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Bangkok First-Timer Guide · 2026

Your first trip to Bangkok
Everything you need, nothing you don't

A city where you can stand before a glittering royal palace in the morning, cross the river on a ฿5 ferry by afternoon, and end the day eating street food under the neon of Chinatown. This guide is built from verified facts and real visitor accounts to get you ready before you land.

Why start here

Temples, markets, malls and a river — all in one frame

Bangkok is one of the most visited cities on Earth, and the reason is simple: nowhere else stacks this much into one place. A 200-year-old royal palace and some of Asia's most dazzling temples. A working river where boats are still real transport, not a theme ride. One of the world's largest weekend markets. Street food good enough to hold Michelin distinctions. And air-conditioned mega-malls waiting for you when the midday sun wins. All of it connected by trains and boats.

Easier to get around than you expect — the BTS Skytrain, the MRT metro and the Chao Phraya express boats reach almost every major sight, with rail fares around ฿17–62 per ride. Eats well on any budget — from noodle carts charging pocket change to rooftop dinners over the river. Works year-round — the heat is real and the rain is real, but get the rhythm right (walk early and late, go indoors at midday) and any season is a good season. This guide walks through it all, one decision at a time.

A note on this guide: All prices, hours and logistics here are drawn from public sources and verified visitor accounts. Details change — check for the latest before you travel.
Trip planning

How many days do you need?

Three to four days is the comfortable answer — because Bangkok works best when you give each day a zone. One day for the old royal island (palace, temples, riverside), one for the river and Chinatown, one for markets and malls. If your dates cover a weekend, keep half a day for Chatuchak Market. Two days covers the essentials, but you will be moving fast.

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3 Days — the essential Bangkok
The right answer for a short first visit

Day 1: the Grand Palace, then Wat Pho, then the cross-river ferry to Wat Arun for golden-hour photos. Day 2: ride the Chao Phraya express boat along the river, then Yaowarat (Chinatown) after dark for street food. Day 3: a market morning (Chatuchak if it is the weekend), Siam's malls in the heat of the day, a rooftop or riverside evening.

Full day-by-day plan: 3-day itinerary →
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4 Days — slower, plus a day trip
The version most people wish they had booked

Days 1–3 as above, at an easier pace. Day 4 goes one of two ways: a day trip out of the city — the ruins of Ayutthaya or a floating market are the classics — or a deeper dig into whichever Bangkok you liked best: Thonburi's cafe lanes, a night market, the museums you skipped.

Full day-by-day plan: 4-day itinerary →

Itineraries for every schedule: 1 day (layover) · 2 days · 3 days · 4 days — and work out the cost at Bangkok trip budget →

Before you fly

Best time to go & entry rules

When to visit
Cool season is the clear winner

November to February is the kindest stretch of the year — the least rain, the most sun, and temperatures cool enough to walk temple courtyards all day. April is the hottest month, but it brings Songkran (mid-April), when the whole city becomes a water fight. June to October is the rainy season: downpours tend to hit in heavy late-afternoon bursts and then clear, so it is very workable with an umbrella — and hotels get noticeably cheaper. Month-by-month detail at when to visit Bangkok →

Peak dates: December–January and Songkran — hotels cost more, book ahead
Entry requirements
Visa-free for many nationalities — verify before booking

As of 2026, travellers from many countries — including most of Europe, the UK, the US, Australia and much of Asia — can enter Thailand visa-free for short tourist stays, typically 30 to 60 days depending on nationality and current policy. The rules do change, so check the latest requirements for your passport with the Thai embassy or an official government source before committing to flights. Have your passport, accommodation details and an onward ticket ready at immigration.

Passport validity: At least 6 months remaining is strongly recommended
Getting to the city

From the airport to your hotel

Bangkok has two airports on opposite sides of the city. BKK (Suvarnabhumi), to the east, is the main hub used by most full-service airlines. DMK (Don Mueang), to the north, is the low-cost base — AirAsia and most budget carriers land there. Check which one your ticket says: they are a long way apart. If you are connecting between them, a free shuttle bus runs airport-to-airport for passengers with an onward boarding pass (conditions apply — verify before relying on it).

From BKK (Suvarnabhumi)
East of the city · the full-service hub

Airport Rail Link (ARL): from the basement level, about ฿15–45, reaching Phaya Thai in around 26 minutes with a direct BTS connection — the fastest option when roads are jammed. Official taxi rank: take a queue ticket on level 1; you pay the meter plus a ฿50 airport surcharge plus tolls, roughly ฿300–500 to central Bangkok. Grab picks up from designated points, and limousine counters exist if you want the easy version.

