Thailand · Central Thailand
Bangkok
Base in Sukhumvit or along the river for easy transit, give a full morning to the Old City temples before the heat and crowds build, spend an evening on street food in Chinatown, and add one day trip out of the city.
Visão geral
Bangkok is Southeast Asia’s great contrast city: gilded temples and canal-side wooden houses sit a few BTS stops from glass megamalls and some of the best street food anywhere. It works equally well as a standalone trip, a stopover, or the gateway to the rest of Thailand.
If you only take one thing from this guide: do the Old City temples first thing, before 9am, then retreat from the midday heat into a mall, a museum or a hotel pool, and come back out for street food once the sun drops.
Melhor para
First-time Southeast Asia visitors · Street food lovers · Culture and temples · Nightlife · Stopover travelers
Roteiro diário
3 to 5 days
Unlike most Southeast Asian capitals, Bangkok layers an intact royal old city, a working river of longtail boats and floating markets, and a street food scene dense enough that a single Michelin-starred wok cart sits meters from a legendary noodle shop.
Melhor época para visitar
November to February is coolest, driest and busiest. The hot season (March to May) is the toughest for walking around temples. The rainy season (June to October) brings short, intense afternoon downpours but thinner crowds and lower hotel prices, and rarely disrupts a whole day.
- November to January: The best weather of the year: warm days, low humidity, minimal rain.
- February to March: Still comfortable, heat starts building toward April.
- April: The hottest month; Songkran (Thai New Year water festival) falls mid-month and shuts down normal street life for several days.
- May to July: Rainy season begins; usually a short, heavy downpour in the late afternoon rather than all-day rain.
- August to October: Wettest months; still very workable if you plan indoor time around the afternoon rain.
Coisas que vale a pena saber
- Songkran (13 to 15 April): the Thai New Year water festival, most intense on Khao San Road and Silom.
- Loy Krathong (November, lunar calendar): floating lantern and krathong ceremonies along the Chao Phraya.
Onde ficar
Sukhumvit
Bangkok’s modern spine: a long BTS-served strip of malls, international restaurants, rooftop bars and nightlife, running from Nana through Asok, Thonglor and Ekkamai. The easiest base for first-timers who want transit at the door.
Melhor para: First-time visitors · Nightlife · Shopping · Transit access
Sprawling and traffic-heavy off the BTS line; some sois (side streets) are adult-entertainment focused.
Riverside (Chao Phraya, Bang Rak)
The grand-hotel strip along the river south of the Old City, with the Saphan Taksin BTS and river boat piers making the Old City and Chinatown an easy trip by water.
Melhor para: River views · Riverside luxury hotels · Boat access to the Old City
Away from the BTS/MRT grid on foot; you will rely on hotel shuttle boats or taxis for onward trips.
Old City (Rattanakosin)
The royal island where Bangkok began: the Grand Palace, Wat Pho and Wat Arun, plus the backpacker strip of Khao San Road and the quieter riverside lanes around Phra Athit. Best visited early, then left for the afternoon.
Melhor para: Culture · Temples · History · Budget stays
Very hot and crowded by late morning; few BTS/MRT stations nearby, so plan boats or taxis.
Silom
Bangkok’s financial district by day, home to rooftop bars (including the famous Sky Bar) and the Patpong night market by evening. Well connected by both BTS and MRT.
Melhor para: Rooftop bars · Nightlife · Business travelers
Patpong’s night market has aggressive touting around its go-go bars; the market stalls themselves are fine to browse.
Onde dormir
Mandarin Oriental, Bangkok
luxury · Riverside (Chao Phraya)
Melhor para: Couples · Riverside luxury · Classic service
- Historic riverside property with over a century of guests
- Private river shuttle boats to piers and malls
- Renowned spa and dining
- Expensive relative to Bangkok norms
- Not near a BTS/MRT station on foot
- Books out early in high season
Sofitel Bangkok Sukhumvit
luxury · Sukhumvit
Melhor para: Couples · Direct BTS/MRT access · French-Thai dining
- Sky bridge straight into Asok BTS and Sukhumvit MRT
- Large rooms by Bangkok standards
- Strong pool and spa
- Busy, built-up part of Sukhumvit outside the hotel
- Convention and event traffic through the lobby at times
Sala Rattanakosin
boutique · Old City (Rattanakosin)
Melhor para: Couples · Wat Arun views · Staying inside the Old City
- A restored riverside warehouse directly across from Wat Arun
- Rooftop bar with a genuine sunset view of the temple
- Walk to the Grand Palace and Wat Pho
- Only 14 rooms, books out fast
- No pool
- Steep stairs in places; not accessible-friendly
Pullman Bangkok Hotel G
design · Silom
Melhor para: Design lovers · Nightlife access · Business travelers
- A five-minute walk from Chong Nonsi BTS
- Bold, contemporary design and a rooftop wine bar
- Close to Silom’s rooftop bars and Patpong
- Nightlife-forward area can be loud at street level
- Rooms lean stylish over spacious
Riva Surya Bangkok
value · Riverside, near the Old City
Melhor para: Couples on a budget · Old City access by river · Riverside pool
- Riverside boutique property a short walk or boat ride from the Old City
- Riverside pool and restaurant
- Good value for a river view
- Small property with limited facilities
- Not on a BTS/MRT line; relies on river boats or taxis
Experiências essenciais
Grand Palace and Wat Phra Kaew
The former royal residence and the Temple of the Emerald Buddha, Thailand’s most sacred Buddha image, inside a walled complex of gilded spires.
