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🏝️ Koh Samui Beaches · 2026

Which Koh Samui beach is right for you?
All seven compared — so you book the right one

Koh Samui's beaches ring the whole island, and each one gives you a different trip. Chaweng is the busy, convenient main strip; Lamai is calmer; Bophut puts old wooden shophouses and great dinners on your doorstep; Maenam is quiet and cheap; Lipa Noi owns the sunset. Here's exactly which beach suits the trip you're planning.

Why the beach choice matters

On Koh Samui, the beach you pick is the trip you get

Here's the honest truth: people who book a Koh Samui hotel without checking which beach it sits on often wish they'd looked closer. The island is bigger than many expect — the 4169 ring road runs roughly 50 km around it — and there's no city-style public transport, so every change of beach means a songthaew hop or a taxi fare you'll have to negotiate. You can stay at Chaweng, three minutes' walk from restaurants and bars but on the busiest sand, or at Maenam, quiet and easy on the wallet but where dinner out takes planning. Those are two very different trips.

Picture the island clockwise: the west coast has Lipa Noi and the car-ferry piers near Nathon → up along the north coast come MaenamBophut (Fisherman's Village) → Choeng Mon on the north-east corner by the airport → then down the east coast to Chaweng, the main beach → little clear-water Silver Beach → and finally Lamai, the island's number two. We'll compare them one by one — swimming, families, food, sunsets, quiet — so you can match the beach to your trip.

One season fact before anything else: Koh Samui sits in the Gulf of Thailand, so its weather runs opposite to Phuket and Krabi — the best window is January–April, with a second drier spell around June–August, while October–December is the island's monsoon (November is the wettest). East-coast beaches like Chaweng and Lamai catch the waves then. See the month-by-month picture in Best time to visit Koh Samui → or compare the two coasts in Phuket or Samui →
Beach by beach

The seven main beaches around the island

Ordered from the busiest main strip to the quietest little cove — pick by what you actually want.

Chaweng Beach, Koh Samui — a long, busy white-sand beach with umbrellas and clear shallow water at the northern end 1
Chaweng
The main beach · longest and busiest · everything within reach

Chaweng is Koh Samui's longest and liveliest beach — roughly 7 km of fine white sand down the east coast, backed by Chaweng Beach Road and its wall-to-wall restaurants, bars, massage shops and the Central shopping mall. Almost anything you want is within walking distance. The northern end has shallow, clear water looking out to little Koh Matlang, while the southern tip, Chaweng Noi, is a different world — far quieter. The honest trade-offs: the biggest crowds on the island, music carrying late into the night along some stretches, and food and rooms priced higher than anywhere else. If you want convenience and a beach with a pulse, start here.

Best for: first-timers · convenience · nightlife · anyone who hates arranging rides
Getting there: about 10–15 min from Samui airport (USM) · songthaews run the main road by day
In the water: calmest and prettiest Jan–Apr · real waves Oct–Dec — check the warning flags first
Read on: Chaweng has quiet zones, party zones and a knack for surprising people — see the full Chaweng Beach guide →
Lamai Beach, Koh Samui — white sand and deep-blue water with sunbathers and a relaxed mood 2
Lamai
The calmer number two · lower prices · Hin Ta Hin Yai rocks

Lamai, on the south-east coast, is the island's second beach and the balance many travellers end up happiest with — sand nearly as good as Chaweng's, noticeably fewer people, a more relaxed mood, and rooms and meals that cost visibly less. The water gets deep a little faster than at Chaweng, which makes for proper swimming. At the southern end sit the Hin Ta and Hin Yai rocks (the "Grandfather and Grandmother" rocks), the island's most photographed natural oddity, and the town behind the beach runs an evening walking street on certain nights (the schedule shifts, so check locally). If you want a beautiful beach without elbowing for space, this is the one.

Best for: couples · a relaxed stay with shops and restaurants still at hand · saving money without going remote
Getting there: about 25–30 min from the airport · about 15 min from Chaweng on the ring road
In the water: good swimming Jan–Apr · deepens faster than Chaweng · waves Oct–Dec — watch the flags
Read on: which stretch of Lamai is quiet, which is busy, and how to reach Hin Ta Hin Yai — see the full Lamai Beach guide →
Bophut Beach, Koh Samui — beach-club cushions on golden sand along a calm bay with Koh Phangan in the distance 3
Bophut / Fisherman's Village
The dining beach · old wooden shophouses · Friday Walking Street

Bophut sits on the north coast with Koh Phangan floating right across the water. Its draw isn't really the sand — golden and coarser than Chaweng's, with water that isn't always as clear as the east coast — but Fisherman's Village, a lane of old wooden shophouses turned into the island's best-feeling strip of waterfront restaurants, cafés and small bars. Every Friday evening the lane becomes a walking street market that pulls half the island in. The bay itself is fairly calm and the beachfront is made for slow evening strolls. Pick Bophut if a great dinner counts for more than a full day on a towel.

