Maya Bay is, quite simply, one of those places that lives up to the photographs. The combination of white sand, still turquoise water, and sheer cliff walls creates a scene that feels almost implausible — as if someone has assembled the best elements of a tropical bay and placed them together in one compact space.
The national park authority closed Maya Bay completely from 2018 to 2022 to allow the reef and marine ecosystem to recover from years of intensive tourism. The recovery has been remarkable. Blacktip reef sharks have returned to the bay in numbers, coral cover has improved significantly, and the water quality is measurably better. The careful re-opening, with regulated visitor numbers and strict rules about boat positioning, means that the Maya Bay you visit today is in considerably better ecological health than the one most travellers knew before the closure.
For travellers who care about visiting beautiful places responsibly, this makes Maya Bay a destination worth seeking out — one where the management is aligned with the goal of keeping it extraordinary.