If you can time your trip for November, the lantern festival (Yi Peng) is magic. But Chiang Mai is at its best when your plan is light and your appetite is heavy.


Home » Destinations » Thailand » Chiang Mai Travel Guide: Temples, Mountains, and a City Built for Eating

Last updated: March 2026 by Corey Gasman

From the Editor:

Bangkok was chaotic in the best way. A full assault of the senses. Beautiful, intense, and endlessly interesting, like a city that never stops moving even when you do. Then we headed north to Chiang Mai, and the whole trip changed gears.

Read more: My first trip story and the rule I learned

On my first big world trip, we came up from Bangkok to Chiang Mai the classic way: the overnight train. It is still one of the iconic rides in the country, but the real shift happened the next morning.

We had gone out our first night in Chiang Mai and had one too many big Chang beers, basically malt liquor at 5.7%. I woke up wrecked. I crossed the street from our little hostel and found an unpretentious restaurant that looked like nothing. Breakfast, some shade, and then I noticed a set of stairs leading up to an open, porch-like room.

Up there were traditional Thai floor mats, a big TV, and a shelf full of DVDs. This was the era when you could find current movies that had just been in theaters, and I had been on the road for months without watching anything. So I did the only responsible thing a hungover traveler can do. I claimed a corner, started a movie, and never left.

I watched four movies that day. I drank banana shakes and water, ate breakfast, ate lunch, stayed after lunch, and nobody cared. Nobody rushed me. Nobody looked at me funny. My tab was maybe twenty bucks for the entire day, and I felt like I had accidentally discovered the real Thailand: generous, easy, and quietly joyful.

This brings me to my #1 rule for this city: Chiang Mai rewards a lighter plan. If you try to stack temples, tours, and reservations every day, you miss the whole point. The best version of this city is simple: one anchor activity, one anchor meal, then let the in-between moments do the work.

That is exactly why I still love a proper Chiang Mai side quest, like a hill tribe stay. We did a two-day trek with one overnight in a traditional village house. You sleep on a mat, you live simply for a night, and you get a glimpse of a way of life that feels a world away from city temples. The bathroom situation is basic, and the shower is a bucket, but the memory is permanent.

Local Guide Tip: Anchor one “must-eat” per day, then stop trying to optimize. Chiang Mai is a discovery city. Your best moment will usually be the one you did not schedule.

Pro Tip: Chiang Mai is easier than Bangkok, but the same food rule applies. Choose busy stalls with high turnover and hot cooking surfaces, especially on your first few days.

Chiang Mai at a Glance

  • Best for: Night markets, temples, coffee, slow travel, easy day trips
  • Ideal stay: 3 to 5 nights
  • Best first base: Old City (walkable and central)
  • Best café zone: Nimman
  • Signature half-day: Doi Suthep + night market dinner
  • Smoke note: Plan around haze season (Feb to April)
  • Getting around: Walk Old City, Grab or Bolt for everything else

Bangkok is full volume. Chiang Mai is rhythm. You wake up to birds and scooters, grab an iced coffee, wander past temple gates, and suddenly it is dark and you are holding a bowl of something spicy, smoky, and perfect.

This guide is built around that food angle first, then everything else slots in behind it: where to stay by vibe, what to do beyond temples, and the day trips that make Chiang Mai feel like a full region, not just a city stop.

The TLGA Chiang Mai rule

One anchor activity, one anchor meal, then let the in-between moments do the work. If you try to stack this city, you miss it.

Panoramic view of layered mountain ranges in Northern Thailand during a colorful sunset with mist in the valleys.

Cool season is prime Chiang Mai: sunny days, comfortable nights, and walking feels effortless.


Best Time to Visit Chiang Mai

If you want Chiang Mai at its best, aim for the cool season (Nov to Feb) when days are sunny, nights are comfortable, and walking is actually enjoyable. The hot season can be fun if you love heat and long pool afternoons. The one season I actively plan around is haze season, when air quality can fluctuate quickly.

Smoke Season Note: “Burning season” typically peaks between mid-February and early April. If you’re sensitive, book a hotel with strong A/C and consider bringing a simple mask for bad days.

Download before you fly:

  • IQAir (AirVisual): Check real-time PM2.5 levels.

If the AQI spikes, pivot to indoor cafés, malls, or a hotel pool day and keep your schedule light.

A sunny, peaceful street in Chiang Mai's Old City featuring traditional wooden Lanna-style architecture, lush potted plants, and motorbikes parked outside boutique guesthouses.

Staying in the Old City puts you in the middle of the action but often feels surprisingly quiet.


