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🤿 Dive Guide · Updated 2026

The Similan Islands
Diving & Snorkeling from Phuket

Some of the clearest water in Thailand, powder-white sand, and giant granite boulders in the Andaman Sea — but read this first: the national park is open only from roughly mid-October to mid-May, and it's further from Phuket than most people expect. This guide covers day trip vs liveaboard, park fees, and an honest take on the seasickness.

Open Season
Mid-Oct – Mid-May
Getting There
~2 hr drive + ~1.5 hr speedboat
Tour Type
Day Trip or Liveaboard
Visibility
Often 20–30 m
Read This First

Among Thailand's Clearest Water — But Open Only Half the Year

The Similan Islands are a chain of nine islands in the Andaman Sea, protected as Mu Ko Similan National Park in Phang Nga province. They're known for exceptionally clear water, powder-white sand, and the giant granite boulders that define the scenery both above and below the surface. Divers worldwide rate this as one of the best dive areas in Thailand. But the single most important thing to know is that the park closes every year during the monsoon — it's open only from roughly mid-October to mid-May. Come in the wrong season and every boat tour stops running. That one fact matters more than anything else when you plan.

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The Similans close in monsoon — always check opening dates before you book
Mu Ko Similan National Park shuts during the southwest monsoon and is generally open only from around mid-October to mid-May (roughly 15 October to 15 May), closing the rest of the year for rough seas and reef recovery. The exact dates shift slightly each year, and daily visitor numbers are capped. Before you commit to flights or accommodation, always confirm the latest opening dates with Thailand's national park department or a reputable tour operator. High season fills up fast — book ahead.
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Clear Water, White Sand
Fine white beaches and water so clear you can see the sand bottom. On good days, underwater visibility often reaches 20–30 metres.
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Signature Granite Boulders
Sail Rock and huge underwater boulder formations create a landscape unlike any other island in Thailand.
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Turtles and Schooling Fish
Green turtles, dense schools of fish, and — at far sites like Koh Bon — a real chance of manta rays.
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Day Trip or Sleep Aboard
Snorkel on a there-and-back day trip, or dive seriously on a 2–4 night liveaboard.

* Phuket has no convenient public transport to the pier — every tour includes a hotel pickup. Getting there independently is awkward, so book a tour that includes transfers.

How to Visit

Day Trip or Liveaboard — Match It to What You Want

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Day Trip (There and Back)
Speedboat from Khao Lak / Thap Lamu pier, Phang Nga

A tour collects you from your Phuket hotel before dawn, drives north to the pier, then runs a speedboat out to the islands. You get 2–3 snorkel stops, beach time, and the climb to the Sail Rock viewpoint, back at your hotel by evening. Best for people who want to see the Similans without diving deep.

Pros: No overnight, accessible price. | Cons: Tiring, long day, lengthy speedboat ride, crowded.

About 2,500–4,000 THB/person
🛳️
Liveaboard (Sleep on Board)
A boat you live on for 2–4 nights, for certified SCUBA divers

A larger boat you eat and sleep on, with 3–4 dives a day and access to far sites a day trip can't reach — Koh Bon, Koh Tachai, and Richelieu Rock, famous for whale sharks and mantas. Best for divers who came to dive properly.

Pros: Many dives, all the best sites, steadier boat. | Cons: Pricey, dive certification required.

From tens of thousands THB

The short version: if you only want to snorkel and see the islands, a day trip is good value and enough. If you're a certified diver set on multiple dives and reaching Richelieu Rock, you need a liveaboard. And if you get seasick easily, a larger liveaboard boat is often gentler than a day-trip speedboat. One more thing — if you'd rather avoid the long drive from Phuket, staying in Khao Lak puts you much closer to the pier.

🎫 Browse Similan tours on Klook

Dive Sites & Highlights

What You'll See at the Similans — Snorkel to Deep Dive

The Similans range from shallow snorkel bays for first-timers to advanced boulder dives for certified divers. Pick the sites that match your level and the kind of trip you've booked.

