Bangkok

Bangkok

Key Takeaways (Read These First)

  • The cool, dry season from November to February is worth the flight. March to May is dangerously hot. June to October brings afternoon downpours but the lowest hotel rates.
  • Wat Pho is mandatory. The Grand Palace is a crowd. You decide which experience you want.
  • BTS and MRT beat taxis every time during rush hour. Grab is your backup. Tuk-tuks are a paid adventure, not transportation.
  • Budget 30-50 USD per day for backpacker comfort. 70-150 USD gets you air-conditioned privacy and better food. 200+ USD opens riverside luxury.
  • Khao San Road is not real Bangkok. It is a backpacker bubble. Go if you want the bubble. Skip if you want the city.

Quick Facts

CategoryDetail
LocationCentral Thailand, Chao Phraya River delta
RegionCentral Thailand
Coordinates13.7367° N, 100.5231° E
Opening HoursThe city operates 24/7. Temples typically 8:30 AM to 3:30-5:00 PM.
Entrance FeeGrand Palace: 500 THB. Wat Pho: 200 THB. Wat Arun: 100 THB. (prices current as of 2025)
Dress CodeShoulders and knees covered for temples. No see-through clothing. No ripped jeans.
Best Time of DayTemple visits before 10 AM or after 3 PM to beat heat and tour groups.
Best Months to VisitNovember, December, January, February.
Estimated Visit DurationFirst-timers need 4-5 days to cover core sights without exhaustion.
Photography RulesNo flash inside temple ordination halls. No photography at all in some Emerald Buddha areas.

Overview: Why Bangkok Demands a Different Kind of Guide

You have read the “amazing” and “wonderful” listicles. Here is the reality. Bangkok is a concrete labyrinth of 10 million people, two million motorbikes, and a transit system that can throw you if you are not paying attention.

I have lived through the Songkran water wars, the smoky March haze, and the flooding that sometimes creeps into riverside parking lots. This city is not a theme park. It is a living, breathing, sweating metropolis.

And it is brilliant, once you stop trying to see it as a postcard.

Check the Thailand weather by month breakdown before you book anything. Getting the season wrong here can ruin your trip.

What This Guide Is NOT

This is not a collection of Instagram captions. It is not a recycled list of “100 things to do.” It is also not an endorsement of elephant tourism or tiger temples. Save that for other sites.

Wat-Pho, Bangkok
Wat-Pho, Bangkok

Temples That Actually Deliver (and One That Might Overwhelm)

Bangkok has over 400 wats. You cannot see them all. You should not try. Focus on these three.

Wat Pho (Temple of the Reclining Buddha)

Why it works: The 46-meter reclining Buddha is spectacular. But the real value is the calm. This temple has space. You can breathe. The coin donation line is a meditation if you let it be.

Best time: 8:30 AM opening. You get an hour of relative peace before the tour buses arrive.

Cost: 200 THB. Includes a free bottle of water. A small kindness that matters in April.

Dress code: Strictly enforced. No covered shoulders, no entry. They will lend you a wrap, but bring your own.

Wat Arun (Temple of Dawn)

Why it works: It is across the river. That simple separation filters out some of the crowds. The porcelain tile work is unlike any other temple in Thailand. The climb is steep. Do it anyway.

Best time: Late afternoon. The sun hits the tiles and the river. Golden hour is not a cliche here.

Cost: 100 THB.

Pro tip: Take the Chao Phraya Express boat. Do not take a taxi. The boat is part of the experience.

The Grand Palace and Wat Phra Kaew

Why it works: The Emerald Buddha is Thailand’s spiritual anchor. The architecture is absurdly ornate.

Why it is exhausting: 500 THB entry fee. Crowds that can feel like a mosh pit. Heat that radiates off the marble courtyards.

Verdict: Go once. See it. Then leave and find peace at Wat Pho.

How to Get There: Breaking Down the Transport Chaos

From Suvarnabhumi Airport (BKK)

OptionCostTimeBest For
Airport Rail Link45 THB30-40 minutes to Phaya ThaiAnyone not carrying huge luggage
Taxi400-500 THB + tolls (75 THB)45-90 minutesGroups of 2-4 with luggage
Grab500-600 THB45-90 minutesWhen taxi drivers refuse meter

Do not take a taxi without a meter. The driver will quote you 800 THB plus tolls. That is a scam.

From Don Mueang Airport (DMK)

OptionCostTimeBest For
Bus A1/A2 to Mo Chit BTS30 THB20 minutesConnecting to Skytrain
Taxi300-400 THB + tolls40-60 minutesLate night arrivals

Navigating the City: BTS, MRT, and the Boat

The BTS Skytrain and MRT subway are your spine. They are air-conditioned, efficient, and easy to use.

  • BTS (Skytrain): Covers Sukhumvit, Siam, and Silom lines. 16 THB to 62 THB per ride. Get a Rabbit card if staying more than 3 days.
  • MRT (Subway): Connects to Hua Lamphong (train station) and Chatuchak Market. 17 THB to 70 THB.
  • Chao Phraya Express Boat: 15 THB to 30 THB. Essential for reaching Wat Arun and the old city. Avoid tourist boats costing 150 THB for the same route.

What This Is NOT: A tuk-tuk is not transportation. It is an experience. Agree on a price (60-100 THB for a short ride) before you get in. Do not let them take you to a “government souvenir shop.” That is a commission trap.

Best Time to Visit: The Real Seasonality

MonthsWeatherCrowdsHotel PricesVerdict
Nov-FebCool, dry, occasional morning fogHighPeakBest weather, busy sights
Mar-May35-40°C, smoggyMedium-LowLowUnpleasant heat
Jun-OctAfternoon showers, high humidityLowLowestLowest prices, green parks

The price of missing the right season: A March trip means you will skip outdoor sights. You will eat indoors. You will pay for short taxis you could have walked. You lose money and experience.

