Where to Stay

Where to stay on Koh Larn — day trip vs overnight & booking

Most people don't stay — and the island is built around that. But spend one night and Koh Larn becomes a different, quieter place once the last day ferry leaves. Rooms are limited and concentrated, so book ahead in high season. We rank experiences, not paid listings, so here's the honest shape of it.

Updated 16 June 2026 · We visit. We don't sell placement.

The big decision

Day trip, or stay the night?

Day trip

For: Most visitors. Cheapest and simplest — first ferry over, last ferry back.

  • No booking needed
  • Cheapest option
  • But: you share the island with the crowd and miss sunset
Overnight

For: Couples and anyone chasing quiet, sunset and an empty morning beach.

  • The island empties after the day ferries
  • Sunset and dawn swims to yourself
  • But: limited rooms, bring cash, book ahead

The island after dark: After the last day-boats leave, Koh Larn is calm and low-key — a handful of open restaurants and bars around Na Baan and Tawaen, quiet beaches, and a proper night sky away from Pattaya's glare. This is mellow island evening, not a party scene; for nightlife, you stay in Pattaya.

Where & what

Where the rooms are

Areas

Na Baan village — The most rooms and the most life after dark — guesthouses and small hotels near the pier, shops and food. Most convenient base.
Tawaen — Beachfront stays near the main action and facilities; livelier and handy for the beach, busier by day.
Quieter beaches — A scattering of resorts and bungalows near beaches like Samae — calmer, but fewer options and you'll want wheels.

Types of stay

฿
Guesthouses & budget rooms — Simple, cheap, mostly around Na Baan.
฿฿
Mid-range hotels & bungalows — More comfort near the village and Tawaen.
฿฿–฿฿฿
Beachfront resorts — A limited number of nicer stays near the main beaches.
Booking

How to book — before it sells out

Book ahead — Koh Larn has limited rooms and they genuinely sell out on weekends, Thai public holidays and through the cool-season peak (Nov–Feb). Standard hotel apps list most island stays; the cheapest village guesthouses may only take walk-ins or phone bookings. Reconfirm what's open if you're visiting in the low season.

  • Book ahead in peak season and on holiday weekends — rooms genuinely sell out.
  • Bring cash; small properties may not take cards and ATMs are few.
  • Confirm what's open out of season before committing to a quiet beach.
  • Pack for a quiet evening — bring anything you can't buy at a village shop.
The network
Stay across Pattaya