The Rabbit Island Boat
The real public fare to Koh Tonsay, where to buy the ticket, and whether the sea is rough today.
The real public fare to Koh Tonsay, where to buy the ticket, and whether the sea is rough today.
There is no bridge and no fixed timetable to Rabbit Island (Koh Tonsay) — the way over is a small boat across open sea from Kep pier. This page does two things: it reads the wind and waves on the crossing for today and tomorrow in plain words, and it tells you the real public fare so you don't get charged the private-charter price.
Rough water in the rainy season
Right now: smooth water (waves around 0.4 m), a gentle breeze (about 18 km/h, gusts to 33).
Much the same through the day.
| When | Looks like | Waves | Wind | Rain |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Morning — the first boats, from about 9am | smooth water, a moderate breeze | up to 0.4 m | up to 49 km/h in gusts | no rain expected |
| Afternoon — the last boats back, by about 5pm | smooth water, a fresh breeze | up to 0.5 m | up to 54 km/h in gusts | a shower possible |
Much the same through the day.
| When | Looks like | Waves | Wind | Rain |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Morning — the first boats, from about 9am | smooth water, a moderate breeze | up to 0.4 m | up to 52 km/h in gusts | a shower possible |
| Afternoon — the last boats back, by about 5pm | smooth water, a moderate breeze | up to 0.5 m | up to 48 km/h in gusts | a shower possible |
Boats leave when they have enough passengers and when the sea allows, not to a fixed clock. The times above are the pattern people report — treat them as a rough guide and confirm at the ticket office.
Small boats on open water
The crossing is made in small wooden passenger boats across open sea. We could not find a record of a serious accident on this particular route — but small boats, overloading and monsoon waves are a dangerous combination anywhere on this coast.
Don't let a boat leave badly overloaded, take a life jacket if one is offered, and watch children closely at boarding — slipping while getting on or off is how people get hurt.
Nothing on this page is a green light to cross. It reads the wind and the waves; it cannot see your boat or your captain. If the boatmen at the pier say the water is not right today, believe them — they can see it and you cannot.
Forecast updated 15 June at 20:25. Wave and wind figures are open-water model forecasts for the open water of the channel between Kep pier and Koh Tonsay, not readings from a boat — conditions in channels and near the shore differ. The words follow two published descriptive scales (the Douglas sea scale for waves, the Beaufort scale for wind); they describe the water and are never a judgement that a crossing is safe to make. Weather and marine data by Open-Meteo (CC BY 4.0).