Best for: couples · food-first travellers · anyone who loves an old seaside town feel
Getting there: about 10 min from the airport · about 15 min from Chaweng
In the water: calm bay, fine for a dip — but not the island's best swimming sand · evenings are the event
Read on: where to eat and when the Friday market gets going — see the full Fisherman's Village guide →
Maenam Beach, Koh Samui — a long quiet beach lined with palms, speedboats moored in the calm bay 4
Maenam
Quiet · budget-friendly · families and long stays

Maenam is a roughly 4 km stretch of the north coast that has stayed the quietest of the big beaches — palms and casuarinas along the sand, and guesthouses and small resorts that are among the friendliest-priced on the island. That makes it the favourite of budget travellers, families and people settling in for a month. The water deepens quickly enough for a real swim, the view is Koh Phangan filling the horizon, and the beach sits closest to the speedboat piers for Koh Phangan and Koh Tao — very handy if you're island-hopping onward. Nights are genuinely quiet, with a modest spread of restaurants and a Thursday-evening walking street (check the day when you visit). You trade buzz for peace of mind.

Best for: budgets · families · long stays · quiet types who still want the north coast
Getting there: about 20 min from the airport · near the Koh Phangan/Koh Tao speedboat piers
In the water: deepens fast, swims well · few people · some waves Oct–Dec with the monsoon
Choeng Mon Beach, Koh Samui — a calm curved bay of white sand and clear water with the Koh Fan Noi islet just offshore 5
Choeng Mon
A small calm bay · good resorts · near the airport and Big Buddha

Choeng Mon is a small curved bay on the island's north-east corner — soft sand, clear water, and waves that are usually gentler than Chaweng's because the bay is well sheltered. The islet of Koh Fan Noi sits just offshore, and at some low tides you can walk across the sandbar (check the tide before you try). The bay is ringed by good resorts up to the top end of the market, and the mood is grown-up: quiet, but not remote. The location is quietly excellent — close to the airport, close to the Big Buddha and Wat Plai Laem, and only about 10 minutes from Chaweng when you want noise again. A strong pick for families and anyone after calm without isolation.

Best for: families · honeymoons · calm stays within easy reach of Chaweng and the airport
Getting there: about 10 min from the airport · about 10 min to Chaweng
In the water: sheltered bay, often gentle · suits kids · still watch the flags late in the year
Lipa Noi Beach, Koh Samui — a golden sunset behind island silhouettes with a leaning palm on the west coast 6
Lipa Noi
The west coast · shallowest water for small kids · the island's best sunsets

Lipa Noi, on the west coast, has the shallowest water on the island — soft sand with barely a rock anywhere, and you can wade a long way out with the sea still at your knees, which makes it the most relaxing beach on Samui for small children. Then evening arrives and this beach becomes the star: the sunset drops behind the silhouettes of the Ang Thong islands right in front of you, and it's the best on the island without much argument. The quiet is real — only a handful of restaurants and bars, with villas and resorts spaced well apart. If you want everything on tap you may feel stranded; if you want to escape the crowds, this is exactly the place. It's also near the car-ferry piers from Donsak, so arriving and leaving by sea is easy.

Best for: families with small kids · sunset chasers · people who want genuine quiet
Getting there: about 40–45 min from the airport (opposite side of the island) · near the ferry piers and Nathon
In the water: shallow and calm most of the year · June–August south-west winds can bring some chop
Silver Beach (Thong Ta Kian), Koh Samui — a small cove of clear green water with rounded granite boulders and fine white sand 7
Silver Beach (Thong Ta Kian)
A small clear-water cove · granite boulders · easy snorkelling

Tucked between Chaweng Noi and Lamai, Silver Beach — also called Thong Ta Kian or Crystal Bay — is one of the most photogenic corners of the island: rounded granite boulders standing in clear green water, with fine white sand between them. On calm days you can snorkel along the rocks and actually see fish without getting on a boat. Its small size is both the charm and the catch: in high season it fills up fast because everyone drops by, and only a few places to stay sit on the sand. Most people visit for a half-day from Chaweng or Lamai, each just minutes away. Come early in the morning and you may have it nearly to yourself.

