About
About Buri hut Natural Resort Koh mak. (เกี่ยวกับ บุรีฮัท เนเชอรัล รีสอร์ท)
Koh Mak Buri Hut Natural Resort is a warm and welcoming hideaway offering full‑service stays with great food and friendly care. With more than 15 years of experience, we look after every guest like family. Set on a peaceful three‑tier hillside, our dome‑shaped bungalows offer hillside, mezzanine, or sea views and include double beds, private bathrooms, and daily housekeeping. Enjoy small comforts like drinking water, coffee sets, a kettle, and a hairdryer in all 25 rooms. Around the resort, you’ll find a 360‑degree sea‑view pool, a playground, a poolside bar, a beachfront restaurant, and activities such as motorbike and boat rental, snorkeling, fishing, and sightseeing trips. Here, you can relax to the sound of the waves and start each day with a quiet sunrise at the end of the Buri Hut Hug Lai Bridge.
History of Koh MakKoh Mak is an island in the sea of Trat Province, located between Koh Chang and Koh Kood, approximately 38 kilometers from the mainland. It covers an area of approximately 8,500 rai or 12,398 square kilometers. It has a shape resembling a four-pointed star, with a coastline 27 kilometers long and featuring various beaches such as Ao Tanid, Ao Pai, Ao Prang, Ao Pat, and Ao Daeng. The coastline around the island and nearby islands has a complete coral reef system. Area: 12.4 square kilometers. Maximum width: 6 kilometers. Archipelago: Koh Mak. Province: Trat. Location: Eastern coast of the Gulf of Thailand. Coordinates: 11°49′08″N 102°28′48″E / 11.819°N 102.480°EThe story of Koh Mak: Located on the easternmost coast of Thai waters, it is part of the Koh Chang archipelago and Trat Province. Travel by catamaran takes approximately 50 minutes, and speedboats are also available, taking about 55 minutes depending on the weather conditions, from the mainland to the island. Koh Mak is a separate district from Trat Province. Koh Mak is Thailand's easternmost island, situated not far from Cambodia. The Cardamom Mountains, stretching from north to south along the Cambodian border, are clearly visible. Koh Mak is a nature reserve that remarkably blends modernity with traditional Thai life, while simultaneously preserving ancient Thai values that we might think have been forgotten. The word "Mak" in Thai means "betel nut tree," referring to the fruit and leaves of the tree that locals chewed. Koh Mak is another Indochina island whose name comes from the same type of betel nut tree, but in Malay, it's Penang Island.