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Railay (West and Phra Nang beaches), Thailand
Railay (West and Phra Nang beaches)

Andaman Coast

Railay (West and Phra Nang beaches)

The postcard limestone-cliff peninsula off Krabi, reachable only by longtail from Ao Nang โ€” Phra Nang round the headland is the better swim, so go early before the day boats land.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 17 Jun 2026

Where

Krabi, Thailand

Opening hours

The beaches are open access. Longtail boats from Ao Nang run through the day, roughly dawn until early evening, leaving when full and subject to tides and weather; crossings thin out and stop after dark. Confirm current crossing times and prices locally.

Tickets

There is no entry charge for the beaches; the cost is the boat. A shared longtail from Ao Nang is about ยฃ2.30 (roughly 100-150 baht) each way, paid at the beach, with a higher set fare if you charter the whole boat. Boats leave once full. Confirm current crossing times and prices locally.

Time needed

Half a day to a full day, including the 10-15 minute boat crossing each way.

In short

Visiting Railay (West and Phra Nang beaches)

Railay is the postcard limestone-cliff peninsula near Krabi, cut off from the road and reachable only by longtail boat from Ao Nang. Railay West is the main sweep of sand; round the headland, Phra Nang is the prettier beach and the better swim. The boats are cheap but run on a full-up, tide-dependent basis, so go early before the day-trip boats land.

Only by boat โ€” and which beach to head for

Railay is the limestone-cliff peninsula you have seen on every Krabi postcard: sheer karst towers, white sand and turquoise water, cut off from the mainland road by the cliffs themselves. The only way in is by longtail boat, and the usual launch point is Ao Nang beach. A shared longtail runs about 100-150 baht (roughly ยฃ2.30) each way, paid on the sand, and leaves once it has filled up โ€” so there can be a short wait for passengers, and crossings depend on the tide and weather. The hop takes ten to fifteen minutes, and you generally wade the last couple of steps ashore, so plan on wet feet.

You land on Railay West, the broad main sweep of sand that catches the sunset. But the better beach is Phra Nang, a few minutesโ€™ walk round the headland on the eastern side, past the resorts: smaller, prettier, backed by towering cliffs and the well-known cave shrine, with the nicer water for a swim. The two are joined by an easy path, so most people do both.

Beat the day boats

The honest catch is crowds. Railay is a fixed stop on Krabiโ€™s island-hopping and day-trip circuit, and from mid-morning the organised boats pour in and the sand โ€” Phra Nang especially โ€” gets busy and noisy. The fix is simple: go early. Catch one of the first longtails out of Ao Nang and you get quieter beaches, calmer water and the morning light raking across the limestone before the bulk of the boats arrive.

There is no entry fee for the beaches; the boat fare is the whole cost, though chartering a longtail to yourself runs a good deal higher. Crossings thin out and stop after dark, so keep an eye on the last boat back if you stay for the sunset, and confirm current crossing times and prices locally on the day.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Krabi city guide.

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Railay (West and Phra Nang beaches) FAQs

How do you get to Railay?
Only by boat โ€” there is no road in. Shared longtails leave from Ao Nang beach for roughly 100-150 baht (about ยฃ2.30) each way, departing once they have enough passengers, so you may wait for the boat to fill. The crossing takes about 10-15 minutes. Note you usually wade the last few steps to shore, so dress for wet feet.
Is Railay West or Phra Nang the better beach?
Phra Nang, round the headland on the eastern side, is generally the prettier beach and the better swim, backed by cliffs and the famous cave shrine. Railay West is the main arrival beach and the bigger sweep of sand, good for the sunset. Walk between them in a few minutes via the path past the resorts.
When should I go to avoid the crowds?
Go early. By mid-morning the organised day-trip and island-hopping boats land and the beaches fill, especially Phra Nang. Arriving on one of the first longtails gives you quieter sand and calmer water before the crowds, and the morning light on the limestone is at its best.

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