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🇹🇭 Phuket Attractions · 2026

What to see in Phuket
The pearl of the Andaman — beaches, clear-water islands, temples and an old town with real character

Thailand's biggest island, out in the Andaman Sea — white-sand beaches strung along the west coast, limestone islands you can spend a whole day reaching by boat, a giant Buddha on a hilltop you can see from half the island, and a Sino-Portuguese old town that's a pleasure to wander. We picked the 12 sights that capture Phuket best, with honest advice on the season and the sea.

Why come here

An island with beaches, temples and an old town in one place

Phuket is more than the beaches and parties it's known for. It's Thailand's largest island, out in the Andaman Sea, with white sand strung all along the west coast — from lively Patong down to quieter, family-friendly Kata and Karon. But the real draw is the range of it: in the morning you can climb to the Big Buddha on its hilltop for the views, spend the afternoon in the Old Town among pastel Sino-Portuguese shophouses with a coffee in an old building, and end the day watching the sun drop into the sea at Promthep Cape.

And if you want to get out on the water, Phuket is the gateway to the finest islands in the Andaman — Ko Phi Phi with the emerald water of Maya Bay, Phang Nga Bay with James Bond Island (Ko Tapu) and sea-canoeing through the caves, and the Similan Islands, which divers rate as the clearest water in Thailand (though they're only open in the dry season). We chose the 12 sights that cover every side of Phuket, with honest notes on when to go, which seas to respect, and where the crowds mean you should go early.

The highlights

12 sights worth your time

From the island's beaches to its temples and old town, and on to the island trips you reach by boat.

Patong Beach Phuket — an aerial view of the curving bay with white sand, clear turquoise water and hotels and shops lined up behind the beach 1
Patong Beach
Phuket's liveliest beach · nightlife and water sports

Patong is the heart of touristy Phuket — a curving white-sand beach about 3km long, with shallow water you can swim in and the full menu of water sports: jet-ski, parasailing, banana boat. Behind the sand it's wall-to-wall hotels, restaurants, malls and Bangla Road, the island's busiest nightlife strip after dark. I'll be straight: Patong is the most crowded and frenetic spot on Phuket, ideal if you want energy and everything within walking distance — but if you're after a quiet beach, it isn't the answer. In the monsoon the surf gets strong, so always check the red flag before going in.

Getting there: West coast · ~45 min from the airport · ~30 min from Phuket Town (taxi/Grab)
Best time: Morning for clear water and fewer people · evening for sunset · nights for the Bangla area
Free: Public beach is free · umbrella/lounger rentals charge
Kata Beach Phuket — a curve of white sand with clear water, longtail boats moored near the shore and swimmers spread along the beach 2
Kata + Kata Noi Beach
The family beach · clear water, seasonal surf

South of Karon comes Kata — a pretty white-sand crescent that's quieter and more easygoing than Patong, with clear water, soft sand and a relaxed feel that suits families and anyone who wants a proper rest. There's a fair scattering of restaurants and places to stay behind the beach, without the chaos. Just beyond is Kata Noi, a small, quiet bay with lovely water. In the monsoon (May–Oct) this stretch picks up enough swell to surf, and there are surf schools, but the waves are strong and the rip currents are dangerous — watch the flags and the lifeguards.

Getting there: Below Karon · ~20–25 min from Patong · taxi/Grab/scooter
Best time: High season (Nov–Apr) for calm, clear water · monsoon for surf (mind the flags)
Free: Public beach is free · gear and surfboards for rent
Karon Beach Phuket — a wave rolling onto a wide white-sand beach with turquoise sea meeting the sky 3
Karon Beach
Long white sand · quieter than Patong, good for relaxing

Karon is one of the longest beaches on the west coast — fine white sand that famously squeaks underfoot, and a beach so wide and long that it never feels packed even when it's busy. It sits in the middle, between Patong's buzz and Kata's calm, and it's perfect if you want to lie in the sun with a bit of space around you. There are hotels and restaurants behind the sand, but nothing overwhelming. In the monsoon the surf can be strong with rip currents, so check the red flag before going in.

