Phuket Airport is at the northern tip of the island. Every beach destination is south, with drives ranging from 10 to 80 km. Here is how each option is priced - and, where we cannot verify a fare from the operator or the authority that sets it, we say so instead of guessing.
The one fare we can quote you
The Phuket Smart Bus charges a flat 100 THB to any stop on its airport-Patong-Karon-Kata-Rawai route. That is the operator's own published fare (phuketsmartbus.com), it does not vary with distance, and it is the cheapest published way out of the airport. You can pay cash, scan a QR code, tap a contactless Visa or Mastercard, or buy a Rabbit card onboard. The catch is that it runs to a timetable and only serves stops on that one west-coast route.
Distances, which are what actually drive the price
| Destination | Distance | Typical drive | Smart Bus |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mai Khao Beach | 10 km | 15-20 min | not on route |
| Bang Tao / Laguna | 18 km | 25-35 min | not on route |
| Kamala Beach | 25 km | 30-40 min | 100 THB |
| Phuket Town | 30 km | 35-45 min | not on route |
| Patong Beach | 35 km | 45-60 min | 100 THB |
| Karon Beach | 40 km | 50-60 min | 100 THB |
| Kata Beach | 45 km | 55-65 min | 100 THB |
| Rawai / Nai Harn | 50 km | 60-75 min | 100 THB |
| Khao Lak | 80 km | about 1.5 hrs | not served |
Why there are no taxi prices on this page
There used to be. We took them out.
Phuket's metered taxi fare is set by the authorities: a meter tariff plus a fixed airport surcharge, both posted on the rate board at the official counter in the arrivals hall. That tariff is revised periodically. Fixed-price airport cars, Grab and pre-booked transfers are priced separately again, and Grab in particular moves with demand minute to minute.
Any range we printed would be a snapshot that quietly rots - and a stale price is worse than no price, because it reads as if someone checked it. So:
- For a metered taxi: read the rate board at the official counter. It is the authoritative, current number, and it is right in front of you before you commit.
- For Grab: the app quotes you before you book.
- For a transfer: you get a fixed price in writing at booking.
All three tell you the real number before you are committed to anything. None of them require you to trust a figure on a web page.
Understanding the options
Metered taxis from the official counter are the standard. The airport surcharge is added to whatever the meter reads. The meter runs on both time and distance, so heavy traffic adds modestly.
Grab is usually cheaper than a metered taxi for the same sedan trip. The catch is the pickup logistics (designated area outside arrivals) and lower availability after 23:00.
Transfers cost more but include the meet-and-greet, fixed pricing, and vehicle selection.
The shared minibus is sold per person to most beach areas. Economical for solo travelers, but the wait-and-stop pattern means the time cost is significant.
What pushes the price up
Traffic. The single road south from the airport has bottleneck points. Rush hour (16:00-19:00) adds time and metered fare.
Late night. The metered tariff does not change, but Grab shows surge pricing and taxi availability drops, pushing you toward the pricier remaining options.
Vehicle size. Upgrading from a sedan to a minivan costs more on every option that offers the choice.
Khao Lak. This destination is 80 km north of the airport and significantly more expensive to reach. Neither bus serves it, and Grab drivers rarely accept the trip.
Tipping
Tipping is not expected in Thai taxis, but rounding up is appreciated. For transfer drivers who help with luggage, a small tip is a kind gesture.
The bottom line on cost
The Smart Bus is the cheapest published fare at a flat 100 THB, if its route and timetable suit you. Grab is usually the cheapest door-to-door option if you can manage the pickup logistics. Metered taxis are the middle ground and their rate board is public. Transfers cost the most but offer the smoothest experience and a price you agree before you fly. In the context of a Phuket holiday, the gaps between these options are small enough that convenience should drive the decision more than cost.