Full options with timings: airport transfer guide →
From DMK (Don Mueang)
North of the city · mostly low-cost airlines

There is no rail link inside the terminal. The workhorses are the A1/A2 buses, about ฿30 to BTS Mo Chit / MRT Chatuchak — fast and frequent. Alternatively, a walkway connects to Don Mueang railway station for the SRT Red Line into Krung Thep Aphiwat Central Terminal, around ฿33 (check current timetables). Taxis run roughly ฿250–400 plus the ฿50 surcharge and tolls, and Grab works here too.

Full options with timings: airport transfer guide →
In the city

Getting around & paying for things

Sathorn Pier on the Chao Phraya River — the interchange between the BTS at Saphan Taksin and the express boats
BTS · MRT · river boats
Trains + boats cover nearly every major sight

The BTS Skytrain (Sukhumvit and Silom lines, plus the short Gold Line) and the MRT (Blue and Purple lines) are the backbone, with fares around ฿17–62. Stations first-timers use most: Siam, Asok, Mo Chit, Saphan Taksin (for the boats), Sanam Chai (for the palace and temples) and Wat Mangkon (for Chinatown). The Chao Phraya express boat (orange flag, about ฿16 flat) and the ฿5 cross-river ferries are the cheapest, best way to see the riverside. Full guides: BTS & MRT guide → and Chao Phraya boat guide →

Tickets don't transfer: Rabbit card = BTS only · MRT has its own card/tokens and takes contactless credit-card tap · ARL is separate again — and rush hours (7:30–9:00, 17:00–19:30) are genuinely packed
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Paying for things
Cash · PromptPay QR · credit cards

Bangkok runs on a mix. Locals scan PromptPay QR codes at virtually every stall, but those QR payments need a Thai bank account — as a visitor you will live on cash for markets, street food and motorbike taxis, and credit cards at hotels, malls and bigger restaurants. ATMs charge foreign cards a fee of about ฿220 per withdrawal, so withdraw larger amounts less often, or bring cash and use a reputable exchange counter (the SuperRich-style money changers usually beat airport rates — compare before you change).

SIM/eSIM: tourist SIM counters operate at both airports, or set up an eSIM before you fly · use Grab for ride-hailing — only ride taxis that run the meter (flagfall about ฿35)
Accommodation

Which area should you stay in?

Bangkok is big and its traffic is famous for a reason. The single best decision you can make is to stay on a rail line or by the river — everything else about the trip gets easier. Know each area's personality before you book: full neighbourhood guide →

Sukhumvit (Asok–Thong Lo)
The favourite stretch along the BTS

The Sukhumvit corridor is the most convenient base for eating, shopping and nightlife — the BTS runs the length of it, and malls, restaurants and bars surround you. Hotels span mid-range to high-end. The trade-off: it is far from the palace-and-temples zone, so you will ride the train and a boat, or take a Grab, to get there.

Best for: First-timers focused on food, shopping, nightlife · mid–high budgets
Silom / Sathorn
BTS + MRT · calmer than Sukhumvit

An office district by day that turns into an eating district by night. You get both the BTS and the MRT, Lumphini Park on foot, and Sathorn Pier close by for river trips. Several of the famous rooftop bars are here, and hotels often cost less than the Sukhumvit equivalent.

Best for: Easy transport, rooftop evenings · mid budgets
The riverside
Chao Phraya views · the top-end cluster

Wake up to the river, then ride a hotel shuttle boat or the express boat to the temples. This is where Bangkok's grand hotels cluster, with ICONSIAM across the water — but mid-range options hide along the bank too. The right choice when the river is the point of the trip, or the trip is a celebration.

Best for: Couples, special occasions · higher budgets (with mid-range exceptions)
Rattanakosin / Khao San
Walk to the palace · no rail line

Sleep within walking distance of the Grand Palace, Wat Pho and Khao San Road, and reach the temples before the tour groups. Most beds here are guesthouses and small independent hotels at friendly prices. The trade-off is real: no BTS or MRT — you will move by river boat, ferry and Grab.

Best for: Temple-first trips, budget travellers, backpackers
Siam / Pratunam
Dead centre · shopping on the doorstep

The geographic centre of modern Bangkok, with every mega-mall on foot: Siam Paragon, CentralWorld, MBK and the Pratunam wholesale market. Siam station is where the two BTS lines cross, and the ARL at Ratchaprarop sits near the Pratunam side. A practical base for families and shoppers who want to start from the middle of the map.