Wat Pho (Temple of the Reclining Buddha)
One of Bangkok’s oldest and largest temples, home to a 46-meter gold-leafed reclining Buddha and considered the birthplace of traditional Thai massage.
Wat Arun (Temple of Dawn)
A riverside temple with a towering, porcelain-decorated prang; best seen at sunset from the opposite bank or climbed in the cooler morning hours.
Jim Thompson House
The teak house and Asian art collection of the American silk entrepreneur Jim Thompson, who vanished in Malaysia in 1967; a calm, guided counterpoint to the temples.
Chatuchak Weekend Market
One of the world’s largest weekend markets, with thousands of stalls selling clothes, crafts, antiques and food across a sprawling site near Mo Chit BTS.
Yaowarat (Chinatown)
Bangkok’s Chinatown by day is gold shops and Chinese-Thai shophouses; by night its main street becomes a dense strip of street food stalls and neon.
Lumpini Park
A large central park with a lake, monitor lizards and an early-morning crowd of joggers and tai chi groups; a green break from the traffic and heat.
Comida e bebida
- Pad Thai: Stir-fried rice noodles with egg, tamarind, tofu and shrimp; Bangkok’s most famous export dish, done best at long-running specialists.
- Tom Yum Goong: A hot and sour prawn soup with lemongrass, galangal and kaffir lime leaf; order it "khon" (creamy) or clear.
- Som Tam: Green papaya salad pounded with chili, lime, fish sauce and palm sugar; a northeastern (Isan) dish now everywhere in the city.
- Kuay Teow Reua (boat noodles): Small, intensely flavored bowls of noodle soup, traditionally sold from canal boats and still served in small portions so you order several.
- Mango sticky rice (Khao Niao Mamuang): Sweet sticky rice with coconut cream and ripe mango; the classic Bangkok dessert, best in mango season (March to June).
Street food is central, not a fallback: many of the best meals in the city are eaten standing or on a plastic stool. Dinner runs from around 6pm; night markets peak from 7 to 10pm.
Onde comer
Jay Fai
street-foodA single-Michelin-starred street food stall known for its crab omelette and drunken noodles; expect a long wait and prices well above typical street food.
Última pesquisa 2026-07-15
Thipsamai
institutionBangkok’s best-known pad thai specialist since the 1960s, famous for the prawn-wrapped omelette version; several newer branches exist around the city.
Última pesquisa 2026-07-15
Sky Bar by lebua
sunset-venueA 63rd-floor open-air rooftop bar over the Chao Phraya, made famous by "The Hangover Part II"; smart dress code enforced.
Última pesquisa 2026-07-15
Nasceres do sol
Golden Mount (Wat Saket)
A hilltop temple reached by a spiral staircase, giving a rare elevated, uncluttered view over the Old City’s low rooftops as the light comes up.
Year-round
Tha Tien pier, facing Wat Arun
The Old City pier directly across from Wat Arun catches the first light on the temple’s prang before the day’s boat traffic and heat build up.
November to February
Pôres do sol
Wat Arun at sunset, viewed from Tha Tien
The temple’s tiered prang catches the last light and silhouettes beautifully against the evening sky, best seen from the riverbank or a rooftop bar opposite.
November to April · The best viewpoints are the riverside bars and restaurants on the Tha Tien side; cross by ferry if you want to be at the temple itself.
Sky Bar by lebua
Bangkok’s best-known rooftop sunset: 360-degree views over the river and the city skyline from 250 meters up.
Year-round
Chao Phraya dinner cruise
A slow river cruise timed to sunset passes the illuminated Grand Palace, Wat Arun and the old riverside hotels from the water.
Year-round
Bate-volta
Ayutthaya
The ruined former Siamese capital, a UNESCO World Heritage historic city of brick temple towers and Buddha images, an easy train or minivan ride north of Bangkok.
About 1 to 1.5 hours each way by train or road · Full day
Damnoen Saduak Floating Market
A canal market southwest of Bangkok where vendors sell fruit, noodles and souvenirs from small wooden boats; touristy but genuinely photogenic if you arrive early.
About 1.5 to 2 hours each way by road · Half day (morning)
Kanchanaburi and the Bridge on the River Kwai
The WWII Death Railway bridge, the Thailand-Burma Railway Centre and the Allied war cemeteries, plus riverside scenery further from Bangkok’s heat and traffic.
About 2 to 2.5 hours each way by road · Full day
Roteiro diário
Five days in Bangkok: temples, street food and one day trip
A base in Sukhumvit or the riverside, with the Old City done early each relevant day and one full-day trip out of the city.
