An honest, side-by-side look at two of Thailand’s most-weighed bases for relocating foreigners — what each does well, and who should pick which.
| Krabi | Koh Samui | |
|---|---|---|
| Cost of living | Low (relative) ✓ | Higher (relative) |
| Beach on the doorstep | Yes | Yes |
| Remote-work / expat scene | Low | Medium ✓ |
| Pace & vibe | Laid-back | Island |
| Getting around | Own vehicle / Grab | Own vehicle / Grab |
| Air connectivity | Regional international airport | Island airport (Samui) |
A check mark flags a clear, objective edge (cheaper, beach access, larger community). Where both are close or it’s down to taste, no winner is marked. Signals are relative orientation, consistent with each city guide.
Krabi is the Andaman coast for people who find Phuket too built-up and expensive. Famous for its towering limestone karsts, mangroves and beaches like Ao Nang and Railay, it offers the same turquoise sea at a noticeably lower cost and a far calmer pace. The trade-off is scale: a smaller expat community, fewer international schools and hospitals, and a more local, low-key town. It suits nature-lovers and budget-minded long-stayers more than those who want city conveniences.
Koh Samui offers the postcard version of island living — coconut palms, white-sand beaches and a warm Gulf sea — with the rare advantage of its own international airport, so you are not stuck on a ferry. It has a real, if smaller, expat and remote-work community, decent private healthcare and an international school, making genuine long-term living possible. But island life is island life: higher prices for imported goods, a car-dependent layout and the realities of monsoon season and ferry-dependent supply chains.
Look elsewhere if: Look elsewhere if you need international schools, specialist healthcare, a big social scene or city amenities — Phuket has the infrastructure (at a price), Chiang Mai the community, and Bangkok everything.
Look elsewhere if: Look elsewhere if you need big-city amenities, low costs, strong public transport, or top-tier specialist healthcare on your doorstep — Chiang Mai and Pattaya offer more community and services for less, and Bangkok the full city.
Pros
Cons
Pros
Cons
Is Krabi or Koh Samui cheaper to live in?
Krabi is generally the cheaper of the two (low vs higher). These are relative orientations — your actual budget depends on the district, building and your lifestyle, so use our cost-of-living tool for real numbers.
Which is better for digital nomads, Krabi or Koh Samui?
Koh Samui has the stronger remote-work and expat scene of the two — easier to plug into a community and find coworking. Read each city guide for the detail.
Does Krabi or Koh Samui have beaches?
Both are by the sea.
How do I choose between Krabi and Koh Samui?
Lead with the deal-breakers: budget, whether you need the beach, how big a ready-made community matters, and your pace. The table and the "choose Krabi / choose Koh Samui" section above map each city to who it suits. Then read the full guides and pick the neighbourhood with our area tools.
Now find the right neighbourhood and home — compare areas, run the cost numbers, and explore long-stay residences.
General information only — not legal, immigration, tax or financial advice. Rents, prices, seasons and rules change and depend on your situation and the exact location; verify current figures and requirements locally before you commit. BAANLYY takes no paid placement.