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Phuket
Thailand · 4-day guide

Phuket in 4 Days: Beaches, Old Town & Island Hops

The west-coast beaches and sunset viewpoints, Old Phuket Town's Sino-Portuguese streets, a Phang Nga or island day, and the night markets — a practical four-day Phuket plan with real stops, Maps links, where to stay and what to budget.

Phuket is bigger and more varied than its party-island reputation suggests: a string of west-coast beaches, a genuinely lovely old town of Sino-Portuguese shophouses, viewpoints and temples in the hills, and the limestone islands just offshore. Four days is the sweet spot — enough for a beach base, the old town, and a day out on the water without spending every hour in transit.

This four-day plan keeps you on the calmer west coast, saves the heat for the beaches and the cooler hours for sightseeing, and builds in one island or Phang Nga Bay day. Phuket's distances are real, so the route groups things sensibly — and every stop links to Google Maps.

At a glance

Ideal length
4–6 days
Where to base
Kata / Karon or Patong
Budget · mid-range
S$70–150 / day
Getting around
Phuket is a big island with no metro and limited public transport, so getting around means Grab (cheaper, but not allow…

Your day-by-day Phuket route

A 4-day Phuket route

A west-coast beach day and a sunset viewpoint, Old Phuket Town's shophouses and cafés, an island or Phang Nga Bay day, then temples, markets and a final beach — paced around the heat and the distances.

Icons, a Patong beach-and-nightlife day, a Phi Phi island day, then the Old Town near the airport.

Day 1

Big Buddha, Wat Chalong, viewpoints & sunset

~4 km on footmedium travel load

If it rains The temple halls give cover; swap the cape sunset for an Old Town dinner if it's wet.

Add if you have time A swim at Kata before the viewpoint.

Day 2

Patong beaches & nightlife

~4 km on footmedium travel load

If it rains Heavy monsoon surf can close the beaches — heed red flags and switch to a mall or the Old Town.

Add if you have time A longtail to a quieter cove.

Day 3

Phi Phi Islands by speedboat

~3 km on foothigh travel load
Dinner
Evening

If it rains Pick a calm-weather day or swap to sheltered Phang Nga Bay.

Add if you have time Add Bamboo Island snorkelling.

Day 4

Sino-Portuguese Old Town & street food

~6 km on footlow travel load

If it rains The museums, mansion and cafés are all indoors.

Add if you have time A Phuket-style coffee on Thalang Road.

Route last checked 2026-06-14 — verify hours and bookings before you go.

Want this as an interactive guide you can reshape by length, budget and pace — with the maps, food and a one-tap PDF?

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Where to stay in Phuket

Phuket is big — where you stay shapes your trip. Kata/Karon are the relaxed, swimmable beaches; Patong is the loud, lively main strip; the north (Bang Tao/Surin/Mai Khao) holds the quiet luxury resorts near the airport; and Phuket Old Town is the cultural, food-led base (not on a beach). Many travellers split between a beach and the Old Town.

Kata / Karon

Relaxed, family-friendly swimming beaches

Patong

The main beach, shopping and nightlife (busy and loud)

Bang Tao / Surin / Mai Khao (north)

Quiet luxury resorts near the airport

Phuket Old Town

Culture, cafés and the best food (not beachfront)

By budget

Rates and availability change constantly — confirm with the hotel or a booking site before paying.

What to budget for Phuket

Per person, per day, excluding flights. A rough guide only — your costs depend on season, area and pace.

Budget

S$35–70 / day
  • Accommodation: Hostel or guesthouse in the Old Town or Karon (฿400–1,000).
  • Meals: Old Town and market food — Hokkien mee, kanom jeen, the walking street, Banzaan court (฿50–150/meal).
  • Transport: Songthaews, the occasional Grab, walking the Old Town and beaches.
  • Attractions: Free beaches, the Big Buddha, Wat Chalong, viewpoints, the Old Town.
  • Evening: Sunset at Promthep or the beach, the Lard Yai/Naka markets.

Mid-range

S$70–150 / day
  • Accommodation: 3–4 star pool resort near the beach (฿1,500–4,000).
  • Meals: Bib Gourmand Phuket food and seafront seafood — Tu Kab Khao, One Chun, Rawai (฿150–500/meal).
  • Transport: A car with driver for a day of sights; Grab/taxi otherwise.
  • Attractions: Add an island day trip (Phi Phi or Phang Nga), an ethical elephant sanctuary, a beach club.
  • Evening: A Southern Thai dinner, then a beach-club sunset or the Old Town bars.

Comfortable

S$150–400 / day
  • Accommodation: 5-star beach resort or pool villa in the north or Surin (฿5,000–25,000+).
  • Meals: A one-Michelin-star tasting menu (PRU) as a special night, plus premium seafood (฿1,500–5,000+/head).
  • Transport: Private car and driver; speedboat charters for the islands.
  • Attractions: Add a private island charter, a spa day, a sunset yacht.
  • Evening: A starred dinner, then a luxe beach club or yacht sundowner.