Where to Stay in Chiang Mai

Chiang Mai is easy because most first-timer highlights are clustered. Pick your neighborhood based on how you like to travel at night: quiet and early, social and snacky, or walkable and central.

Old City (Best first stay)

You are inside the historic moat, surrounded by temples, cafés, massage spots, and casual restaurants. It is the best base if you want to explore on foot and keep logistics simple.

Nimman (Cafés, shopping, modern vibe)

Trendy, youthful, and built for coffee and short hops between spots. Great if you like modern hotels, coworking-friendly cafés, and a slightly more upscale feel at night.

Riverside (Relaxed, scenic, date-night energy)

Good for slower mornings, better views, and a calmer home base. Great if you want a resort feel without leaving the city.

Night Bazaar area (Convenient, lively evenings)

Central, busy, and convenient for markets and late-night walking. It can feel touristy, but it is undeniably practical if you like being near the action.

Travel Style Best Neighborhood
Budget traveler Old City (walk everywhere), or just outside the moat for better value
Mid-range comfort Old City for convenience, Riverside for quieter nights
Luxury reset Riverside resorts, boutique hotels with pools
Nightlife and snacking Night Bazaar area, or Nimman if you like bars and cafés
Vendors behind a counter at a busy Thai market serving various prepared dishes displayed in large silver bowls lined with banana leaves.

The Chiang Mai move: show up hungry, pick three bites, eat slowly, circle back for the second pass.


Food and Coffee in Chiang Mai

Chiang Mai is one of the best food cities in Thailand because it is built around casual eating. Markets are the main event, and the city is the perfect size to do a snack loop: something grilled, something spicy, something sweet, then one last bite you did not plan on.

Local Guide Tip: Don’t try to “win” the market. Pick 3 things, eat slow, and circle back. The best bites are often the second pass when you notice what the locals keep ordering.

The “God Tier” Food Directory

If you only have time for three meals, make them these:

Consistently great local picks for first-time visitors.

Dish Type Where to Go and What to Order
Best Khao Soi Khao Soi Lung Prakit for beef, or Khao Soi Maesai for chicken or pork. Both serve the rich, muddy broth style.
Best Rotisserie Chicken SP Chicken. Garlic-stuffed and it sells out. Go early.
Best Northern Sausage (Sai Ua) Warorot Market (Kad Luang). Head for the food area and look for fresh grilling.
Best Northern Thai Spread Huen Muan Jai for a full Lanna-style meal when you want variety.

Night markets you actually want for food

Use night markets for dinner and desserts, not just souvenirs. Go early if you hate crowds, go later if you want the full energy.

  • Sunday Walking Street: Big, fun, and snack-heavy. Great for first-timers.
  • Saturday Night Market: Similar vibe, slightly less chaotic, also great for food.
  • Night Bazaar area: Convenient, reliable, and easy if you are staying nearby.
  • Warorot Market: More local energy, great daytime browsing and take-home snacks.

Coffee and café culture

Chiang Mai has serious coffee energy. If Bangkok is espresso on a deadline, Chiang Mai is iced coffee and a long morning. Build a café stop into your day, especially if you are temple-hopping in the heat.

Cooking classes (worth it here)

If you do one “touristy” thing, make it a cooking class. Chiang Mai is one of the best places in Thailand to learn the basics because the ingredient markets are part of the experience.

Reclining Buddha statue at Wat Phra That Doi Kham in Chiang Mai, Thailand, featuring white skin and gold robes surrounded by smaller shrines.

Mix the famous temples with the accidental discoveries.


Best Things to Do in Chiang Mai

Temples that are actually worth your time

You could spend a week visiting temples and still not run out. For most travelers, pick a handful that give you variety.

  • Wat Phra That Doi Suthep: The classic hilltop temple with views.
  • Wat Chedi Luang: Big stupa energy in the Old City.
  • Wat Phra Singh: A great “first temple” with easy access and a calm vibe.
  • One surprise temple: Leave space for the one you find on a random side street.

Pro Tip: Dress temple-ready (shoulders covered, shorts not too short) so you are not improvising outfits in the heat.

Massage and recovery

Chiang Mai is a perfect place to build in a recovery afternoon: massage, slow dinner, early night. It is cheap, easy, and you will feel like a new person.

Long exposure shot of a cascading waterfall in the jungle near Chiang Mai, surrounded by green moss and trees.

Chiang Mai is a gateway city: mountains, waterfalls, and countryside are close enough to do in a day.


Best Day Trips from Chiang Mai

Chiang Mai is the gateway to mountains, waterfalls, viewpoints, and countryside. If you only pick one day trip, choose the one that matches your trip mood.