Best for: Families, shoppers, first-timers who want the centre
The highlights

Sights that first-timers shouldn't miss

Bangkok has more to see than any first trip can cover. These six are the core — all realistic within 3–4 days. Full details at Bangkok attractions →

The Grand Palace and Wat Phra Kaew, Bangkok — gilded spires and ornate roofs of the royal palace complex
Strict dress code · go early · foreigners ~฿500

The royal palace complex and the Temple of the Emerald Buddha — the single most dazzling thing in the city and where every first trip should start. Arrive for opening (around 8:30) before the heat and the tour groups. The dress code is enforced at the gate: shoulders and knees covered, nothing see-through or skin-tight. Entry for foreign visitors is about ฿500.

Getting there: MRT Sanam Chai + 10–15 min walk · or express boat to Tha Chang pier
The Reclining Buddha at Wat Pho, Bangkok — the 46-metre gilded statue filling its temple hall
46-metre Buddha · birthplace of Thai massage

A few minutes' walk from the Grand Palace: a gilded reclining Buddha 46 metres long, filling its hall so completely you can never quite photograph all of it. Wat Pho is also the traditional home of Thai massage — you can book one inside the temple grounds. Entry for foreign visitors is about ฿300 (check before you go).

Getting there: MRT Sanam Chai, short walk · pair it with the palace in one day
Wat Arun at sunset — the riverside prang of the Temple of Dawn glowing gold over the Chao Phraya
฿5 ferry from Tha Tien · best light in the evening

The riverside spire on every Bangkok postcard. Take the cross-river ferry from Tha Tien pier — about ฿5, a few minutes — and the porcelain-encrusted prang gets better the closer you stand. Evening light is the best of the day; afterwards, cross back and photograph it lit up from the opposite bank.

Getting there: Tha Tien ferry · slots in right after Wat Pho
An orange-flag Chao Phraya express boat pulling in to a pier — Bangkok's budget river transport
Orange flag, ~฿16 flat · the cheapest city tour there is

Board the orange-flag boat at Sathorn Pier (connected to BTS Saphan Taksin) and ride upriver past warehouses, churches, temples and river life you cannot see from the road. Hop off at Tha Chang for the palace or Phra Arthit for the Khao San area. At about ฿16 for any distance, it is the best-value sightseeing in Bangkok.

Start at: Sathorn Pier — BTS Saphan Taksin exits straight onto it
Chatuchak Weekend Market, Bangkok — lanes of stalls under tin roofs stretching into the distance
Saturday–Sunday · 10,000+ stalls · go early

One of the largest weekend markets in the world — clothes, homeware, crafts, plants, antiques and food, in lanes you could wander all day without finishing. It runs in full only on Saturday and Sunday. Go early before the heat peaks, pause for coconut water often, and bargain politely — it is expected.

Getting there: BTS Mo Chit · MRT Kamphaeng Phet or Chatuchak Park
Yaowarat Road at night — Chinese neon signs and street food carts along Bangkok's Chinatown
MRT Wat Mangkon · after dark is the golden hour

One of the most alive Chinatowns anywhere. By day it is gold shops and old trading lanes; after sunset the whole street turns into a food arena — neon on, carts out, woks roaring. Arrive hungry in the evening and graze stall by stall. That is the correct way to do it.

Getting there: MRT Wat Mangkon puts you right in the middle
Got time to spare: see every sight with directions at Bangkok attractions →, or leave the city for a day with day trips from Bangkok → (Ayutthaya, floating markets, the nearest coast)
What to eat

Bangkok food worth seeking out

Bangkok is the street food capital of the world — the city where a sidewalk wok stall can hold a Michelin distinction and a ฿60 plate can be the meal you remember longest. Full guide at Bangkok food guide →

Pad thai with prawns — tamarind-glossed rice noodles topped with crushed peanuts and a lime wedge
Pad Thai (ผัดไทย)
The national dish, done right on the street

Thin rice noodles wok-fried in tamarind sauce — sour, sweet and salty in one plate, finished with crushed peanuts and a squeeze of lime. Street carts all over the city do it well for around ฿60–100; the legendary old-town houses charge more and earn it. Order it wrapped in a thin omelette if you see the option.

Price: about ฿60–150 · see Bangkok street food →
Tom yum kung — hot orange soup with river prawns, mushrooms, lemongrass and kaffir lime leaves
Tom Yum Kung (ต้มยำกุ้ง)
Sour, spicy, herbal · Thailand's signature soup

The soup that compresses Thai cooking into one bowl: lime-sour, chilli-hot, fragrant with lemongrass and kaffir lime, loaded with big prawns. It comes clear or creamy, and restaurants at every level do it proudly, from shophouse kitchens to riverside terraces. If you fear the heat, say "phet noi" — less spicy — and they will go easy on you.