When to visit Phuket

Phuket's two seasons matter for the sea and island trips. Treat this as general guidance and check the forecast, sea conditions and beach flags close to your dates.

Dry season (best) Nov, Dec, Jan, Feb, Mar

Hot and mostly dry, roughly 27–33°C, with calm, clear Andaman water — the prime window.

Ideal for everything — beaches, islands and the Old Town. Book island trips early.

Look out for: Calm seas and clear water, Similan Islands open, Peak sunsets at Promthep

Shoulder (hot / changeable) Apr, Oct

Hot (up to ~35°C) in April; October is the tail of the monsoon — changeable.

Check sea conditions before booking island trips; keep Old Town culture and indoor options as backups.

Look out for: Songkran (April), Phuket Vegetarian Festival (Sep/Oct)

Green (monsoon) season May, Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep

Warm and humid, 26–32°C, with the southwest monsoon — rougher seas and surf.

Respect red-flag warnings — drowning risk is real. Favour calmer Phang Nga Bay over open-sea trips, the Old Town, and sheltered activities.

Look out for: Dramatic surf and skies, Best resort deals

Common Phuket mistakes to avoid

Good to know in Phuket

Getting around

  • Hire a car with driver for a day to combine the Big Buddha, Wat Chalong, viewpoints and beaches efficiently.
  • Grab and taxis work for point-to-point, but agree the fare or use the app.
  • Island day trips (Phi Phi, Phang Nga, Similan, Coral Island) go by speedboat/longtail from the piers — book a tour with transfers.
  • Within a beach area, walking and short songthaew/tuk-tuk hops cover most needs.
  • Old Town is small and walkable once you're there.

Phuket has no metro and patchy public transport. Use Grab where available (it's restricted in some tourist zones), metered or airport taxis, or hire a car with driver for a day of touring — often the…

Money & connectivity

  • Cash (THB) for markets, street food and longtails; cards and PromptPay QR accepted in restaurants, malls and resorts. Carry small notes.
  • Cheap tourist SIMs/eSIMs (AIS, TrueMove, dtac) at the airport; reliable 4G. Free Wi-Fi in hotels and cafés.
  • Not expected; rounding up or 20–50 baht for good service is kind. Resorts and higher-end restaurants add service charge.

Local etiquette

  • Dress modestly and cover shoulders/knees at Wat Chalong and the Big Buddha; remove shoes in temple halls.
  • Topless/nude sunbathing is not acceptable; cover up away from the beach.
  • Choose ethical, no-riding elephant sanctuaries — avoid riding and shows.
  • Be wary of jet-ski and 'damage' scams on the busy beaches; photograph any rental before use.
Entry reminder: Many nationalities enter Thailand visa-free for a limited stay, but rules vary by passport and arrivals are generally required to complete the Thailand Digital Arrival Card (TDAC) online before arriving. Confirm your own requirements on the official Thai immigration / TDAC website before booking. Last checked 2026-06-14.

Tourist Police: 1155 · Emergency (police/ambulance/fire): 191 / 1669 · Vachira Phuket Hospital (Phuket Town): 076-361 234 · Keep your hotel name in Thai handy for taxi/Grab drivers.

Phuket — frequently asked questions

Is 4 days enough for Phuket?

4–6 days is the usual recommendation for Phuket. The plan here runs to 4 days, and the full guide builds routes from 1–7 days — so you can shorten or extend it to fit your trip.

What food should I eat in Phuket?

Phuket's highlights include Phuket Hokkien mee (mee Hokkien), Phuket morning dim sum, Tu Kab Khao, One Chun Café & Restaurant, Mee Ton Poe (Hokkien noodle institution) and more. Each is linked to Google Maps in the route above; famous spots queue at peak times, so go off-peak or pick a neighbouring stall.

Where should I stay in Phuket?

Good bases include Kata / Karon (Relaxed, family-friendly swimming beaches); Patong (The main beach, shopping and nightlife (busy and loud)); Bang Tao / Surin / Mai Khao (north) (Quiet luxury resorts near the airport). See "Where to stay" above for the full breakdown by budget.

How much does Phuket cost per day?

Roughly around S$35–70 a day on a budget, S$70–150 mid-range, S$150–400 comfortable per person, excluding flights and accommodation swings. See "Budget" above for what each tier covers.

When is the best time to visit Phuket?

Phuket's two seasons matter for the sea and island trips. Treat this as general guidance and check the forecast, sea conditions and beach flags close to your dates. See "When to go" above for the month-by-month detail.

Do I need a visa for Thailand?

Many nationalities enter Thailand visa-free for a limited stay, but rules vary by passport and arrivals are generally required to complete the Thailand Digital Arrival Card (TDAC) online before arriving. Confirm your own requirements on the official Thai immigration / TDAC website before booking.

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