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Krabi Town travel by somtamgirl

Thailand · city guide

Krabi Town: the cheaper, more local base

A riverside town, a weekend night market, and the lowest prices in Krabi.

Krabi Town is the spot I'd point you to if you want the cheapest, most local base in Krabi. It sits inland on the river, away from the beaches, so it's where the buses, boats and airport transfers all connect, and where your money stretches the furthest. Half of me is Thai, and this is the side of Krabi that feels most like everyday Thailand to me: a real working town rather than a resort strip. You can still reach Ao Nang and the islands easily, but you sleep cheaper and eat better. Here's exactly how I'd spend a day or two.

  • The cheapest, most local base in Krabi
  • Transport hub for buses, boats & the airport
  • Weekend walking-street night market for dinner
Where to stay in Thailand

Best things to do

Eat your way through the weekend night market

The walking-street market takes over the centre Friday to Sunday evenings, and dinner here costs next to nothing. Grab a few plates, find a plastic stool, and watch the town come out to eat. My favourite cheap night in Krabi.

~100 THB for dinner · 1-2 hrs

Climb Wat Tham Suea (Tiger Cave Temple)

1,237 steps straight up to a golden Buddha and a view that swallows the whole valley. It's a proper sweaty climb, so go early before the heat and bring water. Cover your shoulders and knees, it's a working temple.

Free · Half day

Wander the riverfront and markets

Stroll the Chao Fah pier and the riverside walk, past the famous crab sculptures, then poke through the day market for fruit and coffee. The easiest free morning here, and the most local.

Free · 1-2 hrs

Boat out to the islands from Krabi pier

Krabi Town is a launch point too: longtails and ferries leave from the piers here for Railay, the islands and beyond. Agree the price before you climb on.

Boat day trip · Full day

Where to stay

BudgetKrabi Town centreA simple guesthouse or hostel near the river and the night market, genuinely cheap and walkable to everything in town. This is where the local base really pays off.Stays coming soon
Mid-rangeRiverside Krabi TownA comfortable small hotel near the waterfront, an easy stroll to the market and the piers, with a pool for the hot afternoons.Stays coming soon
Treat yourselfNear Krabi TownThe splurge here is a resort just outside town, set in the limestone countryside with a proper pool, away from the beach crowds and still cheaper than Ao Nang.Stays coming soon

Getting there & around

Fly into Krabi airport, then it's about 20 minutes into Krabi Town by airport bus, taxi or shared minibus, cheaper and quicker than the run out to the beaches. The town is the transport hub for the whole province, so this is also where the buses to Phuket and the south, and the boats to the islands, all leave from. Once you're here the centre is small and walkable, songthaews (the shared trucks) run out to Ao Nang for next to nothing, and scooters are cheap if you're confident on the roads, always wear a helmet.

Eat & drink

  • The weekend walking-street market — Where I'd eat every night it's on: grilled skewers, noodle bowls, fresh fruit and Thai sweets, all for pocket change.
  • Riverside day market stalls — Morning roti, southern curries and proper local coffee by the river, the everyday Thai breakfast I always come back for.

Day trips

Ao NangThe easiest beach base, about 30 minutes out by songthaew, for the sand and the longtails to the islands.
RailayBoat-access only, dramatic limestone cliffs and quiet beaches, reachable by longtail from the Krabi Town piers.

On the map

Every spot from this guide, pinned on one map — coming soon.

Book this trip

A few of these earn me a small cut at no extra cost to you — only ever things I'd actually book.

Frequently asked

Should I base myself in Krabi Town or Ao Nang?

Krabi Town if budget is the priority. It's the cheapest, most local base, with the weekend night market and easy transport everywhere, though you're inland rather than on the sand. Ao Nang is the easier pick if you want to walk straight onto the beach and the island boats.

Is the Tiger Cave Temple climb worth it?

Yes, if your knees are up for it. It's 1,237 steps straight up and a genuine sweat, but the view over the limestone valley at the top is one of the best in Krabi. Go early, bring water, and cover your shoulders and knees for the temple.

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