For Guests · Transport

Scooter & Bike Rental — Delivered to Your Villa


Hondas, Yamahas and larger bikes from our trusted Koh Samui partners. Cash deposit, no passport held, brought to your door with two helmets in the box.

Read this before you book

If you have real motorbike experience at home, a scooter is genuinely the easiest way to move around Samui — easier than a car for parking, faster through the choke points around Fisherman's Village and Chaweng, and small enough to take down the narrow side roads behind most villas.

If you have never ridden, please do not learn here. Koh Samui is not a beginner island. Wet roads, steep hills, road dust, sudden monsoon downpours, free-roaming dogs and tourists with a week of riding behind them — every emergency room on the island is full of foreigners who thought a scooter looked easy. We've written an honest piece on whether you should ride a motorbike on Samui — please read it first.

What's included

  • Free delivery and collection to your villa anywhere on Koh Samui
  • Cash deposit accepted — passport stays with you, in the villa safe
  • Two helmets per bike, every time. We never deliver a scooter without them.
  • Pre-trip walk-around with photos of every existing scratch, sent to you on WhatsApp
  • 24/7 partner hotline plus our concierge as your backup
  • Phone holder and USB charger fitted on most scooters

What you can rent

Honda Click 125

The Samui workhorse. Light, reliable, easy to park. Best for shorter solo trips and confident riders.

From ฿250 / day

Yamaha NMAX 155

A step up — better suspension and brakes, comfortable two-up, big-wheel stability on Samui's patchy roads.

From ฿400 / day

Honda PCX 160

Smooth, quiet, well-loved by experienced riders. The smart middle choice.

From ฿450 / day

Larger Bikes (300cc+)

For licensed, experienced motorcyclists. Honda Forza, Yamaha XMAX, occasionally a CB500. Quoted on request.

From ฿700 / day

Weekly and monthly rates come down significantly. Helmets always included.

If you do ride — please do these things

  • Wear the helmet. Always. Even on the 400-metre run to 7-Eleven. Most foreign casualties on Samui were not wearing one.
  • Wear a t-shirt at minimum. Riding shirtless looks easy in the Instagram clips and ends in a ten-day skin graft if you slide. Long sleeves and closed shoes are better.
  • Get an International Driving Permit before you fly. No insurance company on earth will pay a motorbike claim without one. The shops don't ask. The hospital and your insurer absolutely will.
  • Don't ride at night if you don't have to. Unlit roads, dogs, and drunk drivers — the night risk is materially higher.
  • Don't drink and ride. Random checkpoints exist and the consequences are severe.

The honest comparison

Samui taxis are more expensive than Bangkok — there's no metering culture and the fixed prices feel high. We know. But after a week of stays we've seen guests do the maths and a hundred dollars a week in taxis is far cheaper than a hospital bill, a cancelled flight home, or a permanently scarred shoulder. If you're not a confident rider, take the taxi or hire a car. If you have kids, just take a car.

Pre-arrival checklist

  • International Driving Permit issued at home (motorcycle category if you want a scooter)
  • Travel insurance that explicitly covers motorbikes — most basic policies don't
  • Closed shoes and a long-sleeve top in your packing
  • Honest answer to the question: have I ridden one of these in the last twelve months?
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