The first-week route most newcomers choose — riverside temples and street food in Bangkok, old-city temples and an elephant sanctuary in Chiang Mai, and the ruins of the old capital at Ayutthaya. We've laid it out day by day, with the overnight sleeper train, domestic flights, where to stay at each base, and tips to keep the trip from being one exhausting rush.
First time in Thailand and stuck on where to go? Honestly, 7 days is the length most people end up booking, and it lines up neatly with the classic first week — start in Bangkok for three days of riverside temples and street food, head north to Chiang Mai for the Lanna temples of the old city and an ethical elephant sanctuary, then finish with Ayutthaya, the former royal capital you can reach as a day trip from Bangkok. Picture one trip where you get a riverside metropolis, the culture of the north, and the brick ruins of a thousand-year-old city. That's exactly why this route has stayed the most popular one of all.
This page lays it out day by day, holding your hand — where you go each day, how to move between cities (sleeper train or flight), how long it takes, which city to sleep in, and the spots first-timers tend to get wrong. We've written it as a route you can actually walk, not one that crams in everything and has you sprinting all day, because a first trip that's too tired usually ends in regret rather than joy.
See the big picture before the day-by-day detail — this plan uses 2 main sleeping bases (Bangkok · Chiang Mai) and loops back to Bangkok, so you only pack up and switch hotels a handful of times, leaving the most time for actually exploring.
| Day | Base | Main highlights | Move / travel |
|---|---|---|---|
| Day 1Day 1 | Bangkok | Arrive at the airport · check in · eat your way through Yaowarat at night | Airport into the city |
| Day 2Day 2 | Bangkok | Grand Palace & Wat Phra Kaew · Wat Pho · Wat Arun | Chao Phraya boat + walking |
| Day 3Day 3 | On the train | Markets · modern districts · board the sleeper train north | SRT sleeper ~12 hrs |
| Day 4Day 4 | Chiang Mai | Old city — Wat Chedi Luang & Wat Phra Singh · Doi Suthep | Arrive in the morning |
| Day 5Day 5 | Chiang Mai | Ethical elephant sanctuary · walking street · fly back to Bangkok | Fly ~1.5 hrs to BKK |
| Day 6Day 6 | Bangkok | Ayutthaya day trip — Wat Mahathat & Wat Chaiwatthanaram | BKK→Ayutthaya ~1.5 hrs |
| Day 7Day 7 | Bangkok | Shopping · whatever you missed · head home | Out via the airport |
Now the detail, one day at a time — each card tells you where to go, how to order it for easy walking, how to get around, and the small tips that keep the day smooth. Swap things around to suit your interests; you don't have to follow it to the letter.
🛬 Bangkok1
Land at Suvarnabhumi or Don Muang, head into the city and drop your bags first. Don't cram the first day — your body's still tired. Start gently in the evening at Yaowarat, the Chinatown road that turns into a street-food heaven after dark: noodles, charcoal-grilled seafood, Chinese sweets. Graze your way along it and ease into the rhythm of the city before a full day tomorrow.
Airport Transfer Guide →
🛕 Bangkok2
Today's for the three big temples clustered by the river. Start early at the Grand Palace and Wat Phra Kaew to beat the midday heat and the crowds, walk on to Wat Pho for the giant Reclining Buddha, then take the cross-river ferry to Wat Arun, finishing with its riverside spire in the soft evening light.
Grand Palace Guide →
🚆 Bangkok3
Your last day in Bangkok for now — take your pick. Market people head to Chatuchak (if it's a weekend); for modern Bangkok, browse the malls around Siam or riverside ICONSIAM. Have a good lunch, then in the evening go to Krung Thep Aphiwat Central Terminal and board the sleeper train heading north to Chiang Mai. Sleep on board, wake up there, and save a night's hotel.
Bangkok 3-Day Itinerary →
🛕 Chiang Mai4
The train arrives in Chiang Mai this morning; drop your bags at a hotel in the old city and start walking inside the square moat. Take in Wat Chedi Luang, with its huge ancient chedi, and Wat Phra Singh, a gem of Lanna craftsmanship. In the afternoon, head up the mountain to Wat Phra That Doi Suthep for the golden stupa and a view over the whole city.
Chiang Mai Attractions →
🐘 Chiang Mai5
This morning, visit an ethical elephant sanctuary with no riding and no shows — you feed the elephants, walk alongside them, and watch them live in a natural setting; pick a place that genuinely cares for its animals. In the afternoon, head back into town for the walking street (if it falls on a weekend) to browse crafts and northern food, then catch an evening flight back to Bangkok.
Elephant Sanctuary Guide →
🏛️ Ayutthaya6
Today, take the train or a van from Bangkok to Ayutthaya, the former royal capital that left brick temple ruins scattered across the island city. See Wat Mahathat, with its famous Buddha head wrapped in tree roots, Wat Chaiwatthanaram, lovely by the river in the evening light, and Wat Phra Si Sanphet, with its three chedis in a row. Rent a bicycle or hire a tuk-tuk to loop the sites in a single day.
Ayutthaya City Guide →
🛍️ Bangkok7
The last day flexes around your flight time. If you fly out in the afternoon or evening, there's still time for shopping — souvenirs around Siam or a market — and to catch whatever you missed: a riverside floating market, a park, or a farewell meal by the water. If you haven't had your fill of street food, today's the day to fix that, before taking the Airport Rail Link or a Grab to the airport.
Bangkok Food Guide →This 7-day route runs on trains, flights, and city transport — no car rental needed. Get your head around these three things and you'll move smoothly without overpaying.
Bangkok→Chiang Mai has two options. The sleeper train (SRT) is ~12 hours, evening to morning, with the atmosphere and a saved hotel night; or a domestic flight (AirAsia/Nok/Thai Lion/Bangkok Airways) is ~1.5 hours, cheap if booked ahead. This plan takes the sleeper north and flies back.
In Bangkok the BTS and MRT are the best way to dodge traffic, while the riverside temples are linked by the Chao Phraya express boats. Call a Grab for anywhere the rail lines don't reach — the fare is transparent, unlike flagging a street taxi.
Chiang Mai runs on red songthaew shared trucks (agree a fare or charter) plus Grab in town · Ayutthaya is easy by bicycle rented for the day, or a chartered tuk-tuk looping the temples in a single day. The distances are short, so there's no rush.
You sleep at 2 main bases — choose somewhere close to a train line or station first, so switching cities and getting an early start are both easy. Here's how to choose a sleeping zone in each city on this plan.
See clearly how the trip moves — Bangkok (central) → north to Chiang Mai → back to Bangkok with an Ayutthaya stop, lined up on a single north-south thread, easily linked by sleeper train or flight.
More time? Extend the first week with the Andaman islands — several full days in Phuket or Krabi.
10-Day Plan →Want to go deeper in Bangkok? A day-by-day 3-day plan covering temples, markets, food, and the best districts.
Bangkok 3-Day Plan →The Chiang Mai highlights in full — Lanna temples, the mountain, elephants, markets, and old-city cafes.
Chiang Mai Attractions →Swap the last day for the sea instead of Ayutthaya — see Phuket, the Andaman islands, and how to pick the right one.
Phuket Guide →Compare the sleeper train, domestic flights, and buses — what's worth it on each leg of your trip.
Getting Around →First trip to Thailand — visa, money, SIM, getting around, etiquette. Start here before you fly.
First-Timer Guide →You know which city you sleep in each night, so open a city guide for recommended hotels and station-side neighbourhoods, or start by finding a room in Bangkok, then add Chiang Mai — book early and you'll get the better neighbourhoods at the better prices.