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Patong Beach | Karon
Beach | Kata Beach | Kata
Noi Beach | Naiharn Beach | Bang
Tao Beach | Surin Beach | Laem
Singh Beach | Kamala Beach | Kalim
Beach | Nai Yang Beach | Mai
Khao Beach | Nai Thon Beach | Rawai
Beach | Chalong Bay | Mittrapap
Beach | Laem Ka Beach | Promthep
Cape | Ya Nui Beach | Ao
Sein Beach | Nui Beach
Phuket
Beaches can be found all over the Island. It is really
a shame that many tourists in Phuket never leave their resort
area.
The beaches at the resort towns such as Patong
beach and Karon beach have
some of the least attractive beaches of Phuket.
If you would go and explore the island then you would find
beautiful Phuket beaches such as Ya Nui beach or Bang
Tao Beach.
So when visiting Phuket next time, please rent a motor bike
or a jeep and go discover the real Phuket. There is so much
more to this wonderful island then just Patong
Beach or Kata Beach. You
will find below an overview of the Phuket
Beaches that everyone should visit during their
Phuket's
most developed beach offers numerous leisure, sporting, shopping
and recreational options along its 3-km long cresent bay.
Windsurfing, snorkelling, sailing, swimming and sunbathing
number among the many popular daytime activities.
Patong is equally well known for its vibrant nightlife, among
which seafood restaurants feature prominently. Read
More...
The
second largest of Phuket's tourist beaches. Large resort complexes
line the road behind of the shoreline, but the long, broad
beach itself has no development. The sand is very white, and
squeaks audibly when walked upon. The southern point has a
fine coral reef stretching toward Kata and Bu Island.
Restaurants, bars, tour companies and other non-hotel businesses
are at the north end, near the traffic circle, and at the
south end, on the little road connecting the back road with
the beach road. The narrow road between Kata and Karon
has a number of small businesses as well as the Dino Park
Mini Golf facillity. Karon Beach
is the most up-scale of Phuket's beaches. There is a regular
daytime bus service to and from Phuket Town. Read
More...
Beautiful
Kata is a scenic gem, its clear water flanked by hills, and
picturesque Bu island sits offshore.
Kata retains a village feel at its northern and southern
ends and is perhaps more family-oriented, its beach more peaceful
than Patong. Read More...
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Kata
Noi Beach (20 & 17 km from town)
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South
of Kata Beach is Kata Noi, a
smaller beach with only a few hotels and little other development.
The beach is superb. Many fish inhabit the rocks and corals
along the beachless shoreline stretching south.
How to get there: Take the narrow beach road up over the
hill from kata.
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Naiharn
Beach (18 km from town)
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South
of Kata Noi and north of Promthep Cape, Naiharn is not Phuket's
longest beach, but it borders the most gorgeous lagoon on
the island. The middle of the beach is dominated by the Samnak
Song Nai Han monastery, which has obstructed excessive development
and is the reason that the beach is generally less crowded
than other spots on the southern part of the island.
A wide variety of water sports can be enjoyed, but swimmers
should be alert for the red flag which warns of dangerous
currents during the monsoon season from May to October. One
can walk to nearby Promthep Cape to observe sunsets, which
are often fiery and spectacular.
Bang Tao is a large open bay with one of Phuket's longest
beaches. It was once used for tin mining, but has since been
developed into a luxury resort. Most of it is occupied by
the Laguna complex, a massive five-hotel development with
golf course. There are, however, accommodations available
outside Laguna at the bay's south end.
Dry season swimming is excellent, and at the bay's north
end is a smaller bay, almost completely enclosed, at the mouth
of which is some fine coral. Plenty of places to eat, tour
companies, and other tourist facilities are available either
at Laguna or in the nearby town of Choeng Thale. Read
More...
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Surin
Beach
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Evergreen trees line this small, curving bay, beneath the
foothills north of Kamala. Surin is home to Phuket's first
golf course, a nine-hole course laid out more than sixty years
ago during the reign of King Rama VII. It is now largely in
disuse except as a park.
The steep incline of the beach, turbulent water, and big
waves make Surin a dangerous place to swim.
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Laem
Singh Beach (About 1 km from Surin Beach)
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The name means Lion's Point. The beach is in a small, curving
bay with rocky headlands at the foot of forest-fringed cliffs
and is among Phuket's most beautiful spots.
Look for signs indicating the path down to the beach.
Kamala is a Muslim fishing village north of Patong. Tourist
development on the beach Much of which is covered by a Muslim
graveyard and a police outpost has been slow in coming. Buffalo
herds still come down to the beach to cool off in the afternoon.
The beach is beautiful and about 2 kms. Kamala
Beach is the perfect place to get away from it all and
has little to offer in the way of entertainment for that go
across the mountains to Patong. Regular bus service to and
from Phuket Town during daytime, tuk-tuk services available
to Patong 5 kms. Away on the new road. Read
More...
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Kalim
Beach
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Just north of Patong Bay, starting from about the Novotel
Resort Hotel Patong to Thavorn Bay Resort, this area consists
of rocky but quiet beaches, and an interesting road leading
up into hills with high viewpoints and a few good quality
restaurants perched on the edge and top.
Some housing compounds are now being built on the hillsides
and the whole area is steadily moving upmarket.
