The Experience
You reach The Pavilion on a covered walkway that climbs from the resort gardens into the trees, and then the room simply opens: a teak pavilion on thirty-metre stilts, walls largely absent, the rainforest pressing in on three sides and Datai Bay glinting through the canopy. At dusk the sound is all jungle, cicadas and hornbills and the rustle of a dusky leaf monkey somewhere close, and no city dining room comes near it. The Pavilion serves Thai food, in the open air, every night the kitchen is open.
The kitchen is led by Thai chef Somkeat Lok, and it cooks across the Thai canon: royal Thai dishes that trace back to the Siamese palace kitchens, central curries, and lighter northern plates. The à la carte reads like a greatest-hits of the region — the yam som o gai kap goong, a pomelo salad with chicken and prawns at RM60; a whole grilled sea bass fillet seasoned simply with salt and lime at RM110; mango sticky rice at RM32 to finish. Prices carry the usual ten-per-cent service charge. The wine list runs deeper than most resort cellars, with Rieslings and Austrian whites chosen to sit against Thai heat rather than fight it.
The room is open-walled and low-lit once the sun drops, lanterns and the forest doing most of the work; tables are spaced for privacy rather than packed, and the pace is unhurried, a long two- to three-hour dinner rather than a quick one. Service is warm and practised. The Pavilion sits inside The Datai Langkawi, a member of the Leading Hotels of the World, and earned a Tripadvisor Certificate of Excellence as far back as 2015; it has been one of the most admired Thai kitchens outside Thailand for years. Book at least a week ahead, ask for a bay-facing table, and bring a light layer, because the canopy cools after dark.
Why it's perfect for Birthday
For a birthday in Langkawi, The Pavilion is the table most likely to outlast the trip. The setting is genuinely singular — a canopy pavilion open to the jungle, the bay glimpsed beyond — and the Thai menu is built for sharing, which suits a table of four to a dozen passing dishes around. The Datai's team handles a birthday with quiet generosity rather than a marching band. For a milestone, it is hard to picture a more memorable room in Southeast Asia.
Not for anyone who needs walls and air-conditioning or a quick bite: it is an open-air rainforest pavilion and a long Thai dinner, reached by a walkway up through the trees.
A note on context
For the full Langkawi dining landscape, the city guide contextualises The Pavilion at The Datai within the broader scene. The best birthday restaurants guide ranks this among the notable choices globally. See also the first date occasion page and our editorial team's scoring methodology.
Frequently Asked
Where is The Pavilion at The Datai?
The Pavilion sits inside The Datai Langkawi at Jalan Teluk Datai, on the north-west corner of Langkawi island, Malaysia. The restaurant itself is a teak pavilion raised on thirty-metre stilts in the rainforest canopy above Datai Bay, reached by a covered walkway from the resort gardens. Non-resort guests can dine, but the property arranges access at the time of booking.
Who is the chef and what should I order at The Pavilion?
The kitchen is led by Thai chef Somkeat Lok, cooking royal and regional Thai. Start with the yam som o gai kap goong, a pomelo salad with chicken and prawns (RM60), move to the whole grilled sea bass with salt and lime (RM110), and finish with mango sticky rice (RM32). Prices carry a ten-per-cent service charge.
Is The Pavilion good for a proposal or special occasion?
Yes, it is one of the most romantic dining rooms in Malaysia. The open-air pavilion in the rainforest canopy, the bay glimpsed through the trees, and the unhurried, two- to three-hour Thai dinner make it a natural choice for a proposal, anniversary or milestone birthday. Ask for a bay-facing table when you book, and tell the team in advance if you are celebrating.
How do I book The Pavilion, and what is the dress code?
Book at least a week ahead, especially in high season, through The Datai Langkawi; access for non-resort guests is arranged at the time of reservation. The dress code is smart casual. The canopy cools after dark, so bring a light layer, and flag any mobility needs when you book, as a golf-cart lift to the walkway can be arranged.
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