from the island

The complete Koh Tao travel guide, 2026

Diving, beaches, ferries, food, where to stay. Built by locals with 20+ years on the island, between us, updated every month.

Koh Tao, Gulf of Thailand 21 km², 70 km off the mainland Updated April 2026
21 km²
Island area
70 km
Off the mainland
25–32°C
Year-round
29°C
Sea temp
200 THB
Scooter from
600 THB
Ferry from
1h 45m
Chumphon crossing
3–7 days
Ideal trip
Why this guide

Built from the island itself

Not from a laptop in Europe

Local authority

Built from over 20 years on Koh Tao

Welcome to Koh Tao, a tropical island in the Gulf of Thailand. Crystal-clear water, vibrant coral, scenic viewpoints and a relaxed island atmosphere, Koh Tao Thailand is often counted among the most beautiful spots in the country.

Despite the island’s modest size, it offers a wide variety of experiences. From world-famous scuba diving to peaceful beach days, jungle hikes and lively evening spots, there is always something to discover here.

This site is your complete Koh Tao travel guide, bringing together everything you need to know before visiting the island. Helpful information about the best things to do, the best places to visit, where to stay, where to eat and how to plan the perfect island trip. Built from over 20 years of real experience living and working on Koh Tao, this guide focuses on what actually matters when you’re here.

Pillar 01 / 06 01
Activities

Best things to do in Koh Tao

One of the main reasons travellers fall in love with the island is the wide range of activities available. Ocean adventures, scenic hikes, late-night bars, plenty for every type of traveller.

Especially famous for scuba diving, with dozens of dive schools running courses for beginners and guided dives for the more experienced. If diving isn’t your thing, snorkelling, island tours and stand-up paddleboarding give the same blue water without the gear.

Best for: first-time divers, snorkellers and anyone planning the days around water.

Read the things-to-do guide
Pillar 02 / 06 02
Places

Beaches, viewpoints, Koh Nang Yuan

Koh Tao used to be known purely for diving. Now it is just as likely to be the place where you lose a few days to good beaches, late nights and people you just met. Most visitors come for one thing and end up doing more.

The bays change character with where you are. Sairee for liveliest, Freedom and Shark Bay quieter, Tanote and Hin Wong for solitude. Koh Nang Yuan a short boat ride from Mae Haad, three small islands connected by a sandbar with a viewpoint worth the climb.

Best for: picking the right beach base for your trip.

Explore places to visit
Pillar 03 / 06 03
Where to stay

Where you stay shapes the trip

The different areas offer very different experiences. Choose the wrong one for your style and you will feel it. Mae Haad for ferry-day convenience, Sairee for the centre of things, Chalok Baan Kao for slower pace, the east coast for quiet.

Budget hostels mostly cluster around Sairee. Bungalows, resorts and villas spread across the island depending on area and setting. From 250 THB hostel dorms to 8,000+ THB private bungalows, there is a fit for every kind of trip.

Best for: deciding which area before you book a single room.

Read the stay guide
Pillar 04 / 06 04
Food & Nightlife

Where to eat and drink

Food and nightlife are a bigger part of the experience here than most people expect. Cheap Thai street food, casual beach spots, proper sit-down restaurants, international cuisine, late-night bites after a long evening out.

Mornings are easy. Cafes and breakfast spots are scattered across the island, good coffee, fresh fruit, smoothie bowls. Evenings shift the energy. Sairee is the centre of it, bars, live music, venues that run well past midnight most nights of the week.

Best for: finding your pace, whether you eat well or go out hard.

Read the food guide
Pillar 05 / 06 05
Plan your trip

A little planning goes far

Knowing when to come, how to get around and what to expect when you arrive makes the difference between a smooth trip and a frustrating one. The time of year matters more than people think, sea conditions, weather and dive visibility all shift with the season.

It also helps to have a basic sense of costs and how transport works before you get here. Nothing complicated, just enough to arrive prepared and spend your time enjoying it.

Best for: month-by-month weather, budget bands and itinerary structure.

Open the planner
Pillar 06 / 06 06
Transport

Boats, scooters, longtails

Koh Tao is a boat-only island. No airport, no bridge. Everyone arrives by ferry or speedboat, and getting here is straightforward once you know the route from where you are coming.

On the island, getting around is easy. Most rent a scooter for the freedom to reach different beaches and viewpoints on their own schedule. Songthaew pickups and longtail boats cover the rest.

Best for: building your route from Bangkok, Phuket or Samui to Mae Haad.

Read the transport guide
FAQ

Questions travellers ask us

Quick answers to the things that come up most. Every link goes to the deeper page if you want more.

What is the best time to visit Koh Tao?
It depends on what you want to do. High season runs mid-December to February, calmest seas and highest prices. Shoulder seasons March to May and September to October balance thinner crowds with workable weather. November to early December is the monsoon window, more cancellations and cheaper rooms. See our Plan Your Trip guide for month-by-month notes.
Is Koh Tao good for scuba diving?
Yes. It is one of the most popular places in the world to learn. Courses are affordable, conditions are generally accessible, and there are plenty of dive sites for all levels. You can explore options in our Scuba Diving guide.
How many days are enough for Koh Tao?
Most people stay longer than planned. Four to seven days is a good balance if you want to dive, explore different beaches and enjoy the island without rushing. If you are not sure how to structure your time, check our Plan Your Trip page for itinerary ideas.
How do you get to Koh Tao?
The island is only accessible by boat. Most routes involve a ferry from the mainland (Chumphon or Surat Thani) or nearby islands like Koh Samui and Koh Phangan. You can find routes, schedules and options in the Ferry guide 2026.
Is Koh Tao safe for tourists?
Yes. Despite the headlines that occasionally surface, Koh Tao is a small town where hundreds of thousands of tourists pass through every year without incident. Standard small-island sense applies, drive scooters carefully, watch your drinks, buy travel insurance. As safe as anywhere in rural Thailand and considerably safer than most large cities.
Is there good wifi for remote work?
Yes. Fibre internet is standard in most Sairee and Mae Haad accommodation, 50 to 200 Mbps is common with some stays hitting 300+. Two dedicated coworking spaces operate on the island, plus several work-friendly cafes. Full 4G and 5G coverage from AIS, True and DTAC island-wide.
start your trip

Plan your Koh Tao trip

Budget, weather, itinerary length, how to get here. One page to work through before you book anything.

Plan your trip