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Bangkok
Thailand · 3-day guide

Bangkok for First-Timers: A 3-Day Itinerary

Temples and the river, markets and night-time energy, and some of Asia's best street food — a first-timer's three days in Bangkok, with real stops, Maps links and a budget that goes a long way.

Bangkok hits hard on a first visit — the heat, the traffic, the food smells, the gold of the temples — and the trick is to let the city set the pace rather than fight it. Three days is enough for the grand temples and the river, a proper market, and the street-food streets that are the reason a lot of people come back.

The route below front-loads the temples for the cooler morning hours, uses the river and the BTS Skytrain to skip the traffic, and saves the markets and night food for the evening. Every stop links to Google Maps.

At a glance

Ideal length
3–5 days
Where to base
Sukhumvit (Asok–Phrom Phong) or Silom / Sathorn
Budget · mid-range
S$85–160 / day
Getting around
The BTS Skytrain and MRT subway cover modern Bangkok; the Chao Phraya Express Boat and cross-river ferries reach the Ol…

Your day-by-day Bangkok route

A 3-day first-timer route

Temples and the river by morning, the Skytrain and the markets by day, street food by night — built around Bangkok's heat and traffic.

Temples, modern Bangkok, then a river-and-market day. Chatuchak is weekend-only — the renderer's date rules flag a weekday swap to Or Tor Kor.

Day 1

Temples, river & Chinatown night

~7 km on foot · medium travel load

Lunch
  • Krua Apsorn Bib Gourmand · recent MICHELIN Guide Thailand · verify current statusOld City
Dinner
  • Thipsamai Pad Thai MICHELIN Selected · recent MICHELIN Guide Thailand · verify current statusOld City
Evening

If it rains: National Museum + BACC indoor; keep Chinatown dinner.

Add if you have time: Sunset Chao Phraya boat.

Day 2

Modern Bangkok — Siam & Sukhumvit

~6 km on foot · low travel load

Dinner
  • Jeh O Chula Bib Gourmand · recent MICHELIN Guide Thailand · verify current statusSamyan

If it rains: Malls + BACC indoor; skip the park.

Add if you have time: Thonglor cafés and bars in the evening.

Day 3

Market & riverside

~7 km on foot · medium travel load

Morning
Afternoon
Dinner
Evening

If it rains: ICONSIAM and its indoor SookSiam food hall keep you dry; skip the open market.

Add if you have time: Lumphini Park early morning before the market.

Route last checked 2026-06-14 — verify hours and bookings before you go.

Want this as an interactive guide you can reshape by length, budget and pace — with the maps, food and a one-tap PDF?

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Where to stay in Bangkok

Stay near a BTS Skytrain or MRT station to beat the traffic — Sukhumvit and Silom/Sathorn are the most convenient first-timer bases, while the Riverside and Old City trade transit links for atmosphere. Bangkok offers exceptional value at every level; rooms cost noticeably more over New Year and Songkran.

Sukhumvit (Asok–Phrom Phong)

First-timers; trains, food, malls, nightlife

Silom / Sathorn

Rooftops, river access, business

Riverside (Charoen Krung)

Boutique hotels and Chao Phraya boats

Old City / Rattanakosin

Temples on foot, fewer trains

By budget

Rates and availability change constantly — confirm current prices with the hotel or a booking site before paying.

What to budget for Bangkok

Per person, per day, excluding flights. A rough guide only — your costs depend on season, area and pace.

Budget

S$50–80 / day
  • Accommodation: Hostel / guesthouse / budget hotel near the BTS (THB 500–1,200).
  • Meals: Street food and food courts — Bib Gourmand bites like Go-Ang chicken rice and Yaowarat stalls (THB 40–120/meal).
  • Transport: BTS/MRT + cheap river boats; walk between close sights.
  • Attractions: Prioritise temples; one major paid site at a time.
  • Evening: Yaowarat street food, Golden Mount at dusk, a riverside walk.

Mid-range

S$85–160 / day
  • Accommodation: 3–4 star hotel with a pool near the BTS (THB 1,800–4,500).
  • Meals: Mix of street food and Bib Gourmand sit-downs — Jeh O Chula, Krua Apsorn, Thipsamai (THB 120–400/meal).
  • Transport: BTS/MRT + occasional Grab for convenience.
  • Attractions: Add the Grand Palace, Jim Thompson House and a river cruise.
  • Evening: Bib Gourmand dinner, one rooftop sunset drink, a night market.

