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A Halal breakfast institution on Thep Krasattri Road in Phuket Town, Roti Thaew Nam has been frying roti over a large charcoal pan for around seventy years. Consecutive Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition in 2024 and 2025 places it among Thailand's documented street-eating addresses, with savoury curry roti and a no-added-sugar banana-and-egg version available at single-baht prices.

Seventy Years of Smoke and Charcoal in Phuket Town
On Thep Krasattri Road in Talat Yai, the old commercial quarter of Phuket Town, the smell of charcoal reaches you before the stall does. A large, flat pan sits over the heat; dough is pressed, folded, and worked at speed. The whole sequence, from raw dough to plated roti, takes less time than it does to find a seat. This is the rhythm of Roti Thaew Nam, a Halal breakfast institution that has been operating from the same address for around seventy years.
Phuket Town's morning eating culture sits apart from the resort-beach version of the island that most visitors encounter. The town's Sino-Portuguese shophouses shelter a network of long-running coffee shops, dim sum houses, and street-side stalls shaped by generations of Hokkien Chinese, Malay, and Thai Muslim communities. Roti Thaew Nam belongs to that fabric: a Muslim-operated roti counter in a district where such places have fed market traders and office workers since before tourism became the island's primary industry.
Bib Gourmand Recognition in a Single-Digit Price Range
The Michelin Bib Gourmand designation, awarded in both 2024 and 2025, is the guide's signal for cooking that delivers quality well above its price point. At Roti Thaew Nam, the single-baht price tier makes consecutive Bib Gourmand recognition an editorial statement in itself: Michelin inspectors are saying, in effect, that the roti here competes on quality with places that charge multiples of its price.
To put that in context, Phuket's Michelin-recognised venues span a wide range. PRU (Thai, Modern Cuisine) operates at the ฿฿฿฿ end of the spectrum, building tasting menus around farm-to-table sourcing. Roti Thaew Nam sits at the opposite extreme, where the Bib Gourmand functions as a corrective to the assumption that Michelin recognition implies fine dining. The guide has been making this point across Southeast Asia for years, but consecutive awards at a breakfast roti stall in Phuket Town remain a concrete illustration of the argument.
Within Phuket Town's own roti tradition, Roti Chaofa represents the closest peer comparison: another long-standing roti operation working in a similar format. The existence of multiple award-recognised roti counters in the same small city reflects how seriously the local tradition is taken, both by residents and, increasingly, by visiting food critics.
The Roti Itself
The awards data in the venue record is specific enough to describe the product precisely. The roti at Roti Thaew Nam are shaped, fried on a large charcoal pan, and served quickly, with a texture described as soft inside and crispy outside without excess oil. That combination, soft interior with a non-greasy crust, is the technical benchmark for well-executed roti canai in the Malay-Thai Muslim tradition, and achieving it on a high-volume charcoal setup requires consistent heat management across service.
The menu runs in two directions. Savoury roti come with beef or chicken curry, the meat cooked until tender. The sweeter version pairs roti with banana and egg, and the specification that no sugar is added is a meaningful detail: the sweetness comes from the banana alone, which keeps the result lighter and less cloying than versions that rely on condensed milk or added sugar.
Phuket Town's Halal breakfast circuit is worth approaching systematically for anyone spending more than a day in the old town. A Pong Mae Sunee represents a different corner of the same morning eating culture, while Go La and Loba Bang Niao extend the neighbourhood's range further into Hokkien-influenced cooking.
Thailand's Bib Gourmand Geography
Thailand's Michelin programme has consistently used the Bib Gourmand category to document a tier of cooking that operates outside formal restaurant structures: hawker stalls, market counters, family-run shophouse operations. Roti Thaew Nam sits in that cohort alongside venues recognised in Bangkok, Chiang Mai, and beyond.
The comparison is instructive. Sorn in Bangkok holds two Michelin stars, placing it in an entirely different tier of the guide. AKKEE in Pak Kret and Aeeen in Chiang Mai show how the guide's recognition extends into smaller cities and provincial towns across Thailand. Angeum in Phra Nakhon Si Ayutthaya reflects the same geographic spread. Roti Thaew Nam's Bib Gourmand places it in this documented network of Thai cooking that the guide considers worth a detour, regardless of format or setting.
Internationally, the small-eats format recognised in Phuket has direct parallels. A Cun Beef Soup in Tainan and A Hai Taiwanese Oden, also in Tainan, represent the same category of Bib Gourmand-recognised single-format street eating, where the product has been refined over decades into something that earns critical attention. The common thread across all these venues is longevity combined with discipline: one thing, done consistently, for long enough that the quality becomes self-evident.
Planning a Visit
Roti Thaew Nam is located at 6 Thep Krasattri Road in Talat Yai, the central district of Phuket Town, and functions as a breakfast and morning operation, as is standard for roti stalls of this type in the region. No booking infrastructure exists: you arrive, you queue if necessary, you eat. The price tier, a single baht symbol, means a meal here costs a fraction of what you would spend at any of the town's sit-down restaurants, including mid-range options. Google Reviews rate the stall at 4.4 across 769 ratings, a score that holds across a volume of reviews large enough to be considered reliable rather than curated.
Phuket Town is a thirty-to-forty-minute drive from the main beach resort areas on the island's west coast. For visitors whose itinerary is anchored on Patong or Kamala, the town warrants at least a half-day, and the morning eating circuit gives that visit a clear structural anchor. For a broader picture of where Roti Thaew Nam fits into the island's hospitality offer, our full Phuket restaurants guide covers the range from street-level to fine dining. Our full Phuket hotels guide, Phuket bars guide, Phuket wineries guide, and Phuket experiences guide complete the picture for planning a stay in the area.
For readers building a wider Thailand itinerary that takes in the south, The Spa in Lamai Beach on Koh Samui and Agave in Ubon Ratchathani indicate how far the country's documented dining network extends beyond its major cities.
What Should I Eat at Roti Thaew Nam?
The roti at Roti Thaew Nam come in two forms, both verified by the venue's Michelin documentation. The savoury option pairs the crispy-yet-soft fried roti with beef or chicken curry; the beef version is cooked to a notably tender consistency. The sweet version combines roti with banana and egg, made without added sugar, so the flavour is clean and fruit-forward rather than heavy. For a first visit, ordering one of each gives a complete picture of the counter's range. The Bib Gourmand, held consecutively in 2024 and 2025, anchors both options as worth the detour, and the price point means there is no material cost to trying both.
At a Glance
These are the closest comparables we have in our database for quick context.
| Venue | Notes | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Roti Thaew Nam | This venue | ฿ |
| PRU | Thai, Modern Cuisine, ฿฿฿฿ | ฿฿฿฿ |
| Blue Elephant | Thai, ฿฿฿ | ฿฿฿ |
| Acqua | Italian, ฿฿฿฿ | ฿฿฿฿ |
| Baan Rim Pa Patong | Thai | |
| Chuan Chim | Thai, ฿฿ | ฿฿ |
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