I Stayed at the Real White Lotus Hotel Thailand – What it’s Really Like – Four Seasons Koh Samui

In White Lotus Season 3, the Ratliff family arrives at their 3-bedroom hilltop villa, admiring its family-size private pool with an island panorama view, where turquoise sea merges with azure sky.  Adorable monkeys frolic nearby, and trees drip with exotic fruit. It’s paradise.  Though my standard villa at the real White Lotus Thailand – a.k.a. the Four Seasons Koh Samui – was not the enormous sprawl of the Ratliff’s family villa, no worries – all the guest rooms here, no matter what room type – are private, gated, pool villas of varying sizes, and offer the same polished interiors that you see in the series.

The family-size villa in White Lotus Thailand. Photo credit: Four Seasons Koh Samui

In some movies, the location has so much charisma that it becomes one of the characters in the story, and this is true of White Lotus Season 3.  Back home in Bangkok, watching the series through glum urban lens, I feel instantly transported straight back to the luscious Four Seasons Koh Samui, its glamour magnified with the magical fairy dust of clever cinematography, its tropical mystique captured in dreamy island landscapes, tinted with rosy dawns and peachy sunsets.

Hidden charm awaits under the coconut fronds at Four Seasons Koh Samui. Photo by Luke Yeung

I’ve been a White Lotus fan from the beginning, and was thrilled when I heard that White Lotus Season 3 was being shot in my home turf, Thailand, though my hotel stay took place well before Season 3 aired. 

I’d been thinking of Samui for an island holiday and when I heard that uber- resort designer Bill Bensley had designed the eco-friendly Four Seasons Koh Samui without cutting down a single tree, I wanted to see his vision of sustainable luxury resort design.

Outdoor living is green and blue. Photo by Luke Yeung

I’ve always been a fan of the Geoffrey Bawa school of tropical architecture, in which trees grow out of swimming pools and architecture is tailored to fit nature, not the other way around.  I’ve visited some glitzy resorts who boasted of their idyllic locations on coconut plantations, only to find all the original trees cut down during construction, with new shrubs plugged in to replace the native trees.  One place even had an in-house “coral reef,” made entirely of cement.  To find construction mimicking nature was tragic. 

Oh that thing? It’s just a giant granddaddy tree in the middle of the restaurant. Photo by Luke Yeung

Nature is well preserved at the Four Seasons Koh Samui, where buildings are almost hidden under a canopy of thick foliage.  Here, the natural landscape informs the resort design; in the open-air breakfast room, a majestic old tree grows in the middle of the restaurant, while in other areas, coconut trunks shoot from the ground through the roof in the middle of a room, or sprout from pool decks.  There’s a dense tropical jungle feel, landscaped to look natural without being wild.

Breakfast comes with a bird’s eye sea view and a side of live coconuts, still on the tree. Photo by Luke Yeung

When hillsides are stripped of trees it weakens the earth, causing immense landslides without tree roots to hold it in place.  Bill Bensley’s design concept was to keep nature as intact as possible.  “I’ve learnt that when we are given a beautiful natural site, minimal intervention on our part as architects always works best. The Four Seasons Koh Samui was an environmental triumph for us. 856 coconut trees presented themselves the first time I went to the location, and 856 coconut trees still stood some five years later when we opened the hotel!”

That’s not a post, it’s a coconut tree growing through the roof.

A wow-factor seascape and chi-chi welcome drinks greet you upon arrival at the hilltop reception lounge.  The resort covers a steep hillside stretching from the hilltop down to a private beach cove, surrounded by coral reef. 

So this is me at my sweetest! A welcome surprise image of me encased in gold-toned sugar! I still don’t know how they did that.

At check-in we learned about the Four Seasons app, a handy personal concierge tool we could use to call a buggy, book a table, book a spa appointment, organize transportation, ask about resort activities or about the island, or whatever we needed.  You can continue to use the app at any Four Seasons property around the world. Over the course of our stay, we found the app to be really convenient and efficient, with instant responses to our queries.

You can do laps in your lengthy villa infinity pool. Photo by Luke Yeung

A thrilling, roller coaster buggy ride around the curvy (whee!), alarmingly steep paths (whoaa!) with some crazy angles (eeek!) took us to our glamourous pool villa, featuring a private infinity pool that’s the longest one I’ve seen in a standard pool villa. I could easily do laps in this luxuriously long pool instead of paddling around in circles in the square tub you sometimes find at other resorts. 

I love an enormous bathroom, especially one with a sea view. Photo credit: Four Seasons Koh Samui
How to escape when it’s too hot outside. The bathtub in the air con room was the coolest place I could find. Photo by Luke Yeung

I love it when the bathroom is bigger than the bedroom, and the space here is brilliantly designed, featuring separate vanities and dressing rooms for two people, with the toilet and shower neatly tucked behind doors in their own cubicles, giving its occupants ample personal space, along with the airy floor to ceiling sea view.

