Votre séjour — Elephant Bay
Prévisions en direct pour vos dates · Quoi de neuf · Qualité de l'air et pollen📅 Pick your check-in & check-out above to unlock your day-by-day forecast, what's on during your stay, and live air quality & pollen for Trat.
La propriété — Elephant Bay
Elephant Bay is a straightforward three-star beachfront property on Hat Sai Khao, Trat’s main strip, with a compact pool and a small restaurant serving Thai staples. The lobby is open-air and tiled, shaded by palms, and gives onto a narrow stretch of sand dotted with loungers. It suits budget-conscious travellers who want direct sea access and don’t mind dated decor or basic amenities. The USP is location: you’re steps from the water and a five-minute walk from the nearest convenience store and casual seafood places.
Chroniques de Trat
Trat bears the legacy of a trading port on the Gulf of Thailand, with Chinese and Khmer influences visible in its shophouse-lined streets. King Taksin used the city as a base to reclaim independence from Burma in the late 18th century, a fact commemorated in local statues and park names. After the French occupation of eastern Siam in the early 1900s, Trat was briefly ceded to French Indochina before being returned in 1907. Today its architecture is an unpretentious mix of teak stilt houses, corrugated-iron roofs and modern concrete blocks. The contemporary identity leans heavily on the nearby islands, with Trat town serving as a jump-off point for Ko Chang, Ko Mak and Ko Kut.
Meilleur moment pour visiter
Guide complet de Trat →Meilleurs mois
December to February: cool, dry air with temperatures around 27°C; minimal rain and a pleasant sea breeze. Crowds are moderate because most visitors head straight to the islands.
Peak / Festival surge
The last week of December into early January, plus the April Songkran (Thai New Year) period. Beaches in Trat town get lively as domestic tourists flock down; hotel prices can double. No major local festival drives it—it’s purely school holidays and public holidays.
La saison des épaules
March and June are good shoulder picks: March is hot but still dry, and June often sees a dip in occupancy before the July school break. Prices drop 20-30% compared to peak, and you’ll have beach stretches nearly to yourself.
Météo & Emballage
July is deep in the wet season: expect sudden tropical downpours, usually in the afternoon, followed by clearing skies. Pack a lightweight rain jacket, quick-dry clothes, and a waterproof phone pouch—umbrellas are useless in the gusts, but a dry bag is essential for boat trips.
Briefing de la ville — Trat
- The Trat bypass road (Route 3153) has periodic overnight lane closures for flyover construction until late 2026; check Google Maps for live detours near the city centre.
- A new international pier at Laem Sok, 20 km south of Trat town, opened in early 2025, cutting ferry queues to Ko Mak and Ko Kut.
- The city’s bi-weekly walking market on Thanon Thanacharn operates every Wednesday and Saturday evening; expect crowd density to increase around Sangkran 2026.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to Elephant Bay, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request a room on the 3rd or 4th floor facing away from the main road. These upper floors get a bit more air and less street rumble from the Trat town traffic.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid ground-floor rooms near the lobby or any side alley where staff park scooters. Also skip rooms directly above the hotel’s small restaurant if it serves early breakfast.
Best views
Rooms at the back (non-street side) likely overlook a local neighbourhood with some greenery. Front-facing rooms give you Trat’s roadside life, but with more noise.
Quietest floors
Floors 3 and 4 are generally quietest, away from ground-level bustle and first-floor common areas.
🔊 Noise notes
Trat’s main roads carry motorbike and songthaew (shared taxi) noise from early morning until late evening. No major clubs nearby, but locals rev engines.
Insider tips
1. Ask for a room on the 4th floor at the rear if available — it’s the farthest from street hum. 2. If you’re driving, the hotel has limited parking out front, so arrive early afternoon to claim a spot before tour vans take them.
- Call the hotel directly 24–48 hours before arrival and ask for a specific room type
- Add a note in your booking comments field
- Ask at check-in — front desk staff can often accommodate if a room is available
Hôtel Facilités — Elephant Bay
Free basic WiFi (3-5 Mbps) for all guests; no login required; no paid upgrade available
No lift – all rooms on ground floor or accessed by stairs across single-storey wings
No digital newsstand; no physical newspapers; property is a converted 1970s wooden bungalow complex with original timber walls and open-air corridors
Standard check-in 14:00-22:00; early bag-drop from 10:00; late check-out fee 200 THB until 18:00 (subject to availability)
Free for same-day storage at reception
Step-free access to main reception and two ground-floor rooms; no wheelchair-accessible bathrooms; gravel paths in garden areas
On-site free parking for up to 12 cars; nearest public car park is at Trat Bus Terminal (3 km away), 20 THB per day; no EV charging
Frais, taxes et dépôts
City / tourist tax: None
Deposit & card hold: 50% advance deposit required to guarantee booking; 500 THB incidental hold at check-in
5 minutes de radios essentielles
ATM — 75 m · ~1 min walk
Buddy Drugstore — 1.9 km · ~24 min walk
Monnaie & Monnaie
Get a travel card →Thai Baht, THB
Use ATMs for the best rates; avoid exchange bureaux at the airport or tourist hubs, which often give poor rates.
