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The Koh Samui Guide

Thailand travel expertise | Est. 2008

The Koh Samui Guide
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8 Ways Koh Samui Has Changed since 2003

  • July 10, 2020
Koh Samui's History and Development: 8 Ways Koh Samui Has Changed from 2003 to 2020
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As of August 2020, we’ll have been visiting Koh Samui for seventeen years (see our top 10 trip highlights from our first visit to Koh Samui).

Since the early 2000s are a blur of bad fashion and questionable pop (taking a hard look at Avril Lavigne for both counts), the time in between has merged into an undefined clump of memories, and it’s all gone by very quickly. But seventeen years?! A fitting occasion to examine what’s changed around Koh Samui since we’ve known it.

8 Ways Koh Samui Has Changed since 2003

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Koh Samui history

Koh Samui History: 8 Ways Koh Samui Has Changed from 2003 to Today
Photos of His Late Majesty King Bhumibol Adulyadej’s visit to Koh Samui in 1962

There’s a nostalgic thread on TripAdvisor for old-time Koh Samui visitors, those who arrived in the first and second wave of backpackers in the 1970s and 1980s. Stories toe the “back in my day” hardship line of dirt tracks and genuine beach bungalows – thatched huts and nothing more. In fact, one of Chaweng’s first beach bungalow establishments was the site of today’s minimalist hotel, The Library (built and run by the original owners’ son). It’s hard to imagine Chaweng as a quiet backwater and a reminder of Samui’s development over the past 30-40 years. But what about more recent history?

1. Restaurants come and go

Koh Samui History: 8 Ways Koh Samui Has Changed from 2003 to Today
Coco Tam’s in 2005

 

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A post shared by The Koh Samui Guide (@kohsamuiguide) on Dec 11, 2019 at 3:15am PST


^Coco Tam’s today

While some of our favourite restaurants from our first trip have long since shut, others remain as firm island fixtures. In 2003, we made friends with the staff at our favourite restaurant. Today we look forward to catching up every visit; they’ve all since grown up, got married, had kids… and have got much better at English than we have at Thai. In general, Koh Samui’s restaurant options have really improved in both quality and variety in the past seventeen years.

2. Internet stopped making screechy noises

Koh Samui History: 8 Ways Koh Samui Has Changed from 2003 to Today
The Jungle Club in 2007
The Jungle Club, Koh Samui, in 2020
The Jungle Club in 2020

We have clear memories of walking down Choeng Mon Beach in 2003 to find an internet café… enduring dial-up … which we paid for by the minute. (Once successful, we then logged in to Hotmail, as Gmail didn’t exist). No such thing as Skype, Facebook or WhatsApp. Or iPhones. This will be the black and white era we tell our children about in suffering tones.

Rest assured that Samui’s WiFi speeds today are easily capable of Skype, Netflix and YouTube, and it’s available in-room in most (non-budget) hotels and resorts. Thankfully you can enjoy the best of both worlds – today, Choeng Mon Beach only looks like the sort of place that should have dial-up internet.

3. Someone fixed the infrastructure

Koh Samui History: 8 Ways Koh Samui Has Changed from 2003 to Today
An island dirt road in 2007
A Koh Samui island road in 2020
A Koh Samui island road in 2020

Improvements to the islands roads and drain systems have vastly diminished flooding during rainy season and heavy storms. You’ll still get soaked (and are just as likely to ride a scooter through a pothole) but it’s much, much better. Electrical upgrades are ongoing, too. Maybe in 2037 we’ll hardly remember what a power cut entails?

4. High-end hotels arrived

Koh Samui History: 8 Ways Koh Samui Has Changed from 2003 to Today
A ‘secret beach’ in 2008 – today, the home of Ritz-Carlton Koh Samui

Flip through a travel magazine for the region today, and there are ads for every five-star hotel brand out there:

  • Conrad Koh Samui
  • Four Seasons Resort
  • Banyan Tree Samui
  • InterContinental Samui
  • Ritz-Carlton Koh Samui

The gang’s all here! All of these have opened in the past fifteen years. While it’s often suggested that Koh Samui is going “upmarket”, there remains a great variety of accommodation – both in price and ambience – and independent favourites are going strong.

Poppies Samui in 2020
Poppies Samui in 2020 – an island favourite for 26 years

For boutique choices, Poppies in Chaweng is as gorgeous as ever – it celebrates its 26th year in 2020. This ‘upmarket upswing’ hasn’t wiped out the budget options, rather, the fancy stuff is now there if you want it.

5. Jet-skis

Koh Samui History: 8 Ways Koh Samui Has Changed from 2003 to Today
Choeng Mon Beach in 2003

Yes, they’ve arrived too.

6. Traffic showed up

Koh Samui History: 8 Ways Koh Samui Has Changed from 2003 to Today
Bophut Beach in 2005

With bigger and better hotels, and nice, new roads comes a brand new phenomenon: traffic! Hard to believe that island time can have such a thing as rush hour – but we suppose you can’t pick and choose life’s realities. Koh Samui’s quieter south and west coasts remain pretty sleepy – unless you meet an unloading ferry in Lipa Noi.

Operating a highly successful six-a-day spay and neuter programme, DCRS has neutered 13,000 dogs and counting.

7. Stray dogs got the snip-snip

A casual street scene on Koh Samui has far fewer stray dogs today than it did in 2003. On occasions, we’ve looked around and wondered “where did they all go?!” This is the fantastic work of the Dog and Cat Rescue Samui (DCRS), which opened in 1999, and recent help from Soi Dog Foundation. The majority of Samui’s stray dogs look much healthier today as well. We remember seeing some very sorry looking puppy dogs, many affected with mange, but they’re today a much healthier looking bunch. Again, all kudos to Dog and Cat Rescue Samui, who offer vaccination and treatment to dogs all over the island.

8. Island landmarks

Koh Samui History: 8 Ways Koh Samui Has Changed from 2003 to Today
Fisherman’s Village Pier in 2003
The old Fisherman's Village Pier in 2020
The old Fisherman’s Village Pier in 2020

Not only did Koh Samui Airport undergo redevelopment with a large new terminal, but Big Buddha has had additions too. The ‘wheel of life’ behind his head was added a few years ago. As well, the pier in Fishermen’s Village today looks a bit sturdier than the 2003 version, above.

While there are surely many other changes besides, these are just a few superficial things that stand out from our small collection of photos. Some of our photos of our first trip are scanned from a film camera. Remember those relics?

What will Koh Samui look like in another seventeen years?

Koh Samui History: 8 Ways Koh Samui Has Changed from 2003 to Today
Koh Samui’s south coast in 2008

We expect that the next fifteen years will bring an increase in green and environmental offerings: The Tongsai Bay and Six Senses Samui lead the way in terms of wildlife care and habitat management, and eco and/or locally grown products are starting to appear: things like Samui coconut oil and DEET-free mosquito repellant. For our part, having learned some hard lessons about sunscreen and wide-brimmed hats, we hope to look much the same as we do today.

The Koh Samui Guide’s 7th edition

The Koh Samui Guide: 2020 Koh Samui Travel Guide
For a top-to-bottom picture of Koh Samui today, we’ve just updated The Koh Samui Guide for 2020 – it’s totally ready to help you plan your perfect trip. Enjoy!

8 Ways Koh Samui Has Changed since 20038 Ways Koh Samui Has Changed since 2003
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