{"ok":true,"data":{"id":10913,"slug":"haad-pak-phra-takua-pa","name":"Haad Pak Phra","country":"Thailand","state":"Phang Nga","city":"Takua Pa","coords":{"lat":8.377,"lng":98.265},"beachType":"Sandy","tags":["hidden","Instagrammable"],"article":{"hero":"The pier's planks have weathered to silver-gray, many missing entirely, revealing the skeletal structure beneath—creosote-soaked posts wrapped in barnacles and green sea moss that glisten when waves retreat. At low tide, you can walk under the structure, threading between pilings where crabs scuttle sideways and tide pools hold stranded fish waiting for water to return. The sand here packs hard and dark, heavy with iron oxide that stains your feet rust-colored and requires actual scrubbing to remove.\n\nPhotographers claim spots along the beach before five in the afternoon, testing angles and checking light meters while vendors set up folding chairs and coolers filled with Leo beer and sliced pineapple. The sunset, when it arrives clear, turns the sky into bands of orange, magenta, and purple that reflect off wet sand in near-perfect mirror images. Silhouettes of the pier against this color-saturated backdrop explain the Instagram fame—every shot looks professionally composed even from a phone camera. But the spectacle depends entirely on cloud cover; overcast evenings deliver nothing but gray disappointment and early departures.\n\nA concrete boat ramp angles into the water at the southern end, stained with engine oil and littered with cigarette butts. During monsoon season, the beach disappears entirely under storm surge that pushes debris against the beachfront road—plastic bottles, driftwood, tangles of fishing net. By November, the sand returns and the sunset chasers resume their evening migrations, each hoping to capture that one shot nobody else has managed yet, though the pier has been photographed ten thousand times already.","teaser":"The wooden pier extends two hundred meters into the Andaman, its pilings listing at drunken angles after decades of tidal surge. Influencers arrive two hours before dusk, tripods in hand, waiting for the light that made this beach a social media pilgrimage.","uniqueAngle":"The only Andaman beach where a derelict fishing pier has become more famous than the water, drawing photographers rather than swimmers.","accessType":"Roadside parking off Route 4","thingsToDo":[{"icon":"camera","title":"Golden hour shoot","subtitle":"Pier silhouettes against vivid sunsets"},{"icon":"hike","title":"Low-tide exploration","subtitle":"Walk beneath weathered pier pilings"},{"icon":"food","title":"Beachside vendor snacks","subtitle":"Grilled corn and fresh pineapple"},{"icon":"sun","title":"Late afternoon lounging","subtitle":"Watch photographers jockey for position"}],"audience":{"surfer":"The beach faces due west into the Andaman with no reef or sandbar to shape incoming swells, meaning waves arrive as disorganized closeouts that dump directly on shore. Even during monsoon season when southwest swells run, you're looking at shorebreak that slams into sand with nowhere to channel. No shoulder, no face, no ride—just whitewater that punishes anyone paddling out. The nearest surfable wave sits forty kilometers south where a reef provides actual structure.","couples":"Arrive an hour before sunset when the beach empties of day-trippers but before the photography crowd establishes territory, and you'll have a brief window of relative solitude. Walk the pier's intact sections hand-in-hand—carefully, watching for missing planks—and you'll feel the structure sway with wave action, unsettling but thrilling. Pack a blanket and beer from the 7-Eleven up the road, and watch the sky perform its nightly color show while sitting on sand still warm from afternoon sun. Skip this entirely during monsoon months when storms erase the beach.","backpacker":"This is a sunset stop, not a destination—you'll spend an hour here maximum before moving on. Park your scooter in the dirt lot, walk the pier, grab a photo, and continue north to actual beaches with swimmable water and budget accommodation. The vendors charge forty baht for corn on the cob, reasonable by tourist standards. No guesthouses exist at the beach itself; the nearest budget beds sit in Takua Pa town, ten kilometers inland. Treat this as a photo opportunity between destinations rather than a place to linger.","local":"You remember when this pier still functioned, when fishing boats tied up here and unloaded