined end to end with restaurants, convenience stores and massage shops, all walkable without a vehicle.
One thing to know: October to December is the Gulf coast's monsoon, when the surf picks up and red flags appear — do not swim against them. To work out which Samui beach suits you, read the Chaweng Beach guide and the full beaches guide first.
When the afternoon sun bites, switch to the temples on the north coast. The Big Buddha is a golden seated statue about 12 metres tall, built in 1972 on the islet of Ko Faan, joined to Samui by a causeway. Climb the naga staircase for a wide view over the Bangrak sea; below the steps sit small souvenir and snack stalls. From here it is about a 5-minute drive to Wat Plai Laem, where a large 18-arm Guanyin and a giant laughing Buddha stand over a pond full of fish — buy a bag of fish food at the entrance, and catch the reflections in the late-afternoon light.
Both temples are free to enter (donation boxes welcome). Dress modestly — cover-ups are lent at the entrance. The full story is in the Big Buddha Samui guide.
From Wat Plai Laem it is a short hop to Fisherman's Village on Bophut beach — a short lane of old wooden shophouses turned into restaurants, bars and small boutiques, with a completely different rhythm from Chaweng. Stroll it in the soft evening light, look out across the water to Koh Phangan sitting right opposite, then take a table by the sea for dinner — the beachfront seafood grills here are the meal Samui regulars come back for. If it happens to be a Friday, the whole lane becomes a walking-street market (~17:00–22:00) packed with street food.
Read ahead in the Fisherman's Village guide · market fans, see the Friday walking street guide · seafood hunters, see where to eat seafood in Samui.
A national park of 42 islands in the Gulf of Thailand · an emerald lake ringed by cliffs · a viewpoint over the whole archipelago — the most rewarding day of a Samui trip.
Today belongs to the sea. Ang Thong National Marine Park is a cluster of 42 limestone islands in the Gulf of Thailand, about an hour west of Samui by speedboat (big boats take around two hours). Most tours collect you from the hotel between 07:00 and 08:00 and board at Nathon or Bangrak pier. The first stop on almost every itinerary is Ko Mae Ko, where a staircase climbs to the Emerald Lake (Talay Nai) — a ring of cliffs enclosing a saltwater lake of deep green, the view that made Ang Thong famous through the novel The Beach.
Pick the boat that fits you: big boats are cheaper, steadier and easier on anyone prone to seasickness; speedboats cost more but get you there faster, which means more time in the park. The full rundown and how to choose a tour is in the Ang Thong Marine Park guide.
Most of the afternoon is spent at Ko Wua Talap, the park headquarters and the main beach of the trip. The highlight is the climb to the viewpoint — only about 500 metres, but genuinely steep, with ropes to haul on in places; allow 30–45 minutes up. From the top, the 42 islands stretch out in a line across the sea, a view worth every drop of sweat. If climbing is not your thing, stay on the beach, paddle a kayak along the cliffs, or snorkel if your tour includes it. Boats are back on Samui around 16:30–17:30.
You are back at the hotel by early evening — rinse off the salt, then head out for an easy dinner. Tonight Chaweng makes sense: the main strip runs from shophouse crab fried rice to fiery southern-Thai kitchens doing sour curry and khua kling. If you still have anything left, the beach bars are right there. The island's best eating is collected in the Samui food guide · and line up tomorrow's recovery coffee in the Samui cafe guide.
The calmer second beach · rock formations that make everyone grin · waterfalls in the island's interior — a last day that shows you another side of Samui before you go.
On the last morning head south to Lamai — the island's second beach, running at a clearly slower pace than Chaweng. The sand is lovely, the water clear, and the strip behind it smaller but complete. Walk it or swim, then continue to the southern end for Hin Ta and Hin Yai — the Grandfather and Grandmother rocks, natural formations whose shapes raise a smile on every visitor, wrapped in a local legend about an elderly couple lost in a shipwreck. From the car park it is a few minutes' walk down past stalls selling kalamae (coconut caramel) and other local sweets to the viewing point, with good sea views for photos.
