The most common question we get from newly certified divers is some version of: “What should I do next?”
The honest answer is that it depends on what you want from diving. But understanding what each certification actually gives you — and what the real-world difference feels like — makes the decision clearer. Here’s the comparison, level by level.
The PADI Certification Ladder at a Glance
| Certification | Depth Limit | Prerequisite | Duration | What You Unlock |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Discover Scuba Diving | 12m | None | 1 day | Try diving (no certification) |
| PADI Scuba Diver | 12m (supervised) | None | 2 days | Dive with a pro, limited independence |
| PADI Open Water Diver | 18m | None | 3–4 days | Independent buddy diving worldwide |
| PADI Advanced Open Water | 30m | OWD | 2–3 days | Full depth range, all major sites |
| PADI Rescue Diver | No new depth | AOWD + First Aid | 3–4 days | Emergency skills, diver safety |
| PADI Divemaster | No new depth | Rescue + EFR | 12–16 weeks | Lead certified divers professionally |
PADI Open Water Diver — The Foundation
The Open Water is the starting point for independent diving. Everything above it builds on the skills learned here.
Depth limit: 18m Duration: 3–4 days Prerequisites: None (minimum age 15; age 10–14 can do Junior OWD)
What You Can Do With OWD
- Dive independently with a buddy (no instructor required)
- Rent equipment at any PADI dive centre worldwide
- Join dive trips anywhere in the world
- Begin further PADI courses
What You Can’t Do With Just OWD
The 18-metre depth limit is the main constraint. At many of the world’s best dive sites — including Sail Rock and Chumphon Pinnacle here in Koh Samui — the most dramatic terrain and marine life is below 18 metres. You’ll have a good dive, but Advanced divers will reach sections you can’t.
The HTMS Sattakut wreck at Koh Tao sits at 30m — Advanced certification is required to dive it properly.
Honest Assessment
Open Water is essential. Don’t skip it or shortcut it with a Scuba Diver certification if you’re serious about diving. The 18m limit will feel constraining faster than you expect.
PADI Advanced Open Water Diver — The Real Upgrade
The Advanced Open Water Diver is, arguably, the single most useful upgrade you can make after your Open Water. It extends your certified depth to 30m, adds two mandatory specialties (Deep Dive and Navigation), and lets you choose three elective adventure dives from a long menu.
Depth limit: 30m Duration: 2–3 days (5 adventure dives total) Prerequisites: Open Water Diver certification
What You Can Do With AOWD That You Couldn’t Before
- Dive to 30m — which opens up the majority of the world’s serious dive sites
- Access the full depth profile at Sail Rock and Chumphon Pinnacle
- Dive most wrecks (including HTMS Sattakut at Koh Tao)
- Experience what nitrogen narcosis actually feels like, in a controlled environment
The Adventure Dives
Two dives are mandatory:
Deep Adventure Dive: Descends to 30m with the instructor. You’ll run an experiment on nitrogen narcosis, check gas management at depth, and note the colour loss in the water. It’s the dive that changes how you think about depth.
Underwater Navigation: Compass use, natural navigation, estimating distance. Useful, genuinely interesting, and the skill that separates confident divers from those who drift around hoping to find the boat.
The three elective dives are where personality enters. Popular choices at Silent Divers include:
- Peak Performance Buoyancy — the single most technically useful elective. Perfect buoyancy makes every subsequent dive better, more comfortable, and less damaging to the reef.
- Fish Identification — suddenly the reef has names. Harder to quantify but genuinely enriching.
- Underwater Naturalist — ecosystem thinking. Why the fish are where they are, why the coral looks the way it does.
Honest Assessment
The AOWD is the upgrade most worth doing immediately after your Open Water, especially in Koh Samui. The sites we dive — Sail Rock’s base at 30m, Chumphon’s pinnacle systems — reward the full depth range considerably. If you’re already here, doing your AOWD before the fun dive trips gives you a substantially better experience on them.
PADI Rescue Diver — The Certification That Changes How You Think
The Rescue Diver is different in character from the first two courses. Open Water and Advanced are about what you can do for yourself; Rescue Diver is about what you can do for others. Most divers who complete it describe it as the most personally impactful course they’ve done.
Depth limit: No new certified depth Duration: 3–4 days Prerequisites: Advanced Open Water + Emergency First Responder (EFR) first aid certification (EFR can be done as a prerequisite module)
What You Learn
- Recognising and managing diver stress before it becomes an emergency
- Self-rescue techniques
- Recovering an unresponsive diver from underwater
- Managing a panicking diver at the surface
- Coordinating surface rescues and calling for help
- Simulated scenarios with realistic urgency
The scenarios are physical and mentally demanding — they’re designed to be. You’ll be tired at the end of Rescue Diver training days in a way that Open Water days don’t produce.
Why It Matters
Rescue Diver training doesn’t prepare you for dramatic emergency scenarios — it prepares you to be a better, more aware dive buddy in everyday situations. You start reading other divers differently. You notice when someone is showing signs of stress before they do. You know exactly what to do if a situation develops rather than freezing.
The Emergency First Responder (EFR) component — required as a prerequisite — also means you leave with proper first aid and CPR skills, which have obvious value beyond diving.
Honest Assessment
Rescue Diver is the course that most divers say they wish they’d done sooner. It’s not flashy — no new depth limits, no dramatic new access to dive sites — but it reframes your relationship with diving in a lasting way. If you’re committed to diving seriously, the path to Rescue Diver is worth completing.
What About Specialty Courses?
Between AOWD and Rescue, there’s a whole world of PADI specialty courses — certifications that go deep on a specific skill. The ones worth knowing about for Koh Samui divers:
Nitrox (Enriched Air Diver): Perhaps the most universally useful specialty. Diving on Nitrox instead of regular air allows longer no-decompression limits, faster surface interval recovery, and better post-dive fatigue management. On the Koh Samui dive trips, Nitrox is available free to certified Nitrox divers — immediate return on investment.
Deep Diver Specialty: Extends certified depth to 30m for those who want to push beyond the AOWD limit. The dramatic sections of Sail Rock’s base are at 35–30m.
Peak Performance Buoyancy: The specialty that has the most impact on day-to-day diving quality. If your buoyancy still isn’t where you want it, this course sorts it.
Sidemount Diver: Carrying tanks on your sides rather than your back — used by cave and technical divers but increasingly popular among recreational divers who prefer the trim and comfort.
The Path Most Serious Divers Take
If you ask our instructors what they’d recommend for someone arriving at the beginning of a diving journey, the answer is usually:
- Open Water Diver — get the foundation right
- Advanced Open Water — immediately, or on the next trip, before doing too many fun dives at 18m
- Nitrox — simple course, immediate practical benefit
- Rescue Diver — when you’re ready to invest three to four days and genuinely stretch yourself
- Divemaster — if you want to take it further professionally
That’s not a rigid formula. Some people do their Advanced and then spend a year doing fun dives before coming back for Rescue. Some do back-to-back OWD and AOWD in a single week on holiday. The path fits around your life.