Getting there: Between Patong and Kata · ~15 min from Patong · taxi/Grab/scooter
Best time: Morning for clear water and fewer people · evening light for photos · calmest in high season
Free: Public beach is free · umbrella/lounger rentals charge
Phuket Old Town — a row of two-storey pastel Sino-Portuguese shophouses along the street, with shops and cars parked at the kerb 4
Phuket Old Town
Sino-Portuguese shophouses · Thalang Road, Soi Romanee, cafes

For a change from the beach, head to Phuket Old Town — a district of pastel Sino-Portuguese shophouses that reflect the island's Thai-Chinese (Baba/Peranakan) roots mixed with Portuguese architecture, a legacy of the tin-mining era. Walk Thalang Road, Dibuk Road and Soi Romanee, where the brightly painted houses are a favourite photo spot, with street art tucked into corners, stylish cafes in old buildings, and Phuket's own local food. Every Sunday evening the Lard Yai walking street takes over Thalang Road, great for grazing. The whole quarter is easy to explore on foot.

Getting there: Phuket Town (east side) · ~30 min from Patong · taxi/Grab
Best time: Morning for cooler light and photos · Sunday evening for the Lard Yai walking street
Free: Free to wander · you only pay for cafes, restaurants and some museums
The Big Buddha Phuket — a large white-marble seated Buddha on a hilltop against a blue sky with white clouds, visitors climbing the steps 5
The Big Buddha (Phra Phutta Ming Mongkol)
45m white-marble Buddha on the hill · free, 360° views

An image you can see from half the island — a white-marble Buddha about 45 metres tall on top of Nakkerd Hill, looking down over Chalong Bay, Kata beach and open sea in every direction. It's a place of real meaning for Phuket locals and a draw for anyone who wants to pay respects and take in a 360° view. The statue is clad in white Burmese marble you can see up close. It's free to visit, with a donation box if you wish to give. As a temple, dress modestly with shoulders and knees covered; sarongs are lent at the entrance.

Getting there: Nakkerd Hill · the road is steep, so you need transport — taxi/Grab/rental/scooter/tour · no public bus up
Ticket: Free (donation if you wish) · open roughly 6am–7pm
Best time: Morning or late afternoon for softer sun · clear days for the views
Wat Chalong Phuket — a Thai temple hall with a multi-tiered red-and-gold roof and a pointed finial, set among green gardens and elephant statues 6
Wat Chalong
Phuket's most revered temple · Luang Pho Cham

Wat Chaithararam — known to everyone as Wat Chalong — is the temple Phuket holds most dear, famous for Luang Pho Cham, a revered monk who helped local people during a 19th-century rebellion. The temple is lovely, with a tiered Thai-style ordination hall, and the Phra Mahathat Chedi enshrines a relic of the Buddha; you can climb the chedi for the view and to pay respects. People come to make wishes, give thanks and set off firecrackers when a wish is granted. As a temple, dress modestly. It's usually paired with the Big Buddha, which is close by.

Getting there: Mueang district, near Chalong Circle · ~30 min from Patong · taxi/Grab/scooter
Ticket: Free (donation if you wish) · open roughly 7am–5pm
Best time: Morning for fewer people and cooler air · pair with the Big Buddha in a half day
Promthep Cape Phuket — silhouetted sugar palms against a golden-orange sky at sunset over the Andaman Sea 7
Promthep Cape
Phuket's most famous sunset viewpoint

The headland at the far south of the island, and Phuket's legendary place to watch the sun go down — every evening people gather to see it sink slowly into the Andaman, the sugar palms silhouetted against a gold-and-orange sky in the classic shot everyone wants. There's a lighthouse and viewpoints to stroll, plenty of wind and a wide-open view. I'll be honest: on a clear evening it gets very crowded, so come about an hour before sunset to claim a spot. If the sky is overcast or it's the monsoon you may not see the sun clearly, but the atmosphere is still good.

