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Island Journal · Food

Where to Eat Halal Food in Koh Phi Phi

By The Phi Phi Island Collection · Updated June 2026 · 5 min read

Good news for Muslim travelers: yes, there is genuinely halal food on Koh Phi Phi — and not just an afterthought. The island has a local Muslim community, a mosque in the village, and a halal-certified Thai kitchen serving the real thing. Here's the honest guide to eating well.

A Muslim community most visitors miss

Behind the beach bars and dive shops, Koh Phi Phi has a settled local Muslim community and a mosque in Tonsai Village. That matters, because it means halal food here isn't a tourist gimmick — it's what part of the island actually eats. You don't have to survive on plain rice and fruit. You can eat proper southern Thai food, made the authentic way.

The honest distinction: Halal-certified means a kitchen is formally certified to Islamic dietary law. Halal-friendly means no pork, no alcohol, and happy to accommodate — but not formally certified. Knowing the difference lets you choose with confidence.

The halal-certified kitchen: The Locals

The Locals — Authentic Thai Curry & Street Food is the island's halal-certified Thai kitchen, and it's exactly where you want to eat. This is "authentic Thai food where the locals eat" — curries simmered the slow way, southern heat, and the kind of cooking you'd otherwise only find in a family kitchen. Because it's certified, you can order freely without second-guessing.

What to order:

Halal-friendly breakfast & coffee

For mornings, Aroi Café is halal-friendly — no pork, no alcohol, and happy to accommodate Muslim guests, though not formally certified. It's the spot for a quiet coffee and breakfast before the village wakes up: classic breakfasts, Thai morning favourites, fresh juices. If certification is essential to you, stick to the certified kitchen for main meals and enjoy Aroi for coffee and lighter bites — and ask the staff, who are used to the question.

Eating halal on the island — practical tips

Plan the rest of your trip: see the honest island itinerary, the best time to visit, and more things to do on Koh Phi Phi.

Frequently asked questions

Is there halal food on Koh Phi Phi?

Yes. The island has a local Muslim community and a mosque, and The Locals serves halal-certified authentic Thai food. Several other kitchens are halal-friendly.

What's the difference between halal-certified and halal-friendly?

Certified means formally certified to Islamic dietary law. Friendly means no pork or alcohol and able to accommodate, but not certified. The Locals is certified; cafés like Aroi are halal-friendly.

Where is the mosque?

In Tonsai Village on Phi Phi Don, serving the local community — within walking distance of the island's halal kitchens.

What should I order?

The curries — massaman, green, southern-style — plus pad krapow, tom yum, and khao gaeng (curry over rice), the way the locals eat.

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