This very cozy sandy beach, about a kilometer long, is located in the north of Phuket. Its distinguishing feature is that even in the high season there are not very many tourists on the beach. The difference is felt when compared with the beaches of Patong or Karon Beach.
The beach is not wild: on the shore you can rent a sunbed and an umbrella, sit in a Thai cafe. Services on the beach do not end: just across the road from it you can find hotels, massage parlors and restaurants - if you want to escape the sun, you can do this by hiding on the veranda. There are no cafes or restaurants on the beach itself.
The main plus of the beach is that it is amazingly beautiful here and there are no noisy discos nearby, which prevent you from pensively wallowing on the sand and slowly forgetting your bustling hometown in the company of half a coconut, in which a refreshing Mojito is poured. There is only one minus at the beach: when tourists leave Thailand and the low season begins, there is a lot of garbage on the beach. The sea brings everything in it to the shore, so you can walk on the sand, drowning in long shaggy seaweed, bumping into coconut shells and whole coconuts, and sometimes finding the wreckage of old boats.
In general, this is even a plus if you have a child who is eager to play sea robbers, because he may well put a note in one of the bottles, and make a small pirate ship out of old wreckage.
You can get to the beach this way: from Phuket Airport 4 kilometers to the south, you need a road called Thep Krasat Tri Nai Yang, after which you turn right at the intersection and follow the signs, after 3.5 kilometers you will find yourself on the beach.
There is no entrance fee to the beach, and for 100 THB per day you can take both a sunbed and an umbrella. The sand on the beach is white and yellow, and in order to get to the depth, you will have to move 20 meters from the coast. During the rainy season, there are days when the beach is closed and the sea becomes rough here, so it is best to visit here during the high season.