Best Time to Visit Koh Phi Phi — An Honest Month-by-Month Guide
We live here, so let's skip the brochure version. The short answer: November to April for clear, calm seas, with March as the sweet spot. But the green season is quietly the island's best-kept secret — here's the honest breakdown, month by month.
The quick answer
If you want postcard weather and calm crossings, come between November and April. Within that window, March is our favourite: the seas are settled, the days are bright, and the December–February crowds have thinned. If you care more about value, space and a lush, green island, the May–October green season is genuinely good — and far cheaper.
High season: November to April
This is the classic window. Skies are clear, the Andaman Sea is calm, and ferries run on time. Visibility for diving and snorkelling is excellent, and sunsets are reliable.
- November: the weather is settling after the rains, prices are still moderate, and crowds haven't peaked. A smart shoulder month.
- December–February: peak season. The best weather, the coolest temperatures (around 23–34°C), and the most people. Book accommodation and tours ahead.
- March: the sweet spot — great weather, warm water, and noticeably fewer crowds than the December peak.
- April: hot and still mostly dry, building toward Songkran (Thai New Year). Lively, warm, and the tail end of reliable calm seas.
Green season: May to October (don't write it off)
Most guides tell you to avoid it. We'd push back. The "monsoon" here usually means short afternoon bursts, not all-day rain — and in return you get a different, arguably better island:
- 30–50% cheaper rooms and tours, and far fewer people.
- The island turns lush and emerald, and sunsets get dramatic.
- Diving can be brilliant — warmer water and more marine life around.
- Seas are livelier, so keep mornings flexible for the odd shower or a rescheduled boat.
Late October is, to us, the best value of the entire year: the weather is improving, the crowds haven't returned, and you're still paying low-season prices.
Beating the crowds, any month
Timing your day matters more than timing your trip. A few honest moves:
- Maya Bay: a 6 AM longtail from Tonsai gets you near-empty sand for about half an hour. Avoid tours arriving after 10 AM; Tuesday–Thursday are quietest. The 400 THB park fee usually isn't included.
- Viewpoints: hike up around 9 AM while the island sleeps off the night. Best light is 10 to 2.
- Monkey Beach: admire it from the water, don't linger — the monkeys are stressed by crowds and can bite. (More honest island advice is in The Local's Guide.)
What to do once you're here
However you time it, the island rewards a slow, local rhythm. A morning coffee at Aroi Café before the boats, a halal curry lunch where the island actually eats at The Locals, a recovery massage at Highseason Thai Massage after a viewpoint climb, and — when you want somewhere more special after midnight — the hidden staircase up to Scubar. And if the island catches you off guard, Highseason Wellness Clinic is open until midnight. See the full day in Things to Do on Koh Phi Phi.
Frequently asked questions
What is the best month to visit Koh Phi Phi?
March is the sweet spot — clear, calm seas and great weather with fewer crowds than the December–February peak. November to April is the overall dry, calm window.
Is the green season (May–October) a bad time to visit?
No. It's 30–50% cheaper, far less crowded, and the island is at its most lush, with often-excellent diving. Seas are livelier and boats can occasionally be delayed. Late October is arguably the best value of the year.
When is Maya Bay least crowded?
Take a longtail from Tonsai Pier around 6 AM for near-empty sand. Avoid group tours arriving after 10 AM; Tuesday–Thursday are quietest.
Does it rain all day during monsoon?
Usually not — rain tends to come in short afternoon bursts. Plan boats and outdoor activities for the morning and keep the afternoon flexible.