Visa and Mastercard accepted at hotels, larger restaurants, and supermarkets; smaller street stalls and markets are cash-only; contactless is common in chain stores.
Not expected, but rounding up taxi fares or leaving 20-50 THB change at sit-down restaurants is appreciated; hotel staff don't expect tips unless for extra service.
Manger, faire du shopping et voyager sur un budget
Cheap car hire →Local iced coffee (oliang) from street stalls, around 20-30 THB.
Pad Thai or chicken rice from a market or simple shop, 40-60 THB.
Stir-fried noodle or rice dish at a local eatery, 50-80 THB for a main.
Evening food stalls along the main road near Trat town market and the pier area offer cheap, local dishes.
Tesco Lotus or Big C are common budget supermarkets in Trat town.
Trat town's day market (Talad Sot) sells cheap cotton clothes and casual wear.
Songthaews (shared pickups) run fixed routes within town for 10-20 THB; from Trat airport, a shared minibus to town costs about 100 THB per person.
Eat at daytime markets rather than tourist-focused restaurants; buy bottled water in bulk from 7-Eleven; negotiate songthaew fares if not on a fixed route.
Bon à savoir — Trat
Type A/B/C · 220V
not safe — drink bottled
$1 ≈ ฿33.41 · THB
Where to Eat
💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Trat, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at Elephant Bay
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🧭 First things nearby: cash · ATM — 75 m · ~1 min walk — pharmacy · Buddy Drugstore — 1.9 km · ~24 min walk
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →S’entourer
Trat Town (Talad Mai Market) → Laem Sok Pier (drop-off, then taxi a short distance to resort)
💡 This bus is mostly used for island ferries, not the resort directly. Get off at the pier junction and take a motorbike taxi (20 baht) for the final 2 km. Ask locals to point 'Siam Beach' – it's a well-known bungalow strip.
Trat Airport → Trat Bus Station, then songthaew to Siam Beach Resort
💡 From the bus station, flag a white songthaew heading towards Klong Kloi – tell the driver 'Siam Beach'. Share the fare group-style; don't pay more than 40 baht per person.
Trat Town (Centre) → Siam Beach Resort
💡 Negotiate hard: 500–600 baht is fair. If you’re coming from the ferry pier (e.g. Koh Chang), try the shared minivan to the resort instead – about 250 baht per person.
Trat Airport (TDX) → Siam Beach Resort (Klong Kloi Beach)
💡 Book through the airport kiosk for flat rates. Avoid touts outside; meters are not used on this route. Shared vans cost half but wait for 6–8 passengers.
Questions fréquemment posées
What are the best rooms at Elephant Bay?
Request a room on the 3rd or 4th floor facing away from the main road. These upper floors get a bit more air and less street rumble from the Trat town traffic.
Which rooms should I avoid at Elephant Bay?
Avoid ground-floor rooms near the lobby or any side alley where staff park scooters. Also skip rooms directly above the hotel’s small restaurant if it serves early breakfast.
Is Elephant Bay noisy?
Trat’s main roads carry motorbike and songthaew (shared taxi) noise from early morning until late evening. No major clubs nearby, but locals rev engines.
Which rooms have the best views at Elephant Bay?
Rooms at the back (non-street side) likely overlook a local neighbourhood with some greenery. Front-facing rooms give you Trat’s roadside life, but with more noise.
What are insider tips for staying at Elephant Bay?
1. Ask for a room on the 4th floor at the rear if available — it’s the farthest from street hum. 2. If you’re driving, the hotel has limited parking out front, so arrive early afternoon to claim a spot before tour vans take them.
What time is check-in at Elephant Bay?
Check-in at Elephant Bay is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does Elephant Bay have Wi-Fi?
Free basic WiFi (3-5 Mbps) for all guests; no login required; no paid upgrade available
Is there a city or tourist tax at Elephant Bay?
None
Where can I eat cheaply near Elephant Bay?
Pad Thai or chicken rice from a market or simple shop, 40-60 THB.
What is the cheapest way to get around from Elephant Bay?
Songthaews (shared pickups) run fixed routes within town for 10-20 THB; from Trat airport, a shared minibus to town costs about 100 THB per person.
When is the best time to visit Trat?
December to February: cool, dry air with temperatures around 27°C; minimal rain and a pleasant sea breeze. Crowds are moderate because most visitors head straight to the islands.
Principales attractions à Trat
💡 Visit late afternoon when the light catches the gold trim. No entry fee, but polite to leave a small donation (20-40 baht) for incense.
💡 Bring insect repellent after dusk – mosquitoes are active. Stop at the floating noodle boat (50 baht) near the end of the promenade.
💡 Go before 7am for the best dried squid and durian chips. Bring small change – stallholders rarely accept cards.
💡 Ring the bell once for luck – locals say it brings safe travel. Temple dogs are friendly but ignore them if they bark.
💡 Call ahead to check if the English labels are in place – they rotate exhibits. The garden has a free map of local waterfalls.