Four Seasons has a coral regeneration project to renew the surrounding reef. Photo by Luke Yeung

We wanted to explore the massive coral reef surrounding the resort, and booked a snorkeling excursion led by the resort’s resident marine biologist, Benji, a cheerful lady who gave us a short talk on coral and fish, and led us on a snorkel around the reef, pointing out the new coral growth, planted by the Four Seasons reef regeneration project. 

Come here, come here, the white platform beckons from the sea.

Our goal was to swim to the resort’s platform, a gleaming white square that beckoned like a magnet in the turquoise sea.  You can see this enticing platform from almost every angle on the hilltop, and every swimmer in the sea is strangely drawn to this mesmerizing white square.

It looks just an arm’s length from the restaurant, but don’t be fooled. It looks so much closer than it really is.

It turned out to be a longer swim than it looked from the shore, the platform bobbed up and down in the current, and my out-of-shape body was exhausted and slightly sea sick by the time we got back to shore.  We collapsed on one the enormous beach beds sheltered by coconut trees, and Benji kindly brought me a tray of lime slices and hot ginger tea, a natural sea sickness remedy. 

Nature is intact. Not a single tree was cut down to build the resort. Photo by Luke Yeung

We were still lazing on the beach around sunset when Benji came by to check if I was feeling better. “You have in-villa dining tonight don’t you”, she politely suggested, “would you like me to call a buggy for you to get back to your villa on time?”

What?

We’d just been talking about going into town for dinner as I’d completely forgotten that we had scheduled a dinner in the villa that night.  Amazingly, through some sort of Four Seasons internal control system, our lovely marine biologist Benji at her beach station seemed to magically know this, and made sure we were back on our schedule.  (I always say the service at Four Seasons is amazing. It really is. They can read your mind even when your mind is totally blank).

Even our buggy driver knew we had in-villa dining to get to, though that might have been because the room service buggy was already outside the villa gate.   We arrived to find the outdoor dining table set up for our Moo Kratah, or “pork pan” dinner, a popular Thai dish that’s a combination of Korean barbecue and Chinese hotpot.

This is how to cook Moo Kratah. Photo by Luke Yeung

The steward showed us how to cook the slices of beef, shrimp, pork chicken and bacon on the tray, pour the soup stock and add vegetables into the pan, and then left us to enjoy grilling our feast of Moo Kratah, somtam papaya salad, and Thai beef salad, while the sunset sank behind the coconut trees and cicadas chirped in the background.   

This way through the secret garden to the spa treatment. Photo credit: Four Seasons Koh Samui

Next morning was what I’d been waiting for – a 90-minute signature spa treatment at The Secret Garden Spa, aptly named because the treatment starts with a walk down a spiral staircase and through thickly wooded paths to reach the spa pavilions.

Every massage starts off with a foot bath and scrub. Photo by Luke Yeung
Inside a spa treatment at the Secret Garden Spa. Photo credit Four Seasons Koh Samui

My deeply relaxing lavender jasmine aromatherapy massage ended with a heavenly head massage that melted all the stress from my body.  I only wished it lasted longer. 

Though the guests at White Lotus Thailand are welcomed to “the best wellness resort in the world” by personal wellness mentors who confiscate your phones and devices for a digital detox, this doesn’t happen at the real Four Seasons Koh Samui (otherwise, how could you use your Four Seasons app?).  It’s all fictionalized for the series.  (Some of the world’s best wellness retreat hotels do exist in Thailand though!  Check out my wellness retreat reviews here).

I must point out here that you also won’t find the gorgeous lotus ponds and garden meditation pavilions that look so enticing in the series.  Those lotus pond scenes, as well as the lobby scenes, were shot at other locations in Koh Samui and Phuket!

We loved sitting in this lovely cool spa lobby. Photo by Luke Yeung

The weather was unusually hot during out stay, and we quickly realized the air-conditioned spa lobby was the coolest, most relaxing place to escape from the boiling heat outside.  We loved sitting there, and the gentle spa receptionist offered us chilled drinks and let us enjoy the space as long as we wanted.

In search of cooling air con, I roamed the steamy jungle paths. Photo by Luke Yeung

Nights are very quiet at the resort, so we went to check out the island night life at the popular Fisherman’s Village in Bophut Beach, about twenty minutes by car from the resort.  The Four Seasons app was especially handy when arranging our transport into town and the return trip to pick us up from the restaurant after dinner was seamlessly efficient too, using this app. 

We headed to Coco Tam’s, located right on the beautiful beachfront on the bustling market street, home of the island’s fabulous fire show.  We joined a very long queue (no bookings, first come, first served) for Italian cuisine, bean bags on the sand, beachside DJ, and the spectacular fire show.

The fabulous fire show at Coco Tam’s – the best night life on the island. Photos by Luke Yeung

It was probably lucky for me that I stayed there before White Lotus Season 3 aired, because I’ve heard that bookings have shot up thanks to the ‘White Lotus Effect.’  No worries, I can simply re-watch the show to feel transported right back at the Four Seasons Koh Samui, until Season 4 drops, and the White Lotus set-jetters move on to the next destination.  

I wonder when we can come back to this fabulous place again. Photo by Luke Yeung

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Have you been the Four Seasons Koh Samui? How was your visit? What’s your favorite experience in Koh Samui?

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