Where the southern Gulf coast begins · long uncrowded beaches like Thung Wua Laen · snorkeling and diving around offshore islands · the revered Prince of Chumphon shrine · river rafting inland at Phato · and fresh, cheap Gulf seafood
About 460 km south of Bangkok, Chumphon is the narrow neck of land where Thailand's south starts and the Gulf coastline opens up. It is best known as the ferry gateway to Koh Tao and Koh Samui, but the province itself rewards a stop: long, quiet beaches like Thung Wua Laen, easy snorkeling and diving around its offshore islands, the deeply revered Prince of Chumphon naval shrine, and river rafting through rainforest at Phato inland. Seafood is fresh and cheap, crowds are thin, and prices sit well below the famous islands next door.
Chumphon spreads out, so where you stay shapes your trip. Most visitors pick one of four areas — beachfront at Thung Wua Laen, near the Prince of Chumphon shrine at Hat Sai Ri, in Chumphon town by the train station, or down at Pak Nam for the Koh Tao ferry. Pick the one that matches what you came for.
Chumphon's most popular beach — a long curve of golden sand with beachfront resorts, seafood restaurants and dive shops. Calm, swimmable water and easy sunsets.
A quiet beach beside the revered Prince of Chumphon shrine and the Khao Matsee viewpoint. Small resorts, sea views and a calm, local feel — close to town yet right on the coast.
The compact provincial town around the railway station — hotels, the night market, restaurants and the easiest transport links. The most convenient base if you're moving on by train or bus.
The river-mouth fishing town and the departure point for the Koh Tao / Koh Samui ferries. Guesthouses, fresh seafood and sunrise over the harbour — handy for an early boat.
Selected across Thung Wua Laen beach, Chumphon town and the ferry side — from beachfront resorts with dive centres to great-value town stays. Compare prices across 3 booking platforms in one click.
Chumphon's leading beach resort — a beachfront pool, an on-site golf course and big, comfortable rooms, set on a quiet stretch of sand near the river mouth.
A long-running beachfront resort right on Thung Wua Laen, with its own PADI dive centre — the natural choice for snorkeling and diving the Chumphon islands.
A bright, design-led boutique hotel in town with colourful rooms and a café feel — walkable to the night market and an easy hop to the train station.
A reliable mid-range town hotel with a pool, spacious rooms and a central location — a comfortable, well-priced base close to restaurants and transport.
A friendly, spotless little guesthouse near the station — clean modern rooms, helpful owners and great ferry advice. A traveller favourite for transit nights.
A stylish budget boutique in the centre of town — loft-style rooms, a cool industrial look and a price that's hard to beat. Walkable to the night market.
Found your ideal area? Compare prices from three leading booking platforms — Chumphon has great-value stays from beachfront resorts at Thung Wua Laen to handy town hotels by the station.
Chumphon eats like the south — bold, spicy and built around the day's catch. Turmeric-yellow curries, fresh-off-the-boat seafood and famous local coffee define the table here. From fiery fish curry to sweet roasted cuttlefish, here is what you cannot miss.
Chumphon's beaches and fishing piers land squid, prawns, crab and fish daily. Grilled over charcoal with a spicy seafood dipping sauce, it's cheaper and fresher here than on the famous islands next door.
SignatureThe defining southern curry — a pungent, fiery sauce made from fermented fish innards, turmeric and chilli, loaded with fish and vegetables. Intense and deeply savoury; not for the timid, beloved by everyone else.
Southern ClassicMinced pork or beef dry-fried with a punchy southern curry paste, turmeric and kaffir lime leaf until fragrant and intensely spicy. A small plate that makes a whole bowl of rice disappear.
Spicy Stir-FryA bright, sour-spicy turmeric curry with chunks of blue swimmer crab and vegetables. The everyday taste of the southern Gulf — tangy, hot and made to be spooned over rice.
Local StapleSun-dried cuttlefish and squid, grilled and pressed — chewy, smoky and a little sweet. A classic seaside and roadside snack you'll smell long before you see the cart.
Seaside SnackThe south runs on strong robusta, grown in Chumphon's own hills. Order it old-style — thick, sweet and milky over ice (oliang or kafae boran) — the perfect counterpoint to all that chilli.
Local CoffeeChumphon pairs long, quiet Gulf beaches and easy island snorkeling with a revered naval shrine, sea-view viewpoints and rainforest rafting inland. Here are the sights you shouldn't miss.
Chumphon's most popular beach — a long curve of golden sand with calm, swimmable water, beachfront seafood and dive shops. The classic place to swim, relax and watch the sun go down.
Top BeachA deeply revered hillside shrine to Prince Abhakara, the "father of the Royal Thai Navy", set above the sea with a decommissioned warship turned museum alongside. Chumphon's most important landmark.
Sacred LandmarkA scatter of clear-water islands just offshore — coral reefs, easy snorkeling and some of the Gulf's most underrated dive sites, on the same waters that lead out to Koh Tao.
Snorkeling & DivingA short climb to a panoramic hilltop above Hat Sai Ri, looking out over the beach, the river mouth and the islands beyond. The best wide view in the province — superb at sunrise.
ViewpointInland in lush Phato district, gentle white-water rafting threads rainforest headwater valleys. A green, cooling half-day adventure and a complete change of pace from the coast.
Day Trip · NatureThe river-mouth fishing town and ferry gateway to Koh Tao and Koh Samui. Watch the boats come in, catch sunrise over the harbour and eat seafood straight off the pier.
Fishing Port · FerriesTwo days is a great taste of Chumphon — day one for the shrine, the viewpoint and a beach afternoon, day two out to the islands to snorkel before your onward train or ferry. Easy to tweak to your own pace.
Essential info and getting-around tips to help your Chumphon trip run smoothly from the very first step.
The overnight train from Bangkok is the classic way — about 7–8 hours to Chumphon station in town. Buses run frequently, or fly to Chumphon Airport (CJM) in around 1 hr 10 min and transfer ~30 min.
Carry cash for markets, beach stalls and small towns. Cards and PromptPay QR work in hotels and bigger restaurants, and ATMs are easy to find in town (expect a per-withdrawal fee).
The province is spread out, so renting a scooter or car is easiest for the beaches and viewpoints. Songthaews and motorbike taxis cover town, and resorts can arrange airport, pier and island transfers.
Pick up a tourist SIM (AIS, TrueMove or dtac) at the airport, or activate an eSIM before you board. 4G/5G coverage is strong across the city.
Click any pin for details — plan your route with ease
Chumphon has great-value stays in every area — from beachfront resorts at Thung Wua Laen to handy town hotels by the station. Pick your ideal base and start comparing right now.
A good trip doesn't end at one province — 3 southern Thailand destinations easily reached from Chumphon.