Getting there: Far south, near Nai Harn beach · ~20 min from Kata · taxi/Grab/scooter
Best time: About an hour before sunset (~5.30–6.30pm depending on season) · claim a spot early
Free: Free to visit · car park on site
Ko Phi Phi — an elevated view of the twin-hilled Phi Phi Don with green limestone cliffs flanking a clear bay and a boat crossing the water 8
Ko Phi Phi
Maya Bay and clear water · the top day trip (seasonal)

Ko Phi Phi lies between Phuket and Krabi and is the most popular day trip from Phuket — emerald water, sheer cliffs flanking the bays, and Maya Bay, made famous by the film The Beach. It has reopened, but with strict rules to let the coral recover (no swimming in the bay, plus a national park fee). Tours usually stop to snorkel at several spots — Pileh Lagoon, Viking Cave and Bamboo Island among them. It gets very crowded by mid-morning, so go early or pick a tour that leaves before the others. Trips can be cancelled in the monsoon, so check first.

Getting there: By boat from a Phuket pier · speedboat ~45–60 min · ferry cheaper but slower
Cost: Day tour + national park fee · varies by package, check before booking
Best time: Early morning for fewer crowds and clear water · high season (Nov–Apr) for calm seas
Phang Nga Bay — tall sheer limestone karsts rising from green sea near Khao Phing Kan and James Bond Island (Ko Tapu) 9
Phang Nga Bay + James Bond Island (Ko Tapu)
Limestone karsts at sea · sea-canoeing through caves

Phang Nga Bay is a sheltered sea studded with strangely shaped limestone karsts rising straight out of the water. The headline is Ko Tapu, the needle-shaped "James Bond Island" made famous by the film, and Koh Panyee, a Muslim village built entirely on stilts over the water. The real magic, though, is sea-canoeing through the caves and hidden hongs into secret lagoons inside the islands. Tours run by speedboat, big boat and canoe. The sea here is calmer than the open water, so it stays runnable more often through the monsoon.

Getting there: North to a Phang Nga pier · ~1–1.5 hr by road before the boat · usually done on a tour
Cost: Day tour (boat/canoe/lunch) + national park fee · check before booking
Best time: Morning for calm water and fewer people · runnable most of the year (the bay is sheltered)
The Similan Islands — a clear turquoise bay with white sand, large granite boulders and tour boats anchored in the bay 10
The Similan Islands
Thailand's best snorkelling and diving · closed in the monsoon

Ask divers where the clearest water in Thailand is, and many will say the Similans — an archipelago in the Andaman where the water is clear enough to see coral and fish sharply, with fine white sand and the distinctive giant granite boulders. It's superb for both snorkelling and diving. Important: it's a national park that closes in the monsoon and is open only from roughly mid-October to mid-May — the rest of the year it's shut to let nature recover. From Phuket you drive up to Tap Lamu pier in Phang Nga, then take a speedboat — a long way out, and the sea can be choppy, so bring something if you get seasick.

Getting there: Road from Phuket to Tap Lamu pier (Phang Nga) ~1.5–2 hr + speedboat ~1–1.5 hr
Cost: Day tour / liveaboard + national park fee · check before booking
Best time: Open ~mid-Oct to mid-May only · go early for clear water and fewer people
Seasonal note: The Similans close in the monsoon (roughly May–Oct). Always check the park's open dates and the tour's status before you plan.
Karon Viewpoint Phuket — looking down over the three beaches of Kata Noi, Kata and Karon with clear curving bays and green headlands reaching into the sea 11
Karon Viewpoint + the Windmill
The three-beach view · a classic west-coast photo stop

On the hill road between Kata and Nai Harn, Karon Viewpoint (some call it Kata Viewpoint) looks down over three bays in a row — Kata Noi, Kata and Karon, the water shading through gorgeous blues and greens. It's the classic photo stop on a west-coast drive. A little further on is the Windmill Viewpoint at Nai Harn, looking out toward Promthep Cape and the open sea. Both are easy to reach by car or scooter, and they make a good stop in the late afternoon on the way to the Promthep sunset.

