La a natu Bed & Bakery — Rice Fields Meeting the Beach in a Thai-Lao Village Like No Other in Pranburi
If you've ever scrolled past a photo of a resort with green rice fields running down to the sea and wondered where it was, chances are it was La a natu Bed & Bakery at Sam Roi Yot beach, Pranburi. This isn't a polished five-star property where every corner is flawless — it's a small Boutique resort of just 12 cottages built from earthen walls, teak, and thatched roofing in a Thai-Lao village style, set between working paddy terraces and a private stretch of sand. Guests who've stayed describe it the same way: it feels like stepping into a rural seaside village you won't find anywhere else in Prachuap Khiri Khan.
La a natu sits at Sam Roi Yot beach, about a 20-minute drive from central Pranburi. What sets it apart from a standard beachfront resort is the terraced rice paddies actually planted between the rooms and the shoreline — open your door in the morning and you look out at green rice stalks swaying in the breeze, with the surf just beyond. With only 12 cottages, the whole place stays quiet and genuinely private; outside of mealtimes you'll rarely cross paths with other guests.
The rooms are built in a Thai-Lao style with brown earthen walls and teak throughout. Ceilings run high, woven basket lamps hang at the centre of the room, and some cottages have an outdoor bathtub for soaking under the stars. Several guests note the rooms are larger than the photos suggest, with careful detailing in the woodwork and bare-plaster finishes. Room types range from a Standard Room up to a Beachfront Villa with a private plunge pool out front and a clear view of the water.
Guests describe it like this: "Opened the curtains in the morning to rice fields and the sea in one frame, cool breeze, the soft sound of waves — they sat with their coffee outside the room all morning and didn't want to move."
Another standout here is the rooftop pool, set beside a thatched beehive-shaped dome. In the late afternoon the sunset reflects off the water and the silhouette of the dome — it's the shot most guests take home and post. The "Bakery" in the name comes from a small on-site café that makes its own cakes and pastries, served alongside afternoon tea. One thing to flag: the bakery menu rotates by the day and some days the selection is thin, so if you're coming specifically for the pastries you may not find the full spread you hoped for.
The beach in front of the resort is properly quiet and private, with fairly fine sand, a wooden swing, and canvas chairs set under the coconut palms. The resort lends out bicycles for riding around the fields and farmland. This is also where several reviews agree on a warning — there's almost nothing within reach of the resort. Restaurants and convenience stores are far off, so without a car or motorbike it's a real struggle, and you'll be relying on the resort restaurant for most meals.
Guest scores are solid — 9.1/10 on Trip.com and 4.4/5 on TripAdvisor, ranked #1 of 4 B&Bs in Sam Roi Yot. The repeated praise is for cleanliness, the beachfront setting, and a rural atmosphere unlike anywhere else. The honest complaints centre on service that can be slow, long waits for food, limited English among staff, and Wi-Fi that isn't reliable in some cottages. A few guests also found dinner pricey relative to the quality — worth knowing before you set expectations.
On price, a Standard Room starts around ฿4,500/night on weekdays, while the Beachfront Villa with a plunge pool climbs to ฿9,000–13,000 depending on season. Over long weekends and through the cool season (November–February) the rooms fill fast because there are only 12 of them, so book at least 3–4 weeks ahead. Come midweek and you get both a better rate and the quiet at its fullest.
The bottom line: La a natu works best for couples or anyone wanting a designed, quiet seaside escape who doesn't mind having no shops or restaurants nearby. If you can drive yourself, enjoy a calm rural setting, and want beautiful photos to take home, it's strong value. If you'd rather step out to a street full of options, or you prioritise big-hotel service, this probably isn't the one for you.
Summary from Booking & Agoda
- ✓ Private beachfront setting, exceptionally quiet
- ✓ Distinctive Thai-Lao design with rice fields by the sea
- ✓ Clean rooms, larger than expected, outdoor bathtubs
- ✓ Friendly, attentive staff
- ! No restaurants or convenience stores nearby — a car is essential
- ! Service can be slow, long waits for food
- ! Wi-Fi unreliable in some cottages
- ✓ Rural seaside atmosphere, calm and genuinely restful
- ✓ Rooftop dome pool with a beautiful sunset view
- ✓ Homemade breakfast and pastries are good
- ✓ Well suited to couples wanting privacy
- ! Dinner pricey relative to the quality
- ! Limited English among staff
- ! Remote location — you need to drive yourself
- 💡If you don't have your own car — think carefully before booking, because there are almost no restaurants or shops nearby and you'll depend on the resort restaurant for nearly every meal → renting a car or motorbike makes the stay far easier
- 💡If the 'Bakery' is the draw — the café does bake its own cakes, but the menu rotates daily and some days the selection is thin → don't expect a full city-bakery spread
- 💡If you want a full sea view — choose the Beachfront Villa with a plunge pool out front (from ฿9,000) → the Standard Room is better value but faces the rice fields or garden rather than the water directly