Best for: photographers · easy snorkelling · a half-day trip from Chaweng or Lamai
Getting there: between Chaweng Noi and Lamai · about 10 min from Chaweng · access lanes pass resorts
In the water: some of the island's clearest water · snorkel on calm days · mind the boulders underwater
Pick by what you want

Which beach fits which kind of trip

A quick summary to decide in 30 seconds.

🎉 First trip, want convenience and buzz
Choose Chaweng first

The longest beach, with restaurants, bars and the mall in walking distance and the airport closest of all. For a similar feel with a cooler head and lower prices, slide down to Lamai.

Order: Chaweng › Lamai
👨‍👩‍👧 With small kids / family
Lipa Noi (shallow) · Choeng Mon (sheltered) · Maenam (budget)

The safest shallow water is Lipa Noi; Choeng Mon is a calm bay with good resorts; Maenam keeps costs down. From October to December the east coast gets waves — always check the flags.

Key call: kid-safe water vs convenience
💑 Couples, food and atmosphere
Choose Bophut (Fisherman's Village)

Waterfront restaurants, cafés and a lane of old wooden shophouses with the best evening mood on the island — plus the Friday walking street. For something more polished and quieter, move to Choeng Mon.

Don't miss: Friday evening, walking street
🌅 Sunsets and real quiet
Choose Lipa Noi / the west coast

The west coast is the only side where the sun sets over open sea, behind the Ang Thong island silhouettes. Shallow water for long walks, few bars, few people — properly peaceful.

Best time: roughly 5:30–6:45 pm depending on season
Frequently asked

FAQ · before you pick your beach

Which Koh Samui beach should I stay on?
First trip and you want convenience, a long beach, restaurants and nightlife — choose Chaweng, the main beach and the closest to the airport. Want pretty sand with a calmer mood and lower prices — choose Lamai. If food and atmosphere matter most, choose Bophut (Fisherman's Village). With small kids or on a budget, choose Maenam, or Lipa Noi on the west coast with the shallowest, safest water. For calm comfort near the airport, choose Choeng Mon. Go deeper area by area in Where to stay on Koh Samui → and browse rooms in our 10 best Koh Samui hotels →
Which Koh Samui beach is best for families with small kids?
Lipa Noi on the west coast has the shallowest water — soft sand, almost no rocks, and you can wade a long way out with the water still at your knees. Choeng Mon is the runner-up, a small sheltered bay with gentle waves, and Maenam is quiet and easy on the budget. Chaweng and Lamai work with kids too, but from October to December the east coast gets real waves — watch the warning flags and keep children out of the sea on rough days.
When is the sea at its best on Koh Samui?
Koh Samui sits in the Gulf of Thailand, so its seasons run opposite to Phuket and Krabi. The best window is January to April, when the sea is calm and the days are dry, with a second drier spell around June to August. October to December is the island's rainy season — November is the wettest month — when east-coast beaches like Chaweng and Lamai get rough, some boats stop running and Ang Thong Marine Park trips can pause depending on conditions. In short: when the Andaman coast is rained out (May to October), Samui is often still good, especially June to August. See the month-by-month detail in Best time to visit Koh Samui → and compare coasts in Phuket or Samui →
Are Koh Samui's beaches free, or do you need to go through a resort?
All beaches are public and free to use, but some of the paths down cross resort land, especially around Choeng Mon and Lipa Noi — look for the signed public access lanes. Most loungers and umbrellas belong to hotels or beach clubs, so if you want a seat, order a drink or some food from that place.
How do you get to each beach on Koh Samui?
There is no train or city-style public transit on the island — the 4169 ring road circles it. The main options are songthaews, shared pick-up trucks running the main routes by day (about ฿50–100 a hop; ask the price before boarding — after dark they switch to charter rates) · taxis, which are famously expensive and don't use meters, so agree the fare every time (cross-island rides often run about ฿300–600) · Grab, which works but has few cars · and rented scooters at roughly ฿200–300 a day — the most freedom, but some stretches are steep and tourist accidents genuinely are common, so wear a helmet and carry a valid licence. Full detail in Getting around Koh Samui →
Where is the clearest water for snorkelling?
On the island itself, Silver Beach (Thong Ta Kian) has some of the clearest water, with easy snorkelling along the granite boulders on calm days, and Choeng Mon's bay is pleasantly clear too. For proper coral you need a boat: Ang Thong National Marine Park, or a day trip to Koh Tao, the Gulf's main dive hub. See Ang Thong Marine Park → and Day trips from Koh Samui →
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