Cape Dara Resort Pattaya — Headland Infinity Pools Where the Sun Drops Into the Bay
Pattaya sits within Chonburi province, and when people picture a beach hotel here they tend to picture the noise of the strip first. Cape Dara Resort Pattaya is the opposite of that — literally a different corner of the bay. It holds the Na Kluea headland at the northern tip, next to Wong Amat Beach, and opened in 2012 before a major 2018 refit. What guests keep coming back to is consistent: two infinity pools that face straight out to sea and a rooftop deck angled due west so the sun sets over the water right in front of you — a view only a handful of hotels in Chonburi can deliver, and this one can because the whole building points the right way.
Cape Dara opened in 2012 and had a full refit in 2018. The building is a modern tower pushed out onto the headland, laid out so nearly every room faces Pattaya Bay. There are around 252 rooms and suites, starting with Deluxe rooms at roughly 36–41 sqm and rising to Beachfront and Junior Family Suites at 90–100 sqm. Rooms run a pale-wood and sea-blue palette with a King bed, an oversized round sofa, and a private balcony on most categories. The detail guests mention most is the simplest one — opening the curtains in the morning to a full bay view.
The real headline act is the pair of sea-facing infinity pools, where the edge appears to spill straight into the bay. Two swim-up bars let you order a drink without leaving the water, and blue loungers line the deck. But the spot people photograph most is the rooftop deck above — white-curtained cabanas and a round-boulder garden, all angled due west. Between about 5 and 6 pm the light drops gold across the water in front of you, and more than one reviewer calls it the best sunset they have seen anywhere around Pattaya.
One guest recalls: "Floating in the infinity pool in the early evening, water just warm enough, the edge blending into the bay, watching the sun sink — they sat there for an hour and never got bored."
There's a reasonable spread of food. Radius is the main open-air restaurant looking over the bay — all-day dining and the venue for the breakfast buffet. Ming Xing is the Chinese restaurant, a smart red-and-white room with a sea view from height, while the Twinkle Pool Bar poolside and Walala Beach Bar below are easy spots for an evening drink. One honest note that comes up repeatedly: breakfast tastes fine but the range of dishes isn't huge by big-resort standards, so if you're expecting an enormous buffet you may find it modest.
Beyond the pools, there's enough on-site to fill a day. Luminous Spa is a sea-view spa with Thai massage, oil massage and body treatments, and there's a sauna, a steam room, a gym and a morning yoga class. Families get a Kids' Club and a separate children's pool. The private Dara Beach sits below the headland, reached by a stairway down, and stays quiet because it's reserved for hotel guests.
The Trip.com score sits at 8.9/10 from roughly 1,939 reviews — service leads at 9.0, with cleanliness and location close behind at 8.9. Guests agree on the pools, the sunsets, and attentive staff. The honest criticism is worth stating plainly: the private beach is small and badly eroded, rocky in places, and at times there's barely any sand left — it is not the long white-sand strip some people picture. Several reviewers also flag roosters crowing from a nearby farm from the small hours into morning. Better to know both before you book.
Location is both the draw and the caveat. Out on the Na Kluea headland at the northern end of the bay, it's far quieter than Central Pattaya and genuinely restful. Terminal 21 and CentralMarina are about 5 minutes by car, and the hotel runs a shuttle to the malls. Getting to Walking Street or Central Pattaya, though, means allowing 10–15 minutes and a Grab. Travellers here for the sea and the quiet will love the setting; anyone who wants nightlife on the doorstep may find it a touch remote.
The bottom line: Cape Dara works best for couples and families who want a quiet sea-view resort in Chonburi without the city pressing in. Its strengths are clear — the infinity pools, the rooftop sunset, and genuine sea-view rooms at a price below several other 5-star resorts in the area. Deluxe Sea View rooms start around ฿3,500/night. If you're travelling as a group or with kids, stepping up to a Beachfront or Junior Family Suite buys a lot more space and comfort.
Summary from Booking & Agoda
- ✓ Infinity pools with a stunning sea view, especially at sunset
- ✓ Rooftop deck is a highlight many guests remember most
- ✓ Staff attentive and friendly, helpful throughout the stay
- ✓ Quiet North Pattaya setting, close to Terminal 21 with a shuttle
- ! Private beach is small and eroded with a lot of rocks
- ! Roosters from a nearby farm can be heard some mornings
- ! Walking Street and Central Pattaya are a 10–15 minute drive
- ✓ Two sea-facing infinity pools that photograph well from every angle
- ✓ Spacious rooms with sea views and the signature round sofa
- ✓ Sea-view Luminous Spa with a relaxing atmosphere
- ✓ Headland location is peaceful — a real escape from the crowds
- ! Breakfast variety is smaller than at the bigger resorts
- ! Beach in front of the hotel is more rock than sand
- ! Reaching the beach means a stairway down from the headland
- 💡If you want the fullest sea view — request a high-floor Sea View room when booking → lower floors or rooms not facing the bay see less water and miss the full sunset
- 💡If you're hoping to swim off the hotel beach — Dara Beach is small and rocky, and erosion has taken much of the sand → lean on the infinity pools and the view here, and take a short ride to Wong Amat or Jomtien for a proper sand beach
- 💡If you're a light sleeper — reviewers flag roosters from a nearby farm in the early hours → a high-floor sea-facing room helps, and it's worth packing earplugs just in case