Samui Elephant Kingdom - Ethical Elephant Sanctuary in Koh Samui
Samui Elephant Kingdom is an ethical elephant sanctuary on Koh Samui, founded in 2019 by Chokchai Ruengsri, whose family has cared for elephants across several generations. The park was built on a single belief: elephants deserve real freedom. Every elephant living here has been rescued from the logging industry or tourist shows, where they spent years under constant stress and in confinement.
The sanctuary covers more than 4 hectares of dense jungle. The elephants live without chains, without riding and without coercion - they choose where to go, what to eat and how to spend their time. The sanctuary staff guide guests to the elephants and bring the animals close: you can stroke them, feed them by hand and take photos right beside them. Everything happens in a calm atmosphere, overseen by a team that knows every elephant by name.
The Skywalk and Elephant Feeding Experience
The centrepiece of the park is the 400-metre floating Skywalk bridge - the first of its kind in Koh Samui. The bridge passes directly above the sanctuary: from up here you can watch elephants roam freely, forage for food, interact with each other and splash in the pool. It is both the best vantage point for photographs and a window into natural elephant behaviour.
One of the most memorable parts of the visit is preparing and presenting the elephants with so-called health balls - nutritious rounds of rice, herbs and spices that support the animals' immune systems. Your guide will explain how to make them and you will hand-feed your elephant directly from your palm - one of those moments you carry with you long after you leave.
After the feeding each guest is given a basket of treats and set loose on the walkways. The elephants know this ritual well: they approach from below, raise their trunks and happily take what is offered. There are shaded rest spots on the bridges where you can pause, watch the herd from above and soak in the atmosphere. The guide then leads the group down into the park itself, where you can approach the elephants up close, stroke them and take photos beside them.