Beginner · Snorkel Stops on a day trip with easy entry
Sail Rock above Donald Duck Bay, Island 8, Similan Islands, Phang Nga Thailand 🪨 Sail Rock1 Beginner
Donald Duck Bay
Island 8 (Ko Similan) · Main Anchorage

The white-sand bay that is the postcard image of the Similans. A giant granite boulder shaped like a sail (Sail Rock) sits above it. Most day-trip boats anchor here, and you can swim and snorkel in the shallows close to the beach. The water is exceptionally clear, and it's the most photographed spot in the whole chain.

🤿Best for: Snorkeling, beach time, photos
🌊Water: Shallow, clear, gentle near the beach
💡Tip: Arrive before the other boats mid-morning for emptier photos
White-sand beach and granite boulders at the Similan Islands with snorkelers 🏖️ Viewpoint2 Beginner
Sail Rock Viewpoint
Viewpoint · Island 8

A 15–20 minute climb up steps and rock from the bay leads to the top of the Sail Rock boulder. The view takes in the curving white-sand bay against the deep blue sea in a near-360-degree sweep — the classic Similan shot everyone wants. The path is a little steep, so wear shoes you can walk in.

🥾Best for: Everyone, 15–20 min climb
📷Highlight: Elevated view over the white-sand bay
💡Tip: Avoid the midday heat — the rock gets hot and slippery
Green sea turtle swimming near the surface at the Similan Islands 🐢 Sea Turtles3 Beginner
Shallow Snorkel Bays
Honeymoon Bay / Island 4 Coves

Around Island 4 and several sheltered coves, shallow reefs make for easy snorkeling — clownfish, colourful damselfish, and the occasional green turtle gliding past. Day trips stop at two or three bays like this, with life jackets and a guide on hand. A good choice if you're not a strong swimmer.

🐠You'll see: Clownfish, damselfish, sea turtles
🦺Safety: Life jackets and a guide at every stop
💡Tip: Never stand on or touch coral — it's fragile and slow to recover
🎫 Book a Similan snorkel tour
Table and staghorn coral reef with schooling fish at the Similan Islands 🪸 Coral Reef4 Beginner
East-Side Coral Gardens
Sheltered Hard-Coral Reefs

The eastern side of the chain holds relatively healthy hard-coral reefs — table coral, staghorn, and bright schooling fish — making for beautiful, easy snorkeling and shallow diving. The water here is usually calmer than the west side with gentle current, so it's ideal for watching coral and taking casual underwater photos.

🪸You'll see: Table and staghorn coral, schooling fish
🌊Water: Usually calm, gentle current
💡Tip: Reef-safe sunscreen only
Certified · SCUBA Deeper dive sites for certified divers
Scuba divers at an underwater granite boulder site, Similan Islands 🪨 Boulder Dive5 Intermediate
Elephant Head Rock
Hin Pousar · Between Islands 7–8

One of the Similans' best-known dives. Giant granite boulders stack underwater into swim-throughs, channels, and arches, drawing big schools of fish and varied marine life. It's a fun dive, but the current shifts, so it suits divers with some experience and is always done with a dive guide.

📏Depth: About 15–30 m
🎯Best for: Open Water and above, with a guide
💡Tip: Check the current with your guide before descending
Yellow soft coral and reef fish at Koh Bon near the Similan Islands 🦅 Manta Rays6 Intermediate
Koh Bon
Koh Bon · Liveaboard Site

A limestone island north of the main Similans, known as one of the better spots to encounter manta rays — especially earlier in the season. A sloping underwater wall holds soft coral and schooling fish. Liveaboards favour this site; ordinary day trips usually don't reach it.

📏Depth: About 18–30 m
🗓️Manta chance: Better early season (varies yearly)
💡Tip: Usually reached on a liveaboard trip
Liveaboard dive boat anchored off an island in Mu Ko Similan National Park 🛳️ Liveaboard7 Advanced
Richelieu Rock
Richelieu Rock · Andaman Sea, Phang Nga

A pinnacle in open water that many rate as the single best dive site in Thailand. It's famous for whale sharks (seasonal), manta rays, vivid soft coral, and dense fish life. It lies far out and is generally only reachable on a liveaboard. Current can be strong, so it suits experienced divers.

