Ko Chang is the big Trat island for travellers who want more than a simple beach resort. The Thai National Parks page covers Mu Ko Chang National Park and its island setting.
The island rewards active planning: waterfall mornings, beach afternoons, scooter caution, ferry timing and weather checks all affect how good the trip feels.
Why Go

Ko Chang is large enough to offer different moods: busier beaches, quieter coastlines, waterfalls, viewpoints and boat trips. That variety makes it useful for travellers who find tiny islands too limited but do not want Phuket or Samui scale.
Use it with TFT Travel, Hotels and Wellness guides when deciding between Trat, Gulf and Andaman islands.
Beach Choice

Pick the beach zone before choosing a hotel. White Sand Beach is convenient and busier, while other stretches can feel calmer but require more transport planning. The right beach depends on whether you want nightlife, families, swimming, quiet or easy food options.
Do not assume every resort solves transport. Roads can be steep, wet and dark, so staying near the things you want to do is a real safety decision.
Waterfalls And Weather
Waterfalls are a key reason to choose Ko Chang, especially after rain, but trails and roads can be slippery. Wear proper footwear, carry water and check local conditions before committing to a waterfall day.
Rainy-season trips can still be worthwhile, but they need flexibility. Boat trips, viewpoints and waterfalls all respond to weather in different ways.
Who Should Go
Choose Ko Chang for a more varied island trip, active days, waterfall stops and travellers who want a road-and-ferry adventure. Skip it if you want a very flat, walkable island or a short no-friction weekend with guaranteed calm seas.
How To Plan
Start with the reason this stop is on your list, then build the day around that reason instead of trying to make it do everything. For Ko Chang National Park, the decision usually comes down to timing, transport, group energy and whether the surrounding area supports the rest of the plan. A strong visit can still feel weak if it is placed after too many errands, a long taxi ride or a meal that leaves no time to enjoy the main point. Keep the schedule simple and protect the one detail that matters most.
Check current opening hours, reservation routes, weather and transport before leaving, especially if the visit depends on a specific table, view, ferry, staircase, mall event or daylight window. Bangkok and Thailand plans often fail at the edges rather than at the main attraction: the final walk is hotter than expected, the return taxi takes longer, the group is underdressed, or the chosen time lands exactly when everyone else arrives. A ten-minute check before departure prevents most of those problems.
For groups, plan around the least flexible person. If someone has mobility limits, spice concerns, a tight budget, a child with them, heavy shopping bags or an early flight the next morning, that detail should shape the visit. It is better to enjoy one well-chosen stop properly than to stack three ambitious stops and spend the day negotiating discomfort. Keep one nearby backup and decide in advance what you will drop if traffic, rain or queues change the mood.
Money and value also deserve a quick reality check. Premium venues, hotel bars, island transfers, temple donations, cafe beans and shopping stops all price their experience differently. Compare the final spend with the experience you actually want, not just the headline. If the point is a view, one drink may be enough. If the point is coffee, buy beans only if you can brew them well. If the point is a cultural or outdoor stop, time, heat and respectful behaviour matter more than trying to rush through a photo list.
Before leaving, save the map pin, the official page and any booking or payment confirmation somewhere you can reach offline. That small habit helps when mobile signal drops, a driver needs the Thai location, a staff member asks for proof, or a rainy-day change forces the group to make a quick decision without searching from scratch.
Good To Know
Province: Trat, eastern Gulf of Thailand.
Best for: beaches, waterfalls, viewpoints, longer island stays and active travellers.
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FAQ
How do I get to Ko Chang?
Most travellers route by road to Trat province and then use the ferry to the island.
Is Ko Chang good in rainy season?
It can be, but keep plans flexible because roads, waterfalls and boat trips depend on weather.
How many nights should I stay?
Three nights is a practical first visit; longer is better if you want waterfalls and boat trips.





