
Kerala
India
Krabi
Thailand
Kerala
Krabi
💰 Budget
🛡️ Safety
Kerala
Kerala is consistently rated among the safest states in India for tourists, including solo female travelers. Its high literacy rate, organized tourism infrastructure, and strong local governance contribute to a lower crime rate than most Indian states. The primary hazards are environmental — monsoon flooding, coastal currents, and wildlife in forested areas — rather than personal safety concerns.
Krabi
Krabi is a relatively safe destination for tourists. The area sees millions of visitors annually with a well-established tourism infrastructure. The main dangers are environmental and road-related rather than criminal — ocean hazards during monsoon, motorbike accidents, and sun exposure account for the majority of tourist incidents. Petty theft exists but serious crime targeting tourists is uncommon. Solo female travelers generally report feeling safe in both Ao Nang and Krabi Town.
⭐ Ratings
🌤️ Weather
Kerala
Kerala has a tropical climate governed by two monsoon cycles. The southwest monsoon (June-September) is the heaviest in mainland India, bringing thunderous daily rainfall, high humidity, and a dramatic transformation of the landscape into intense green. The northeast monsoon (October-November) brings lighter rains to the south. December to February is the dry, mild peak tourist season. Kerala's highland areas (Munnar, Wayanad) are significantly cooler year-round.
Krabi
Krabi has a tropical monsoon climate dominated by two distinct seasons: a dry season with calm, azure seas (November to April) and a monsoon season with heavy rain and rough water (May to October). Sea temperature stays around 27-29°C year-round. The dry season brings the ideal postcard conditions most people picture, but even the wet season offers long sunny stretches between downpours.
🚇 Getting Around
Kerala
Kerala is one of the better-connected Indian states for travel. Indian Railways runs the backbone of the coastal corridor linking Trivandrum, Kochi, and Calicut, with frequent expresses. KSRTC (Kerala State Road Transport Corporation) and private buses reach virtually every district. Kochi and Trivandrum have Uber and Ola. Autorickshaws are ubiquitous for short hops. The backwaters require boats. Munnar and Wayanad are best reached by hired car or bus from Kochi.
Walkability: Walkability varies sharply by location. Fort Kochi is compact and very walkable — the fishing nets, synagogue, Dutch Palace, and cafes are all within 30 minutes on foot. Alleppey town is flat and bikeable. Trivandrum and Calicut are sprawling and require transport. Munnar town is small but the plantation walks require transport to trailheads.
Krabi
Water transport is as important as road transport in Krabi — longtail boats and ferries connect the beaches, islands, and mainland in ways no road can. On land, songthaews (shared pickup trucks) run fixed routes between Krabi Town and Ao Nang, while motorbike taxis and rentals cover shorter distances. The Grab app works in Ao Nang and Krabi Town but supply is limited compared to Phuket.
Walkability: Ao Nang beach strip is walkable end-to-end in about 20 minutes and most restaurants, shops, and the longtail pier are on a single road. Krabi Town is also walkable around the river and night market area. However, between Ao Nang and Krabi Town (15 km) walking is impractical — use songthaew or Grab. Railay is car-free by necessity and entirely pedestrian.
The Verdict
Choose Kerala if...
you want "God's Own Country" — Alleppey houseboat backwaters, Munnar tea hills, Fort Kochi colonial streets, Kathakali dance, and Ayurveda across a tropical coast
Choose Krabi if...
you want limestone karsts rising from turquoise sea, Railay's boat-only beach cliffs, and roughly half the price of Phuket