- 1
Arrival and Sukhumvit
relaxedArrive, check in, orient with the BTS.A food court or noodle shop near your hotel.Easy afternoon; a mall or a short walk around Sukhumvit.A Sukhumvit rooftop bar.Thai or international dining in Sukhumvit.Early night to adjust.BTS covers everything today.Estimativa: Skip the rooftop if jet-lagged and rest instead.
- 2
Old City temples
fullGrand Palace and Wat Phra Kaew early, then Wat Pho.A riverside restaurant near Tha Tien.Cross the river to Wat Arun; climb if the heat allows.Wat Arun view from Tha Tien pier or a riverside bar.Dinner in the Old City or back toward Chinatown.Yaowarat street food crawl.River boats connect the Old City sights; a taxi or river ferry gets you to Chinatown.Estimativa: Add the Jim Thompson House if you have energy left in the afternoon.
- 3
Day trip to Ayutthaya
fullTrain or van north to Ayutthaya.Riverside lunch in Ayutthaya.Wat Mahathat, Wat Chaiwatthanaram and the historical park.Sunset over the temple ruins if timing allows, otherwise back to Bangkok.Dinner back in Bangkok.Rest after a full day.Organized tour or train; a private driver saves time if the budget allows.Estimativa: Swap Ayutthaya for Damnoen Saduak floating market if an early-morning market suits your group better.
- 4
Markets and modern Bangkok
moderateChatuchak Weekend Market (Saturday/Sunday only) or Jim Thompson House if visiting on a weekday.Market food stalls or a nearby mall food hall.Shopping or a spa afternoon in Sukhumvit or Siam.Lumpini Park for an early-evening walk.A Michelin-recognized restaurant or street food institution.Silom nightlife or a quieter night depending on preference.BTS/MRT covers today entirely.Estimativa: If not a weekend, swap Chatuchak for a cooking class or the Jim Thompson House.
- 5
Slow morning and departure
relaxedA final walk or massage before checkout.Lunch near the airport route.Departure.Departure.Allow extra time for Bangkok traffic to the airport.Estimativa: If time allows, fit in one more street food meal en route.
Como se locomover
- Suvarnabhumi Airport (BKK) is the main international gateway, about 30 minutes from central Bangkok by Airport Rail Link or taxi outside rush hour.
- Don Mueang Airport (DMK) mainly serves low-cost carriers and is a similar distance from the city center on the north side.
- The BTS Skytrain and MRT subway cover most tourist areas except the Old City; buy a rechargeable Rabbit card for the BTS.
- Chao Phraya Express Boats and cross-river ferries are the fastest way between the riverside, the Old City and Chinatown.
- Metered taxis and ride-hailing apps are cheap but subject to Bangkok’s heavy traffic; avoid relying on them at rush hour.
Coisas que vale a pena saber
- · Underestimating Bangkok traffic and booking a taxi for a cross-town trip at rush hour instead of the BTS/MRT or a river boat.
- · Visiting the Grand Palace or Wat Pho in shorts, sleeveless tops or flip-flops and being turned away or made to rent cover-up clothing.
- · Doing the Old City temples in the early afternoon heat instead of first thing in the morning.
Orçamento
| Baixa | Esperada | Confortável | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Estilo de hospedagem / por noite | ฿ 800 | ฿ 2.500 | ฿ 7.000 |
| Estilo culinário / por dia | ฿ 300 | ฿ 800 | ฿ 2.000 |
| Transporte local / por dia | ฿ 100 | ฿ 400 | ฿ 900 |
| Estimativa / por dia | ฿ 100 | ฿ 400 | ฿ 1.000 |
Estimativa · THB · 2026-07-15. Accommodation is per room per night (two sharing). Bangkok is inexpensive by international standards even at the "comfortable" tier; prices rise in the November to February high season.
Coisas que vale a pena saber
Perguntas frequentes
How many days do you need in Bangkok?
Three to five days covers the Old City temples, a street food evening, a market and one day trip. Three is workable for a stopover; five lets you add a second day trip or slower days.
What is the best area to stay in Bangkok for the first time?
Sukhumvit for BTS/MRT access, malls and nightlife, or the riverside for a quieter, more scenic base with river boat access to the Old City.
When is the best time to visit Bangkok?
November to February has the coolest, driest weather and the biggest crowds. June, September and October are hot or rainy but noticeably cheaper and quieter.
Do you need a car in Bangkok?
No, and it is a disadvantage. The BTS, MRT and river boats cover the main tourist areas; a car adds Bangkok’s notorious traffic without much benefit.
What should you not miss in Bangkok?
The Grand Palace, Wat Pho and Wat Arun done in one Old City morning, a Yaowarat street food evening, and at least one rooftop bar or river sunset.
Fontes (4)
- The Grand Palace, official residence of the Kings of Siam from 1782 · official · 2026-07-15
- Bangkok overview, attractions and practical information · tourism-board · 2026-07-15
- Historic City of Ayutthaya, UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1991 · unesco · 2026-07-15
- Jim Thompson House museum and Thai silk heritage site · official · 2026-07-15