📏Depth: About 5–35 m
🐋Highlight: Whale sharks / mantas, seasonal (not guaranteed)
💡Tip: Liveaboard only — Advanced with current experience
White-sand bay, clear water and granite boulders at the Similan Islands 🐟 Schooling Fish8 Intermediate
Koh Tachai
Koh Tachai · Northern End of the Route

A northern island with a gorgeous white-sand beach and very clear water. Underwater, boulders and reef draw big schools of fish, and divers love it. Landings are capped to protect the environment, and parts may close at times. It mostly sits on liveaboard or specialist boat routes, so check the conditions before you go.

📏Depth: About 10–30 m
🎯Best for: Diving and clear-water snorkeling
💡Tip: Visitor numbers are capped — check your trip includes it
Getting There

How to Reach the Similans from Phuket — and How Far It Is

The Similans aren't a close-to-Phuket island like Phi Phi or Phang Nga Bay. They sit off the Phang Nga coast, so you drive north to a pier first, then transfer to a speedboat.

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Leg 1: Phuket van → pier
Tours collect you from your Phuket hotel before dawn, around 5–6 am, and drive north to a pier near Khao Lak and Thap Lamu — about 1.5–2 hours depending on where you're staying in Phuket.
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Leg 2: Speedboat → the Similans
From the pier, a speedboat runs out to the islands in roughly 1.5 hours across open sea, with swells in stretches. The one-way trip from Phuket usually tops three hours, so plan for the whole day.
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Alternative: stay in Khao Lak
If you'd rather skip the long drive from Phuket, Khao Lak (Phang Nga) is far closer to the pier — a later start and a shorter day. A good idea if diving is your main reason for coming.
Costs & Fees

Rough Budget — Honest Numbers

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Day Trip Tour
About 2,500–4,000 THB per person, usually including transfers, lunch, snorkel gear, and a guide. Some include the park fee, some don't — ask before booking.
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National Park Fee
Foreigners pay more than Thais under the standard park rates (typically around 500 THB for foreign adults, around 100 THB for Thais). Rates can change — confirm with your operator or the park department.
🛳️
Liveaboard
From tens of thousands of baht for a 2–4 night trip, depending on the boat's standard and the number of dives. Includes cabin, meals, and tanks. For certified divers.
What to Really Expect

Seasickness, Safety & Season — the Things Tours Gloss Over

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Seasickness is real
The speedboat runs over an hour across open sea and pounds through swells. If you're prone to seasickness, there's a real chance you'll feel ill. Take a tablet 30–60 minutes before boarding, sit mid-boat, watch the horizon, and carry a bag.
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Pick your month carefully
Seas are usually calmest and clearest mid-season (Dec–Mar). Early season (Oct–Nov) and late season (Apr–May) still bring swells, and underwater visibility is more variable.
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Follow the guide and the flags
Always follow your guide and the lifeguards, wear a life jacket if you're not a strong swimmer, and stay within marked areas. In rough conditions tours may cancel or change sites for safety.
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Reef-safe sunscreen
Ordinary sunscreen damages coral, and at times the park bans products with harmful chemicals. Use a reef-safe formula or cover up with a long-sleeve rash guard instead.
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Take nothing from the islands
Removing coral, shells, sand, or marine life from the park is strictly prohibited and penalised — it's a conservation area. Take photos and leave everything where it is.
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Limited signal and power
Phone signal is weak and electricity is limited on the islands. Charge up and download what you need beforehand, and bring a power bank and enough water.
Where to Base Yourself

Your Base Before the Similans — Phuket or Khao Lak

Accommodation on the islands themselves is very limited (a small number of hard-to-book park tents and bungalows), so most people base in Phuket or Khao Lak and visit on a day trip or by liveaboard.

Patong Beach, Phuket — a popular base before island tours
Main Base · Most Options
Stay in Phuket
The widest choice of hotels, restaurants, and tours, and easy to reach — but a longer drive to the pier. Ideal if you're combining the Similans with the rest of Phuket.
Every price level
See Phuket Stays →
Similan diving liveaboard boat anchored off an island
For Divers · Closest to the Sites
Sleep on a Liveaboard
If you're serious about diving, a 2–4 night liveaboard is the way to fit in the most dives and reach far sites like Richelieu Rock.
From tens of thousands THB/trip
See Dive Trips →

See all reviewed Phuket stays →

Plan Your Trip

Keep Planning — Related Phuket Sea Guides

Phuket Island Hopping

Every island off Phuket compared — Phi Phi, Phang Nga Bay, the Similans, Coral Island, Racha. Which tour suits you, and what runs in which season.