Price: about ฿150–400 by prawn size · see food guide →
Khao man gai — poached chicken sliced over seasoned rice with soybean-ginger sauce and a bowl of broth
Khao Man Gai (ข้าวมันไก่)
The everyday lunch Bangkok actually eats

Tender poached chicken over rice cooked in the chicken's own broth, with a ginger-chilli soybean sauce and a cup of soup on the side. It looks simple and it is — which is why the famous Pratunam shops draw queues all day and have held Michelin recognition. At around ฿50–100 a plate, this is lunch the way the city really does it.

Price: about ฿50–100 · see Michelin street food →
Mango sticky rice — slices of ripe golden mango beside coconut sticky rice
Mango Sticky Rice (ข้าวเหนียวมะม่วง)
The dessert people fly here for

Ripe mango with coconut-cream sticky rice and a scatter of crisp mung beans — three ingredients that became Thailand's most famous dessert. You will find it at markets, dessert shops and food courts across the city. Mango season (roughly March to June) is when it is at its sweetest and most fragrant.

Price: about ฿60–150 by shop and size · easy to find citywide

More Bangkok food: street food → · eating Yaowarat → · full food guide →

Setting a budget

How much will it cost?

Bangkok genuinely works on any budget — good hostels are plentiful, a street-food meal costs pocket change, and the trains and boats are cheap. Aim higher and a riverside suite with rooftop dinners will happily absorb whatever you give it. Full breakdown with sample trips at Bangkok trip budget →

Level Hotel/night Food/day Total/day (rough)
Budget about ฿300–800 hostel or guesthouse about ฿200–450 street food + food courts about ฿800–1,500
Mid-range about ฿1,500–3,000 3–4 star hotel about ฿500–1,000 popular restaurants + cafes about ฿2,500–4,500
Comfort about ฿4,000–20,000+ 5-star / riverside about ฿1,000–3,000+ rooftops + fine dining about ฿6,000–20,000+

Transport barely registers — BTS/MRT rides are about ฿17–62, the orange-flag express boat about ฿16, cross-river ferries about ฿5. Major temples charge foreign visitors roughly ฿100–500 each. The biggest saving of all is timing: low-season hotel rates drop noticeably — see when hotels get cheaper →

Good to know

What first-timers get wrong

Temple dress codes are enforced
The Grand Palace is the strictest

"Dress modestly" is not a suggestion at the royal temples — it is checked at the gate. Shoulders covered (sleeves, not a draped scarf alone), knees covered, nothing see-through or skin-tight. The Grand Palace is the strictest in the city; fail the check and you queue to rent or buy a cover-up on the spot. Far easier to dress for it from the start.

Tip: One light shawl or sarong in your bag solves nearly every temple
"It's closed today" is a scam
The classic move near the big sights

A friendly stranger near the palace tells you it is closed for a royal ceremony — and conveniently, a tuk-tuk can take you to a "better" temple or a "government" gem sale. Nearly all of these end at a gem shop or tailor paying commission to whoever delivered you. The suspiciously cheap ฿20 tuk-tuk tours work the same way. Major sights are almost never closed all day: walk to the gate and check for yourself.

Simple rule: A stranger says it's closed and offers a ride elsewhere — say thanks and keep walking
Taxis: meter or no deal
Refuse the flat-rate offer

Bangkok's metered taxis are cheap — the flag drops at about ฿35. The catch: some drivers around tourist areas quote a flat price several times the meter fare. If the driver will not run the meter, get out and hail another, or use Grab, which shows the price before you confirm. Motorbike taxis (the orange vests) are great for short hops down long sois — agree the price first.

Remember: No meter = no ride · Grab always shows the fare upfront
The rail systems don't share tickets
BTS · MRT · ARL are separate companies

The single most confusing thing about Bangkok transport: the BTS, MRT and Airport Rail Link are run by different operators and there is no shared ticket. The Rabbit card works on the BTS only; the MRT sells its own stored-value card and tokens and accepts contactless credit-card tap at the gate; the ARL is separate again. Budget extra patience at rush hour (7:30–9:00, 17:00–19:30) — the trains are genuinely packed.

Step-by-step: BTS & MRT guide →
Don't drink the tap water · love the 7-Eleven
Bottled water; a convenience store every block

Tap water in Bangkok is not for drinking — stick to bottled or filtered water. The good news is that 7-Elevens sit on practically every block and never close: cold water, sunscreen, basic medicine, snacks, rice boxes, grilled pork skewers at breakfast. Whatever you are missing, the nearest 7-Eleven probably has it. Ice in restaurants is generally factory-made tube ice and not a typical problem.

