Restaurant in Phuket, Thailand
Walk-in Michelin dining, no planning needed.

A Michelin Plate winner two years running (2024 and 2025), Khrua Ohm serves southern Thai cooking in a small, casual room in Kathu at ฿฿ pricing. Owner Somphop sources fresh catches daily, hand-cuts them himself, and cooks dishes including braised fish in salted soybean sauce and the regional armpit-cut pork. One of Phuket's strongest value propositions for anyone serious about regional Thai food.
Getting a table at Khrua Ohm requires almost no planning. At ฿฿ pricing with a 4.6 Google rating across nearly 800 reviews, this small Kathu restaurant earns its two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) without making you work for access. Walk-ins are plausible; a same-day call ahead is sensible. The real question is whether a casual southern Thai spot in Kathu, away from Phuket's tourist corridor, is worth the detour. It is, especially for anyone who wants to eat the way Phuket actually eats rather than the way Phuket sells itself to visitors.
Khrua Ohm opened after its owner, Somphop, spent roughly ten years as a musician who happened to feed his bandmates well. The shift from kitchen-for-friends to restaurant is visible in how the place operates. This is a small, casual room in Kathu District, not a dining room designed for ceremony. The spatial experience here is deliberately low-key: expect a compact layout, the kind of seating that prioritises function over atmosphere, and a setting where the cooking, not the décor, holds your attention. For explorers drawn to regional Thai food in its working environment rather than its polished presentation, that framing is the point. The room tells you exactly what you are paying for before the food arrives.
Somphop still walks the market each morning to select fresh catches, then hand-cuts them himself for service. This daily sourcing rhythm shapes the menu's character. Southern Thai cooking at this level is ingredient-led by necessity: the tradition depends on fish, shellfish, and pork that are genuinely fresh, seasoned with the bold, fermented, and saline flavours that define the south. At Khrua Ohm, that means braised fish in salted soybean sauce, prawns with salted eggs and acacia, and wok-fried pork from the armpit cut, the tender section between picnic shoulder and belly. These are not dishes you encounter at every Phuket restaurant. The armpit cut in particular is a regional specific, the kind of ingredient knowledge that separates a cook who grew up with a cuisine from one who learned it secondhand.
The service approach at Khrua Ohm is consistent with its price tier and its origins: informal, direct, and entirely free of the hospitality performance you pay for at ฿฿฿ and ฿฿฿฿ venues. There is no tableside theatre, no printed backstory on the menu, no sommelier pairing. What you get instead is the kind of practical attention that comes from a small owner-operated kitchen where the person who cooked your food has a stake in whether you enjoyed it. At ฿฿ pricing, that tradeoff is clear and sensible. You are not paying for service depth; you are paying for cooking quality, and the two consecutive Michelin Plates confirm that Khrua Ohm delivers on that side of the equation. Visitors accustomed to the formal service of Blue Elephant or PRU should adjust expectations accordingly. The informality is not a gap; it is the correct register for what this restaurant is trying to do.
For the food-focused traveller, that informality also means you can ask about what came in from the market that morning without it feeling like an unusual request. The casual format supports that kind of conversation. It is one of the practical advantages of a small, owner-run room over a larger operation where the floor team rotates and no single person knows the full story of each dish.
Phuket has a strong cluster of southern Thai cooking worth knowing about. On the island itself, Chom Chan, Kin-Kub-Ei, Krua Baan Platong, Krua Kao Kuk, and Krua Praya all represent the regional tradition at different price points and formats. Beyond Phuket, Juumpo in Phang Nga and Kapi Sator on Ko Samui are worth the trip for anyone building a southern Thai eating itinerary. For the broader Thai fine dining context, Sorn in Bangkok is the reference point for what southern Thai cooking looks like at the leading of the market. Khrua Ohm operates at the other end of that spectrum: no tasting menu, no advance booking required, no price premium for the Michelin association. That accessibility is a genuine advantage, not a consolation.
