When to Go
Best Time to Visit
November–February. Cool dry season — comfortable days, cooler nights, less rain. March–May is brutally hot.
Daily Spend in USD
Budget
Budget
$25/day
Mid-range
$70/day
Luxury
$200/day
One of the world’s best value cities — street food is genuinely $1–3, luxury hotels are world class for $150–300.
With Kids
Family Travel
Lumpini Park (giant monitor lizards), Children’s Discovery Museum, ethical elephant sanctuaries via day trip — never elephant rides.
Together
Couples Travel
Rooftop bars (Sky Bar at Lebua, Vertigo), river dinner cruise, Thai cooking class.
On Your Own
Solo Travel
Easy, welcoming, lots to do. Hostels and co-working communities are excellent. Sukhumvit is solo-friendly.
Food
What to Eat
- Pad Thai. Best from street carts — Thip Samai is the classic.
- Tom Yum Goong. Spicy-sour shrimp soup — order it medium-spicy at first.
- Mango Sticky Rice. Seasonal April–June; year-round at touristy spots.
- Som Tam. Green papaya salad — pungent, spicy, addictive.
- Boat Noodles. Tiny rich bowls; pile up the bowls at a noodle boat.
Transportation
Getting Around
BTS Skytrain + MRT subway reach the modern center; tuk-tuks for short hops; Grab for cars.
Avoid taxis that refuse the meter. Bangkok traffic is brutal 4–7 pm — plan accordingly.
Where to Base Yourself
Neighborhoods
- Sukhumvit. Modern restaurants, hotels, malls — the safest first-time area.
- Old Town (Rattanakosin). Grand Palace, Wat Pho, the historic core.
- Chinatown (Yaowarat). Best street food, late-night energy, golden temples.
- Thonglor / Ekkamai. Hip cafés, craft cocktails, expat-friendly.
What to Know
Safety
Mostly safe; watch traffic, tourist scams ("the temple is closed today"), and overpriced tuk-tuks.