A stunning backdrop for relaxation and adventure.

Banana Beach on Koh Hey feels like a tiny daydream that drifted into the Andaman Sea and decided to stay forever.
The moment your feet touch the sand,
something inside you softens —
your breath, your shoulders, even the thoughts you didn’t realize were heavy.
The water glows in that gentle,
impossible blue,
the breeze brushes past like a warm whisper,
and suddenly the whole beach feels like it’s quietly holding you.
It’s the kind of place that makes you think, “Oh… this is exactly the softness I needed.”
It’s playful without noise, luxurious without effort, and dreamy in that slow, sun‑kissed way that makes time feel beautifully irrelevant.
A warm, barefoot kind of luxury
Banana Beach doesn’t try to impress you. It simply exists beautifully — confident, soft, and wrapped in sunlight. Everything here feels like a gentle reminder that “life doesn’t have to be loud to be beautiful.”
- The water shimmers like it’s sharing a secret.
- The sand warms your steps until you naturally slow down.
- The whole beach moves in a soft, unhurried rhythm.
- Even the staff carry that island calm that makes you relax without trying.
This is luxury in its warmest form — simple, quiet, and deeply comforting.
The Goose House
The island’s sweetest surprise.
Just when you think Banana Beach can’t get any more charming, you meet the geese.
The Goose House sits right along the shoreline, and its feathered residents wander freely like tiny beach celebrities. They waddle across the sand with full confidence, dipping their feet in the waves, sunbathing, and occasionally posing like they know exactly how adorable they are.
Visitors can observe them up close, feed them gently, and capture the kind of photos that feel too cute to be real. Watching them trot along the beach adds a playful, unexpected sweetness — the kind of moment that makes you whisper, “How is this place even real?”
It’s dreamy, a little silly, and completely unforgettable.
Beach snorkeling
The softest underwater adventure.
Snorkeling at Banana Beach feels like slipping into a watercolor painting.
The water is calm, clear, and warm —
perfect for gentle,
easy swims that don’t require effort,
only curiosity.
- Bright, curious fish drift around you like tiny moving brushstrokes.
- Soft corals sway beneath you in pastel colors.
- Sunlight dances on the surface, turning everything into a quiet underwater dream.
It’s the kind of snorkeling that makes you think,
I could float here forever.
Little joys that feel like floating
Everything at Banana Beach is easy, light, and quietly magical.
- Clear kayaks that make you feel like you’re gliding above a dream.
- Parasailing that lifts you into the sky just long enough to feel weightless.
- Beach lounging — the softest, most delicious kind of doing nothing.
- And the geese, wandering by like gentle, feathered side characters in your island story.
Every moment feels like a postcard you accidentally stepped into — the kind you look at later and think, “Yes… that was a good day.”
Arriving by yacht

Ombre’s dreamy entrance.
Arriving at Banana Beach is already beautiful, but arriving on Ombre turns the whole moment cinematic.
Ombre glides toward Koh Hey with that quiet, confident elegance — sleek lines, soft curves, and a presence that feels almost romantic against the turquoise water. As the yacht slows near the shore, the island opens up in front of you like a warm invitation: soft sand, glowing water, and geese waddling along the beach as if they’re part of the welcome committee.
Stepping off Ombre onto the sand feels like slipping between two worlds — polished luxury behind you, barefoot freedom ahead. It’s the kind of moment that makes you pause and think, “This… this is the life I want to remember.”
The scene is dreamy, gentle, and a little cheeky — exactly the kind of memory that stays warm long after the day ends.
Banana Beach is the kind of place that lingers — soft, warm, cheeky, dreamy, and sprinkled with the sweetest goose magic. A place that whispers, “Stay a little longer… you’re safe here.”

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