This is where the National Park office is located. The beach
itself is on a long curving bay lined with evergreens that
provide shade to picnickers. The large coral reef is home
to many different species of fish, and Nai Yang is well known
as a site where sea turtles come to lay their eggs during
the period from November to February; the population of these
has however, dropped off greatly. First class accommodations
are available and small food vendors cater to the many day
trippers.
How to get there: Take the Nai Yang road, and look for signs
indicating the park entrance. Read
More...
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Mai
Khao Beach (40 km from town)
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Many kilometers of deserted beach characterize Mai Khao where
there is little tourist business. The water is fine for swimming
during the dry season; the rainy season brings big waves and
strong currents that are dangerous.
This lonely beach is another area where sea turtles come
to lay eggs. It is also home to what the Thais call a sea
cicada, which is a form of marine life.
How to get there: Go to the northern tip of Phuket;
the beach lies along the road's length.
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Nai
Thon Beach
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This quiet bay nestled at the foot of high hills has a fine
strip of sand. There is some accommodation but virtually no
other business.
How to get there: Located between Bang Thao Bay and Nai Yang
Beach, Nai Thon Beach can be reachd by taking Thepkrasatri
Road. Turn at the first traffic light north of Thalang Town
to Nai Yang Road. Look for signs indicating the turn-off to
Nai Thon.
The palm-fringed beach is best known for 'sea gypsies,' a
formerly nomadic fishing minority believed to be of Melanesian
descent.
On the other side of the cape from Nai Harn, Rawai beach
was the first to be regularly visited by Thai tourists to
Phuket long before foreigners were a common sight in Phuket.
Promthep Cape The Rawai area is famous for the Promthep Cape
viewpoint and a Sea Gypsy village both of which form part
of the Thai and Asian tourist trails. The main beach at Rawai
is is not great for swimming, but the casuarina tree lined
esplanade is perfect for sampling freshly barbequed seafood
at the weekend - a favourite with the locals. This is also
an excellent starting point for visits to the outlying islands
of Ko Hae and Ko Lone and Ko Racha/Raya- longtail boats and
speedboats. Read More...
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Chalong
Bay
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This beach has several restaurants selling some of Phuket's
best seafood.
Located on the south coast opf the island, Chalong Bay is
the mining area and is muddy to swim in. However, a fine view
of the coconut palm groves, and delicious food in the good
restaurants on the shore attract hundreds of visitors to the
place daily.
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Mittrapap
Beach
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This beach has several restaurants selling some of Phuket's
best seafood.
Located on the south coast opf the island, Chalong Bay is
the mining area and is muddy to swim in. However, a fine view
of the coconut palm groves, and delicious food in the good
restaurants on the shore attract hundreds of visitors to the
place daily.
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Laem
Ka Beach
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Just south of the Phuket Island Resort hotel, and north of
Rawai is a small rocky bay, popular with Thais at the weekend.
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Promthep
Cape
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Promthep
Cape is a headland forming the extreme south end of Phuket.
"Prom" is Thai for the Hindu term, "Brahma,"
signifying purity, and "Thep" means 'God.'
Local villagers used to refer to the cape as "Leam Jao",
or the God's Cape, and it was an easily recognisable landmark
for the early seafarers traveling up the Malay Peninsula from
the sub-continent.
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Ya
Nui Beach
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Tucked
between Promthep Cape and Rawai, Ya Nui Beach is small but
perfectly formed.
Steep headlands at either end hem in this slice of sand
which is visited by gentle waves from December to March. However,
the onset of the monsoon season brings with it crashing surf
and swimming during these months is not advised. A few small,
inexpensive bungalow operations have esteblished themselves
in the wooded area to the rear of the beach.
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Ao
Sein Beach
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Often
overlooked due to its proximity to Naiharn, and because the
connecting road runs through and under the Meridien Phuket
Yacht Club, Ao Sein has a wan air of long lost glamour to
it. Those who visited the island two decades ago recall that
it was once one of the most popular and populace of the island's
southern beaches, and the bungalow operations still in situ
attest to its headier days. Today, a treacherous road - suitable
only for experienced motorbike riders and four-wheel drive
trucks - runs down to the small beach of sand and boulders
and its cheif appeal is the epic view it offers of Naiharn
and Promthep Cape
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Nui
Beach
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Possibly
the most difficult beach to visit on Phuket, Nui lies between
the Kata Viewpoint and Naiharn. A new, wide, dirt road has
recently been cut through the forested hillside to replace
the winding track down to the beach, however this is just
as steep and difficult to traverse and should only be attempted
by four-wheel drive trucks and moto-cross bikes. The company
which built the road and operates the only restaurant on the
beach charges a small fee for its facilities and does not
allow visitors to bring their own food and drink onto the
sand.
Patong Beach | Karon
Beach | Kata Beach | Kata
Noi Beach | Naiharn Beach | Bang
Tao Beach | Surin Beach | Laem
Singh Beach | Kamala Beach | Kalim
Beach | Nai Yang Beach | Mai
Khao Beach | Nai Thon Beach | Rawai
Beach | Chalong Bay | Mittrapap
Beach | Laem Ka Beach | Promthep
Cape | Ya Nui Beach | Ao
Sein Beach | Nui Beach
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