Costs and Budget: What Things Actually Cost (2026)

ItemBudgetMid-RangeLuxury
Street food meal50-70 THB100-150 THB
Nice restaurant meal300-600 THB1000+ THB
BTS/MRT ride17-62 THB17-62 THB17-62 THB
Short Grab ride60-100 THB60-100 THB60-100 THB
Temple entry100-500 THB100-500 THB100-500 THB
Cheap hotel400-800 THB
Mid-range hotel1500-3000 THB
Luxury hotel5000+ THB

Daily budget ranges:

  • Budget backpacker (dorm bed, street food, BTS): 1000-1500 THB per day (30-45 USD)
  • Mid-range solo (private room, restaurant meals, some Grab rides): 2000-3000 THB per day (60-90 USD)
  • Luxury (good hotel, nice dinners, private tours): 4000+ THB per day (120+ USD)

Top Things to Do: The Shortlist

1. Eat Thip Samai Pad Thai

It is famous for a reason. The lines are long. Go at 9 PM, not 7 PM. Order the omelette-wrapped version (pad thai song kreung). Cash only.

2. Explore Yaowarat (Chinatown) at Night

The street food stalls here are exceptional. Find the oyster omelette. Find the toasts with Thai custard. Eat until you cannot move.

3. Get a Real Thai Massage at Wat Pho

The Wat Pho Thai Massage School is the national gold standard. 420 THB for 60 minutes. No happy endings. Just excellent technique.

4. Visit the Jim Thompson House

An oasis of traditional Thai architecture hidden behind a concrete wall. The story of Thompson’s disappearance in Malaysia adds a layer of mystery. 200 THB entry. 30-45 minutes is enough.

5. Take a Day Trip to Ayutthaya

The old capital is one hour by train. Rent a bicycle. See the Buddha head in the tree. Return by evening. Read my full Ayutthaya day trip guide here. (Link when published)

Bangkok street food
Bangkok street food

Tips and Etiquette: What Saves You Money and Respect

  • Dress code is enforced. Cover your shoulders and knees for temples. Women especially. They will deny you entry. I have seen it happen.
  • Remove your shoes before entering any temple building. Look for the shoe rack.
  • Do not touch people’s heads. The head is considered the most sacred body part.
  • Do not point your feet at Buddha images. Sit with your legs tucked to the side.
  • Smile. It de-escalates confusion. It opens doors. It is not fake here.

Where to Stay: Decoding the Neighborhoods

AreaVibeBest ForBudget
Sukhumvit (Asok, Phrom Phong)Modern, convenient, expat-heavyFirst-timers who want easy BTS accessAll ranges
RiversideQuiet, historic, spectacular viewsLuxury travelers, couplesHigh
Old City (Rattanakosin)Temple-filled, chaotic, authenticFirst-timers who want to walk to sightsLow-Mid
AriTrendy, local, cafe cultureLong-term visitors, remote workersMid
Khao San RoadBackpacker ghetto, loud, cheapBudget travelers under 25Very Low

For first-timers: Sukhumvit near Asok BTS or Riverside near a ferry pier. Do not stay on Khao San Road unless you want to hear bass until 4 AM.

Bangkok rooftop bars
Bangkok rooftop bars

Nearby Places and Alternatives

DestinationDistance from BangkokBest For
Ayutthaya80 km (1.5 hours by train)History, ruins, day trips
Kanchanaburi130 km (3 hours by bus)WWII history, waterfalls, river
Koh Samet200 km (3.5 hours + ferry)Closest beach escape
Hua Hin200 km (3-4 hours by train)Laid-back beach resort

FAQ (Real Questions, Real Answers)

Four full days is the sweet spot for first-timers. Two days is rushed. One week lets you do day trips.

No. You can eat well for 50 THB. You can stay in a decent guesthouse for 400 THB. The expensive parts are optional.

Yes, with normal precautions. Do not walk alone in deserted alleys at 2 AM. Do not leave your drink unattended. Use Grab, not street taxis, at night. The main tourist areas are well-lit and busy.

Cash is essential for street food, markets, and taxis. Cards work at malls, mid-range restaurants, and hotels. You can use cards to top up BTS and MRT cards.

No. Do not. Buy bottled water (7-10 THB). Check the seal is not broken.

Wat Pho at 8:30 AM. Before the crowds. Before the heat. Just the gold Buddha and the monks.

The Contrarian Truth

Bangkok is not “cheap” anymore if you stay in Sukhumvit high-rises and eat at rooftop bars. It is affordable. It is not a bargain basement. The backpacker days of 100 THB dorms and free street pad thai are gone. Adjust your budget or adjust your expectations.

Summary

Bangkok is the chaotic, humid, brilliant capital of Thailand. Visit between November and February for cool weather. Use the BTS Skytrain and MRT to avoid traffic. Eat street food. Respect temple dress codes. Budget 1000-1500 THB per day for backpacker comfort, 2000-3000 THB for mid-range. Stay near Sukhumvit or the Riverside for first-time convenience. Wat Pho and Wat Arun are the essential temples. Avoid tuk-tuk commission scams. Drink bottled water.

Bangkok is a lot. This guide is a start, not a finish.

I have written deeper guides on specific Bangkok neighborhoods, transport hacks, and honest hotel reviews. [Subscribe to the Thai-Hub newsletter for weekly updates.] (Link when available)

Have a specific question about a hotel or a street? Drop it in the comments. I live here.