Compare Islands →
🏝️

Phi Phi Day Trip

Maya Bay, speedboat vs ferry, snorkel stops, and the go-early trick to beat the crowds — an honest day-trip guide.

See the Plan →
🗿

Phang Nga Bay & James Bond

Ko Tapu, Koh Panyee, sea-canoeing through the caves — a calmer-water sea trip that still runs in light monsoon.

Read More →
FAQ

Visiting the Similans — Every Question Answered

When are the Similan Islands open — do they really close?
Yes, they really close. Mu Ko Similan National Park shuts every year during the southwest monsoon and is generally open only from around mid-October to mid-May (roughly 15 October to 15 May). It closes for the rest of the year because the seas are rough and dangerous, and to let the reefs recover. During the closure all boat tours stop. The exact opening and closing dates shift slightly each year — Thailand's national park department announces them annually. Before you plan, always check the latest opening dates, and note that daily visitor numbers are capped, so some periods need advance booking.
What's the difference between a Similan day trip and a liveaboard, and which should I choose?
A day trip is a there-and-back run by speedboat from a pier near Khao Lak and Thap Lamu in Phang Nga. It suits people who want to snorkel and walk the beaches — expect roughly 2,500–4,000 THB per person including transfers from Phuket, lunch, and fees, but it's a long, tiring day with a lengthy speedboat ride. A liveaboard is a boat you sleep on for 2–4 nights, built for certified SCUBA divers who want several dives a day and access to far sites like Koh Bon, Koh Tachai, and Richelieu Rock. Liveaboards start in the tens of thousands of baht. If you only want to snorkel, a day trip is enough. If you're serious about diving, choose a liveaboard.
How far are the Similans from Phuket and how long does it take?
Reasonably far. The Similans sit off the Phang Nga coast — they are not a close-to-Phuket island like Phi Phi or Phang Nga Bay. Most day trips collect you from your Phuket hotel before dawn, around 5–6 am, drive north to a pier near Khao Lak and Thap Lamu in about 1.5–2 hours, then transfer to a speedboat for roughly another 1.5 hours. All in, the one-way journey from Phuket is usually over three hours, so set aside the whole day. If you'd rather not sit in a van for so long, staying in Khao Lak puts you much closer to the pier than Phuket.
Will the speedboat to the Similans make me seasick, and how do I prepare?
Honestly, the speedboat runs over an hour across open sea and pounds through swells, so if you're prone to seasickness there's a real chance you'll feel ill — especially early season (Oct–Nov) or late season (Apr–May) when the sea is still choppy. Take a motion-sickness tablet 30 minutes to an hour before boarding, sit in the middle of the boat where it rolls least, keep your eyes on the horizon, and carry a bag just in case. If you suffer badly, a liveaboard on a larger, steadier boat may be more comfortable than a day-trip speedboat.
How much is the Similan Islands national park fee?
Mu Ko Similan National Park charges an entry fee, and foreigners pay more than Thai nationals under the standard national park rates (typically around 500 THB for foreign adults and around 100 THB for Thais, with children roughly half). Many day-trip operators include this fee in their price, but some charge it separately, so ask before you book. Rates can change — confirm with your tour operator or the national park department before you go.
What should I pack for snorkeling the Similans?
Bring reef-safe sunscreen (ordinary sunscreen damages coral, and at times the park bans products containing harmful chemicals), a long-sleeve rash guard or swim shirt, a hat and sunglasses, motion-sickness tablets for the speedboat, a waterproof dry bag for your phone, and drinking water. Most tours provide a mask and fins, though you can bring your own if you prefer. Never remove coral, shells, or sand from the park — it's strictly prohibited.
Ready to Go

Check the Park's Opening Dates
and Book a Similan Tour Before It Fills

The Similans are open only half the year and cap daily numbers, so high-season tours sell out fast. Open the full Phuket guide to plan the whole trip — or start browsing Similan tours now.

🤿 Book Similan Tour Phuket Guide