If this side of the island feels more like you than Chaweng, read more in the Lamai Beach guide — food spots, places to stay and the Lamai walking street are all in there.
From Lamai, drive inland about 15–20 minutes to the Na Muang waterfalls — the easiest falls to reach on Samui. Na Muang 1 sits close to the road, a few hundred metres' walk from the car park, about 18 metres tall with a pool cold enough for a proper dip. Na Muang 2 is the bigger one (around 80 metres) and takes a sweaty 20–30 minute uphill walk — fewer people, better views. Both are free to enter.
Straight talk about the water: in the dry months (February to April) the falls can shrink to a thin stream — they are at their best soon after rain. If you come in the dry season, treat this as a short jungle walk rather than a swimming stop. And the rocks around the falls are seriously slippery in every season — walk with care.
Do not cram anything else in. Spend the last afternoon on the sand, as a Samui trip should end — back at Lamai, or at Silver Beach (Thong Takhian), a small clear-water cove between Lamai and Chaweng. Close it out with an hour of beach massage (~฿300–500), then go and eat the farewell meal: one more seafood dinner by the water from our seafood shortlist, or back to whichever neighbourhood won you over these past two nights.
Getting out: Samui airport (USM) is on the north coast, only ~10–15 minutes from Chaweng — allow normal check-in time. Leaving by ferry instead, the Nathon and Lipa Noi piers are on the west coast, ~45 minutes to an hour from Chaweng. Details in the Samui airport transfer guide and the Samui ferry guide.
For a first trip, pick Chaweng — the main beach, the most restaurants, walkable to everything and on the songthaew route. Calmer and cheaper, choose Lamai. Couples and food-focused travellers, choose Bophut / Fisherman's Village. Quietest and best value, near the piers for the neighbouring islands, choose Maenam. Compare them all in where to stay in Samui or the 10 best Samui hotels.
Samui has no metro and no train — everything runs on the 4169 ring road. By day, songthaews (shared pickups) cover the main stretches for ~฿50–100 a hop — ask the price before boarding; after dark they become charters. Taxis do not use meters — always agree the fare before you ride (short hops usually start ~฿200–300). Grab works but cars are few. Scooters rent for ~฿200–300/day, but some stretches are steep and slippery in rain — be honest about your skill. Full detail in getting around Samui.
Fastest is a direct flight to Samui airport (USM) — mainly Bangkok Airways, with fares noticeably higher than flying to Phuket or Krabi. The budget route is via Surat Thani (plane, train or bus), then a transfer to Donsak pier and a ferry across (Lomprayah / Seatran / Raja, ~1.5–2 hr); combined bus+ferry tickets from Bangkok are sold as one package. Compare both in the airport transfer guide and the ferry guide · for data, see the Thailand eSIM guide.
| Item | Budget | Mid-range | Comfort |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hotel (per night) | ฿600–1,200 (guesthouse behind the beach) |
฿1,800–3,500 (beachfront resort) |
฿5,000–12,000+ (villa / upper-end resort) |
| 3 meals | ฿300–500 (local places / markets) |
฿600–1,200 (a mix with sit-down spots) |
฿1,500–3,000 (beachfront + big-name spots) |
| Island transport | ฿100–250 (mostly songthaew) |
฿300–800 (songthaew + some charters) |
฿1,000–2,000 (taxis / private car) |
| Tours + entry (avg/day) | ฿0–100 (skip the boat tour — beaches, temples, falls are free) |
฿500–950 (Ang Thong tour ~฿1,500–2,800 spread over the trip) |
฿900–1,600 (speedboat + extra activities) |
| Daily total (approx.) | ฿1,000–2,050 | ฿3,200–6,450 | ฿8,400–18,600+ |
Prices are approximate and shift with the season · rooms rise sharply over the late-December–January and July–August peaks · island prices run a little above the mainland, since everything arrives by ferry — full numbers in the Samui trip budget.