Overview
Temples & Heritage
Street Food Capital
Markets & Shopping
River & Canal Life
Nightlife & Rooftops
Day Trips
History
Culture
Practical Info
Bangkok is simultaneously ancient and hypermodern—a city where monks in saffron robes collect morning alms beside a BTS Skytrain station, where the Grand Palace's gold-encrusted spires tower over the Chao Phraya River while rooftop bars atop cloud-piercing skyscrapers serve cocktails with panoramic sunset views. The city's official name in Thai is the world's longest place name (168 letters), commonly shortened to Krung Thep Maha Nakhon. Bangkok's temple treasures are world-class: the Grand Palace and Wat Phra Kaew (Temple of the Emerald Buddha), Wat Pho's massive reclining Buddha, and Wat Arun's riverside porcelain spires. But the city's street-level energy is equally captivating—Chinatown's Yaowarat Road transforms into a nightly street-food festival, Chatuchak Weekend Market's 15,000+ stalls make it the world's largest outdoor market, and the canal-side communities reveal a quieter, older Bangkok still navigated by longtail boat. Thai cuisine is the city's greatest cultural product: pad Thai, som tam (green papaya salad), massaman curry, and mango sticky rice are just the starting point in a food culture where ฿40 ($1) buys an extraordinary meal from a street cart and two Michelin-starred restaurants hold a single Bib Gourmand at a fraction of Western prices. The BTS Skytrain and MRT Metro have modernized transit, but Bangkok's traffic congestion remains legendary—plan around it, not through it.
Discover Bangkok
10 embassies based in this city, grouped by region.