Getting there: Kata–Nai Harn hill road · easy to drive to · taxi/Grab/scooter/rental
Best time: Late morning to afternoon for clear three-beach views · evening for soft light
Free: Free to visit · roadside parking
Bangla Road Patong Phuket — a night walking street with bright neon bar signs and crowds of people on both sides of the road 12
Bangla Road + Patong nightlife
The night walking street · bars and live music (adults / party crowd)

Let's be honest — Phuket's busiest night out is on Bangla Road in Patong. In the evening it closes to traffic and becomes a walking street packed with bars, neon, live music and a crowd from all over the world. It's fun and full-on, good for the party crowd and for seeing another side of Phuket. To be clear, it's an adult strip with all kinds of bars, not somewhere for young children — if you're travelling as a family, an early-evening stroll to soak up the atmosphere is plenty. Keep an eye on your valuables, and don't follow anyone luring you into a bar that won't state its prices upfront.

Getting there: Central Patong, near the beach · walk from Patong-area hotels · taxi/Grab
Best time: After dark, ~8pm onwards · early evening for a look around
Free: Free to walk · you only pay for drinks/bars (check prices before you order)
Plan your trip

How to fit it all in

Phuket's sights are spread out and there's no metro — leave plenty of time for taxis, Grab or a rental.

The west-coast beaches
Suggested Days 1–2 · Patong / Kata / Karon

White sand runs all along the west coast — Patong the liveliest, Karon long and quieter, Kata good for families. Pick the beach that suits your style to stay near and explore around. Always check the red flag before swimming, especially in the monsoon.

Time needed: 1–2 days · Getting there: taxi/Grab/scooter/rental
Temples + viewpoints, the south
Suggested Day 2 · Big Buddha / Chalong / Promthep

The Big Buddha, Wat Chalong, Karon Viewpoint and Promthep Cape are all in the south of the island, not far apart, so they fit into a half to full day. Save Promthep for the evening sunset to finish. You'll need your own transport or a tour.

Time needed: Half a day to a day · Getting there: taxi/Grab/rental · no public bus up the Big Buddha
Phuket Old Town
Suggested Day 3 · east side

Switch it up with a wander through the Sino-Portuguese Old Town — photograph the pastel houses, sit in a cafe, try the local food. The quarter is walkable, and if you're here on a Sunday evening there's the Lard Yai walking street on Thalang Road.

Time needed: Half a day · Getting there: taxi/Grab ~30 min from the beaches
Island trips (by boat)
Phi Phi · Phang Nga · Similan (seasonal)

Ko Phi Phi and Phang Nga Bay both work as day trips; the Similans are further out and open only ~mid-Oct to mid-May. Boat trips can be cancelled in the monsoon — always check status before booking. See the whole island menu in the Phuket island-hopping guide →

Time needed: A day per island · Best: high season for calm seas, book ahead
Frequently asked

