
Our Story
Talay Khao — "Sea and Mountain" — is how we describe Samui. An island where the ocean meets forested peaks, where fishing villages sit beneath coconut groves, where the land still remembers what it was before the first resort.
The Problem
Foreign agents who arrived last year. Companies that see land as inventory. Websites full of plots they've never walked, sold to buyers they'll never meet again.
They don't know which streams dry up in March. They don't know which families have farmed here for generations. They don't know — or care — what will be lost when the trees come down.


Who We Are
We were born on this island. We swam in these waters before we could walk. We know which trees the hornbills nest in, which beaches empty out at low tide, which villages still wake to the sound of fishing boats.
Our families have lived here for generations. When we sell land, we're not moving inventory — we're introducing you to a place we love.
Our Philosophy
Not every buyer is right for this land. If someone wants to clear-cut for a hotel, we won't help. If they see nature as an obstacle, we're not a match.
That plot with the stunning view? The road floods in monsoon season. The beachfront land? Erosion is a real concern. We share what we know.
We've walked every property we list. We know its history, its ecology, its potential. We know the neighbors and their stories.
After the sale, we're still here. Need a recommendation for a builder who respects the environment? Want to meet local artisans? We help.

"The land doesn't belong to us.
We belong to the land."
— Island philosophy
The Right Buyer
We're selective. Not because we're difficult, but because the land deserves owners who will honor it.
You see trees as neighbors, not obstacles
You want to build with the land, not against it
You're interested in the story, not just the specs
You plan to be part of the community, not just a visitor
You understand that some things matter more than square meters
Tell us what you're looking for. Not the specs — the feeling. What does your vision for this land look like?