If you are building a broader trip around Phuket's food scene, the full Phuket restaurants guide covers the island comprehensively. For accommodation context, the Phuket hotels guide is the practical companion. The Phuket bars guide, Phuket wineries guide, and Phuket experiences guide round out the picture if you are planning further ahead. For southern Thai cooking elsewhere in Thailand, AKKEE in Pak Kret and Anuwat in Phang Nga are worth adding to your list. Regional Thai cooking outside the south is well represented by Aquila in Chiang Mai and Ayutthayarom in Phra Nakhon Si Ayutthaya, and The Spa in Lamai Beach adds further context for island dining.
Khrua Ohm is the kind of Michelin-recognised restaurant that does not require you to plan around it. Book same-day or walk in, spend well under what you would at any ฿฿฿ option on the island, and eat southern Thai food that the Michelin inspectors have now flagged twice in a row. The location in Kathu rather than the tourist-heavy beach areas is a minor navigation consideration, not a deterrent. If you are spending any meaningful time in Phuket and care about eating the regional cuisine at its source rather than its tourist-facing version, this is the table to take.
Quick reference: Michelin Plate 2024 and 2025 | ฿฿ price range | 4.6 / 5 on Google (796 reviews) | Kathu District, Phuket | Booking: easy, same-day possible.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Khrua Ohm | Southern Thai | ฿฿ | After a decade as a musician with a side gig of cooking for bandmates, these days Somphop finds himself enjoying daily walks through the market for fresh catches of the day and hand-cutting them for various southern Thai dishes served at his small, casual restaurant. Braised fish in salted soybean sauce; prawns with salted eggs and acacia; and wok-fried pork featuring the tender, succulent ‘armpit cut’ between the picnic shoulder and belly are not to be missed.; Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | Easy | — |
| PRU | Thai, Modern Cuisine | ฿฿฿฿ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Blue Elephant | Thai | ฿฿฿ | Unknown | — | |
| Acqua | Italian | ฿฿฿฿ | Unknown | — | |
| Baan Rim Pa Patong | Thai | Unknown | — | ||
| Chuan Chim | Thai | ฿฿ | Unknown | — |
What to weigh when choosing between Khrua Ohm and alternatives.
It's a small, casual restaurant in Kathu run by Somphop, who built his cooking around feeding bandmates before opening to the public. It holds a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025, but the format is relaxed and the prices sit firmly in the ฿฿ range. Walk in, order without ceremony, and eat well for well under what you'd pay at Phuket's tourist-facing options.
The menu is built around southern Thai techniques, with dishes like braised fish in salted soybean sauce and wok-fried pork — protein-forward cooking where seafood and meat are central. Vegetarians or those with shellfish allergies may find options limited. Worth calling ahead if possible, though a phone number isn't publicly listed.
Khrua Ohm is a small casual restaurant, not a bar-format venue. Seating is informal; there's no bar counter in the sense you'd find at an omakase or cocktail-led spot. Solo diners and small groups can expect standard table seating without a dedicated counter option.
Same-day or walk-in works most of the time at ฿฿ pricing and a casual Kathu location — this isn't a timed-reservation restaurant with a months-long waitlist. That said, a Michelin Plate recognition tends to draw attention, so earlier in the day or off-peak hours reduce any wait risk.
Dress casually. Khrua Ohm is an informal, neighbourhood-style restaurant, and showing up in anything beyond clean, comfortable clothing would be out of place. Phuket heat applies — lightweight is practical.
The Michelin guide specifically calls out three dishes: braised fish in salted soybean sauce, prawns with salted eggs and acacia, and wok-fried pork using the 'armpit cut' between the picnic shoulder and belly. Somphop also hand-cuts fresh market fish daily, so whatever the day's catch is tends to be the right call.
Yes, and at ฿฿ pricing it's one of the more practical solo options among Phuket's Michelin-recognised restaurants. The informal format means there's no awkwardness around single-person tables, and the portion structure of southern Thai dishes suits ordering two or three items without waste.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.