FAQ · before you set out

How many days do you need in Phuket?
Four to six days work well, because Phuket has beaches, an old town, temples and island trips you reach by boat. Day 1, relax on the west-coast beaches (Patong, Kata or Karon); Day 2, the Big Buddha plus Wat Chalong and Promthep Cape for sunset; Day 3, walk the Sino-Portuguese Old Town and its cafes; Day 4, a day trip to Ko Phi Phi or Phang Nga Bay; with more time, and if you are here in the open season (~mid-Oct to mid-May), add the Similan Islands for diving. Phuket's sights are spread out and there is no metro, so leave plenty of time for getting around by taxi, Grab or rental. See the full Phuket guide →
When is the best month to visit Phuket, and can you swim in the monsoon?
The best window is the high season, roughly November to April, with calm seas, clear water and the beaches at their best. The southwest monsoon runs roughly May to October, with more rain, rougher wind and seas, and on some days big surf and dangerous rip currents. West-coast beaches like Patong, Kata and Karon fly a red flag on no-swim days — take the flags and the lifeguards seriously and never go in when the red flag is up, because rip currents cause deaths here every year. Boat trips out to the islands may be cancelled or postponed in the monsoon, and the Similan Islands close in the monsoon (open ~mid-Oct to mid-May). Check the forecast and the tour's status before you book.
Is the Big Buddha in Phuket free, how do you get up there, and what should you wear?
The Big Buddha (Phra Phutta Ming Mongkol Akenakkiri) is free to visit, with a donation box if you wish to give. It is a white-marble Buddha about 45 metres tall on top of Nakkerd Hill, visible from much of the island. You need your own transport to get up there — taxi, Grab, rental car, scooter or a tour — because the hill road is steep and there is no public bus. It is a temple, so dress modestly with shoulders and knees covered; sarongs are lent at the entrance. It is open roughly 6am–7pm; allow about an hour including the 360° views, and go in the morning or late afternoon to avoid the midday heat. See the full Big Buddha + Wat Chalong guide →
Is a Ko Phi Phi day trip from Phuket worth it, and how do you get there?
It is worth it if you love clear water and dramatic cliffs. Ko Phi Phi sits between Phuket and Krabi, and you can do it as a day trip by ferry or speedboat. The speedboat is faster (about 45–60 minutes) and stops at several snorkelling spots; the ferry is cheaper but slower. Maya Bay (from the film The Beach) has reopened but with strict rules to let the coral recover — no swimming in the bay, and a national park fee. It gets very crowded by mid-morning, so go early or pick a tour that leaves before the rest. Trips can be cancelled in the monsoon when the sea is rough, so check first. You can book a speedboat tour ahead on Klook. See the full Ko Phi Phi day-trip guide →
When are the Similan Islands open, and how far are they from Phuket?
The Similan Islands are a national park that closes in the monsoon and is open only from roughly mid-October to mid-May (closed the rest of the year to let nature recover). The water here is some of the clearest in Thailand, great for snorkelling and diving. From Phuket you drive about 1.5–2 hours up to Tap Lamu pier in Phang Nga province, then take a speedboat another 1–1.5 hours, so it is a long way out and the sea can be choppy — bring something if you get motion sick. You can do it as a day trip, but for more dive time across several sites there are liveaboard options. You can book a tour ahead on Klook. See the full Similan Islands guide →
How do you get around Phuket — is there a metro or public transport?
Phuket has no metro, no train and no mass-transit system like Bangkok's. The main ways around are metered taxi (many refuse the meter, so agree the fare first), tuk-tuk (notoriously expensive on Phuket), Grab (available but limited, and contested by local taxis in some areas), a rented scooter (you need a licence and a helmet, and accidents are common, so ride carefully), a rental car, or hotel and tour transfers. Local songthaews (blue buses) run between the beaches and Phuket Town cheaply but slowly, and stop early. Phuket Airport (HKT) is at the far north of the island, about 32km and 45–60 minutes from the west-coast beaches. In short, there is no mass transit, so plan around taxis, Grab, a scooter or transfers from the start.
Klook · Phuket tours

Phuket tours & tickets — Phi Phi, Phang Nga Bay, the Similans, Racha & Coral islands, airport transfers, all bookable ahead

Ko Phi Phi speedboat tours, Phang Nga Bay / James Bond Island, Similan diving (seasonal), island-hopping around Phuket, airport transfers and Thai cooking classes — book on Klook in advance and skip the same-day queues.

See Phuket tours on Klook →
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