Tip: A big bottle of water from 7-Eleven costs a fraction of the hotel minibar
Learn three phrases
Small effort, outsized returns

English gets you through hotels and malls, but three Thai words change how the city treats you: sa-wat-dee (สวัสดี) — hello; khop khun (ขอบคุณ) — thank you; and the lifesaver, phet noi (เผ็ดน้อย) — "a little spicy, please." Men end a phrase with "khrap," women with "kha," and the smile you get back is real. Use phet noi early and often if chilli is not your sport.

Bonus: mai phet = not spicy at all · aroi = delicious — say it and watch the cook light up
Before you go

Your first-trip checklist

Before you fly
Sort these before leaving home

☑ Check the current visa rules for your passport (validity 6+ months)
☑ Pick your dates wisely — see the best months
☑ Book a hotel on a BTS/MRT line or by the river
☑ Pack light, breathable clothes + sunscreen + a temple-modest outfit + a rain layer (Jun–Oct)
☑ Download Grab, and arrange an eSIM or plan to buy a SIM on arrival

Once you land in Bangkok
Do these on day one

☑ From BKK take the Airport Rail Link · from DMK the A1/A2 bus or Red Line
☑ Get a Rabbit card if you'll ride the BTS a lot — the MRT takes credit-card tap
☑ Withdraw cash in larger amounts (ATM fee ~฿220 per pull) or use an exchange counter
☑ Drink bottled water · find your nearest 7-Eleven, you'll be back
☑ Practise sa-wat-dee, khop khun and phet noi on your first street-food order

Frequently asked

FAQ · before you go

How many days should I spend in Bangkok as a first-timer?
Three to four days is the sweet spot. Give one day to the old royal island (the Grand Palace, Wat Pho and Wat Arun), one to the Chao Phraya River and Chinatown, and one to the markets and malls — and if your trip covers a weekend, keep half a day for Chatuchak Market. Two days covers the essentials but feels rushed; a fourth day suits a day trip such as Ayutthaya. See the plans: 1 day · 2 days · 3 days · 4 days
Do I need a visa to visit Bangkok?
As of 2026, travellers from many countries — including most of Europe, the UK, the US, Australia and much of Asia — can enter Thailand visa-free for short tourist stays, typically 30 to 60 days depending on nationality and current policy. The rules change, so verify the latest requirements for your passport with the Thai embassy or an official government source before booking. Have your passport, accommodation details and an onward ticket ready.
Can I use one ticket for the BTS, MRT and Airport Rail Link?
No — the three systems are separate operators with separate tickets. The Rabbit card works on the BTS only; the MRT has its own stored-value card and tokens, plus contactless credit-card tap at the gates; the ARL uses its own tokens. Fares run about ฿17–62 per ride. Step-by-step at the BTS & MRT guide →
What is the best way from the airport into the city?
From Suvarnabhumi (BKK): the Airport Rail Link, about ฿15–45, reaches Phaya Thai in ~26 minutes with a BTS connection — or the official taxi rank, meter + ฿50 surcharge + tolls, roughly ฿300–500 to the centre. From Don Mueang (DMK): the A1/A2 buses, about ฿30 to BTS Mo Chit, or the SRT Red Line from Don Mueang station (check timetables). Compare every option at the airport transfer guide →
Which area should a first-timer stay in?
For convenience, stay on the rail lines — Sukhumvit (Asok–Thong Lo) or Silom/Sathorn. To walk to the palace and temples, choose Rattanakosin/Khao San (no rail line — river boats and Grab instead). Shoppers do best around Siam/Pratunam. Full comparison at where to stay in Bangkok → and Top 10 Hotels in Bangkok →
Is Bangkok safe? What scams should I watch for?
Bangkok is generally safe for visitors, including at night in the main areas. Know the classics: the "closed today" stranger near the Grand Palace who steers you into a tuk-tuk towards a gem shop or tailor; suspiciously cheap ฿20 tuk-tuk tours that end at commission shops; and taxis that refuse the meter. Major sights are almost never closed all day — walk to the gate and check yourself, and only ride taxis that run the meter, or use Grab.
Klook · Bangkok Activities

Book Bangkok tickets and tours in advance — skip the queues

Ayutthaya and floating-market day trips, Chao Phraya dinner cruises, sky-high observation decks and Thai cooking classes — book ahead on Klook and arrive with the day already sorted.

Browse Bangkok on Klook →
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