Comfortable

S$170–320 / day
  • Accommodation: 5-star or landmark riverside hotel (THB 6,000–15,000).
  • Meals: Good restaurants plus one Michelin-starred or fine-dining dinner — Le Du or Sorn (book well ahead) (THB 400–6,000/meal).
  • Transport: Grab/hotel car where convenient; BTS for quick hops.
  • Attractions: Add premium experiences, a private long-tail boat, a spa.
  • Evening: Starred dinner or a top rooftop, then a riverside nightcap.

When to visit Bangkok

Weather and festival dates vary year to year. Treat this as general guidance and check a forecast and official event calendars close to your dates.

Cool & dry (peak season) Nov, Dec, Jan, Feb

The best weather — roughly 23–33°C with low humidity and clear skies.

Make the most of outdoor temples, river boats and rooftop bars while it's pleasant.

Look out for: New Year fireworks by the river, Cool-season night markets

Hot season Mar, Apr, May

Very hot — often 35–40°C and humid.

Shift sightseeing to early morning and evening; use malls, the BACC and the National Museum for midday.

Look out for: Songkran water festival (mid-April)

Rainy (green) season Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct

Warm (28–34°C) with afternoon downpours.

Front-load outdoor sights in the morning; keep an indoor backup (malls, museums, cooking class) for the afternoon rain.

Look out for: Lush parks, Fewer crowds at temples

Common Bangkok mistakes to avoid

Good to know in Bangkok

Getting around

  • BTS Skytrain + MRT subway cover modern Bangkok and beat the traffic — use them as your backbone.
  • Chao Phraya Express Boat and cross-river ferries reach the Old City, Chinatown and Wat Arun.
  • Grab (app) or metered taxis for areas off the rail — always use the meter, or agree a fair fare for tuk-tuks.
  • Avoid rush-hour road travel (07:30–09:30, 16:30–19:30); the river and rail keep moving.

Buy single-journey tokens or a stored-value card at station counters. The BTS (Rabbit) and MRT use separate cards. Pay cash; contactless is expanding.

Money & connectivity

  • Cash is still king for street food and markets; carry small notes. Cards and PromptPay QR are common in malls and restaurants.
  • Cheap tourist SIMs and eSIMs (AIS, dtac, TrueMove) at the airport; widely reliable 4G/5G. Free Wi-Fi in malls and cafés.
  • Not expected. Rounding up or leaving small change is appreciated; upscale restaurants add a service charge.

Local etiquette

  • Dress modestly at temples — cover shoulders and knees; remove shoes where indicated.
  • Treat images of the King and monarchy with respect (it is taken very seriously by law).
  • The head is sacred and feet are 'low' — don't touch heads or point feet at people or Buddha images.
  • A wai (palms together) is a polite greeting; a smile goes a long way.
Entry reminder: Many nationalities enter Thailand visa-free or with visa-on-arrival for short stays, but rules and durations change. Confirm your own passport's requirements on the official Thai immigration website before booking. Last checked 2026-06-14.

Tourist Police (English): 1155 · Police: 191 · Ambulance / emergency medical: 1669 · Keep your hotel address in Thai for taxi drivers.

Bangkok — frequently asked questions

Is 3 days enough for Bangkok?

3–5 days is the usual recommendation for Bangkok. The plan here runs to 3 days, and the full guide builds routes from 1–7 days — so you can shorten or extend it to fit your trip.

What street food should I try in Bangkok?

Bangkok's highlights include Jay Fai, Jeh O Chula, Go-Ang Pratunam Chicken Rice, Thipsamai Pad Thai, Nai Mong Hoi Thod and more. Each is linked to Google Maps in the route above; famous spots queue at peak times, so go off-peak or pick a neighbouring stall.

Where should a first-timer stay in Bangkok?

Good bases include Sukhumvit (Asok–Phrom Phong) (First-timers; trains, food, malls, nightlife); Silom / Sathorn (Rooftops, river access, business); Riverside (Charoen Krung) (Boutique hotels and Chao Phraya boats). See "Where to stay" above for the full breakdown by budget.

How much does Bangkok cost per day?

Roughly around S$50–80 a day on a budget, S$85–160 mid-range, S$170–320 comfortable per person, excluding flights and accommodation swings. See "Budget" above for what each tier covers.

When is the best time to visit Bangkok?

Weather and festival dates vary year to year. Treat this as general guidance and check a forecast and official event calendars close to your dates. See "When to go" above for the month-by-month detail.

Do I need a visa for Thailand?

Many nationalities enter Thailand visa-free or with visa-on-arrival for short stays, but rules and durations change. Confirm your own passport's requirements on the official Thai immigration website before booking.

Plan Bangkok your way

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