Thailand has a 2,500-year Buddhist meditation tradition, and several monasteries run structured silent retreats specifically designed for foreigners with zero experience.
Wat Suan Mokkh International Hermitage (Chaiya, Surat Thani): - 10-day retreats first 10 days of each month - ΰΈΏ2,000 donation for entire stay (very low) - Anapanasati (mindfulness of breathing) tradition - 4 AM wake, vegetarian, 4 hours formal meditation/day - Accepts ~100 students per retreat β book online 1β2 months ahead - English-speaking teachers, very accommodating to beginners - β οΈ Hard physical schedule, but mentally accessible
Wat Pah Nanachat (Ubon Ratchathani): - Thai Forest Tradition (Ajahn Chah lineage) - More austere β guests follow monastic schedule strictly - 1β3 days possible for guests; longer requires more commitment - Free/donation-based
Dipabhavan Meditation Centre (Koh Samui): - 7-day retreats monthly - ΰΈΏ9,000 donation - More structured for beginners than Wat Suan Mokkh - Gentler intro to Vipassana
Vipassana 10-Day Course (Goenka tradition): - Free, donation-based, locations near Bangkok and Chiang Mai - Most intense β 10 hours/day meditation - Strict noble silence - Book 6+ months ahead β extremely popular globally
What to expect on day 1β3: - Mind feels like a hyperactive monkey - Boredom, restlessness, self-doubt - This is normal β instructors are unfazed - By day 4β5, most beginners hit a calmer rhythm
Important: Silent retreat is mentally demanding. If you have untreated trauma or severe anxiety, consult a therapist first. These centers do not provide mental health support beyond meditation instruction.