their catch directly onto trucks headed for Phuket markets. Now it's a photo backdrop, and you watch tourists risk broken ankles walking on rotten planks that should've been condemned years ago. The beach serves its purpose—every visiting relative wants a sunset picture here, so you drive them over, wait in the truck scrolling your phone, and leave when they've captured enough content. The actual fishing moved to Tha Noon pier years ago where the pilings still hold weight.","family":null,"party":null,"diver":null,"explorer":null},"faqs":[{"a":"Haad Pak Phra generally offers safe swimming conditions during the dry season (November-April) when the Andaman Sea is calm. The beach features gentle waves suitable for casual swimming and wading. However, conditions change during monsoon season (May-October) when stronger currents and larger waves can develop. As this is a less-developed beach, lifeguard services may be limited or absent, so swimmers should be cautious and assess conditions carefully. Always check local weather and sea conditions before entering the water, and avoid swimming during storms or rough seas.","q":"Is Haad Pak Phra safe for swimming?"},{"a":"For the best photography, especially the Instagram-worthy sunsets mentioned, visit Haad Pak Phra during the dry season from November to April when skies are clearer and weather is more predictable. The golden hour before sunset (approximately 5:30-6:30pm depending on season) offers spectacular lighting for the beach's unique landscape. Budget travelers will find this beach appealing year-round as it remains uncrowded and undeveloped. Weekdays and early mornings provide the most solitude for photography. The shoulder months of November and April can offer dramatic cloud formations while avoiding peak crowds.","q":"When is the best time to visit Haad Pak Phra for photography?"},{"a":"Haad Pak Phra is located in Takua Pa district, Phang Nga province, approximately 90-100 kilometers north of Phuket International Airport. The most convenient access is by rental car or private taxi, taking about 1.5-2 hours via Highway 4 northbound. You can also take a bus from Phuket to Takua Pa town, then arrange local transportation (motorbike taxi or tuk-tuk) to the beach. From Khao Lak, it's a shorter 30-40 minute drive north. As a hidden beach with limited signage, having GPS navigation or local directions is helpful.","q":"How do I reach Haad Pak Phra from Phuket or other major areas?"},{"a":"Haad Pak Phra is a relatively undeveloped, hidden beach with very limited immediate facilities. For accommodation and meals, you'll need to stay in Takua Pa town (a short drive inland) which offers local guesthouses and authentic Thai restaurants at budget-friendly prices, or in nearby Khao Lak (30-40 minutes south) which has more extensive resort and dining options. The beach itself may have occasional small local food vendors, but facilities are minimal. Bringing your own snacks, water, and beach supplies is advisable, especially if planning to spend several hours there.","q":"What accommodation and dining options exist near Haad Pak Phra?"},{"a":"Haad Pak Phra is known for its distinctive natural landscape that differs from typical Thai beaches. While specific features vary by season and conditions, the beach often showcases dramatic sunset views over the Andaman Sea, interesting rock formations, or unique coastal scenery that creates photogenic backdrops. Its undeveloped, hidden nature means you'll capture authentic, uncrowded beach scenes without the commercialization of popular tourist spots. The combination of natural beauty, solitude, and changing light conditions—especially during golden hour—makes it particularly appealing for photography enthusiasts and Instagram content creators seeking unique Thai beach imagery.","q":"What makes Haad Pak Phra's landscape unique and Instagram-worthy?"}]},"seo":{"title":"Haad Pak Phra Beach: Takua Pa's Hidden Sunset Paradise","description":"Golden sands meet limestone karsts at this secluded Phang Nga cove. Watch crimson sunsets paint ancient rock formations while waves whisper on empty shores.","ogImage":"/api/place-photo?ref=Ab43m-svufopvEYGZIgkA_VR0mcF4oeSplM5wlOnDmQaB3eqL4WA5DYVVH4ZDyKlcH-d2duZFZ7gT9Yqa-t236kLaXy9Tz74hXOnYHkWw-DHlk0v_JNu4qwU85PAZZA27gYbW9OTUUJJwTx22p3A0eTa1zSr2WHo7c1AtBcP8FMuRRqx_rUSR4gO2JgyEqBNQ6VD5jNRpliQ5S19KNPZGR0YmZw48TMibzSYkJY7IgxwTHx9tQDbzOyQH4-QuPPKFbPTCTKnIeFvO09XVm9AH5bGnuTbojwMLyIiPZi7VsjLKSrmnA&w=1600"},"images":[]}}