Doi Suthep (half-day)

Easy, iconic, and perfect if you want big payoff without burning a full day.

Sticky Waterfalls (Bua Tong)

One of the most fun nature spots in the province. The limestone rocks are “sticky,” meaning you can climb directly up the waterfall. It’s about an hour north. Bring a change of clothes.

If you don’t want to rent a car, most hotels can help arrange a driver for the day.

Doi Inthanon National Park (full day)

The big nature day. Cooler air, viewpoints, and waterfalls. Great reset from city heat.

Elephant experiences, done responsibly

If this matters to you, do it right. Prioritize sanctuaries that do not offer riding or performances and that center welfare and observation over entertainment.

Hiker with a red orange umbrella walking on a wooden boardwalk through the mossy cloud forest at Doi Inthanon.

The best Chiang Mai itineraries leave breathing room: one anchor plan per day, then let food and curiosity fill in the rest.


Chiang Mai Itineraries (2, 3, and 5 Days)

2 Days (The highlights, food-first)

  • Day 1: Old City wander + Wat Chedi Luang + massage + Sunday Walking Street (or Night Bazaar).
  • Day 2: Doi Suthep (morning) + khao soi lunch + sunset at a riverside bar.

3 Days (Best balance)

  • Day 1: Old City temple run + street food dinner.
  • Day 2: Doi Inthanon day trip (or Sticky Waterfalls).
  • Day 3: Nimman coffee hopping + shopping + SP Chicken for lunch + slow evening.

5 Days (The Chiang Mai you remember)

  • Day 1: Settle in + Old City stroll + night market.
  • Day 2: Doi Suthep + monk chat + massage.
  • Day 3: Nature day trip (Doi Inthanon or an elephant sanctuary).
  • Day 4: Cooking class + afternoon nap + riverside dinner.
  • Day 5: Flexible: Warorot Market for snacks to take home, one last khao soi.
A person riding a motorbike down a narrow street covered by hundreds of hanging red, yellow, and blue umbrellas, creating geometric shadows on the road.

Chiang Mai is easy without a scooter: Old City is walkable, and ride apps cover everything else.


Getting Around Chiang Mai in 2026

The transport apps you need

  • Grab: The most reliable option. Use this for airport runs.
  • Bolt: Often cheaper than Grab, but wait times can be longer.
  • InDrive: Lets you negotiate the fare. Great for longer trips, but requires patience.
  • Red Trucks (Songthaews): Flag one down, tell the driver your destination, and agree on a price if it’s not shared-route.

How to pay: the QR scan shift

Cash is still king for street food, but more vendors accept PromptPay (QR Code). Always carry cash, but use QR when it saves your small bills.

A street food vendor carefully plating portions of steamed rice and fresh herbs onto traditional banana leaves at an outdoor stall. Alt Tag: A woman wearing a white shirt and plastic gloves preparing food at a wooden table, featuring fresh cilantro, fried garlic, and rice served on banana leaves.

Chiang Mai is one of Thailand’s best value cities: you can eat extremely well without Bangkok pricing pressure.


Chiang Mai Budget: What Things Cost

Chiang Mai is one of the best value stops in Thailand. You can eat extremely well on a budget, and you can also level up into boutique hotels and nicer dinners without Bangkok pricing pressure.

Item/Activity Typical Cost
Street food and markets Cheap (50 to 80 THB per dish), perfect for snack-hopping
Mid-range restaurants Great value (200 to 400 THB per person), especially for northern Thai dishes
Grab rides Affordable (80 to 200 THB) for most trips across town
Day tours Worth it (1500 to 3000 THB) for nature days if you do not want to self-drive

Bonus Side Trip: Luang Prabang, Laos

A procession of barefoot Buddhist monks wearing bright orange robes walking in a line down a wet street in Luang Prabang, Laos, while people kneel on mats along the sidewalk to place food offerings into their alms bowls during the morning Tak Bat ceremony.

Luang Prabang is a UNESCO river town of temples, French-era cafés, and slow mornings.


If you are craving something even slower than Chiang Mai, Luang Prabang is the move. It is a UNESCO heritage town of French colonial villas, golden temples, and arguably the best croissants in Asia.

Should you go for 1 to 2 nights?
Yes, but only if you fly. If you take the boat or bus, you will spend your entire trip in transit.

The logistics: getting there

Transport Method Details
The fast way (Flight) About 1 hour. Direct flights run regularly. You clear immigration at the airport. Stress-free.
The scenic way (Slow boat) 2 days. Border crossing plus Mekong boat with an overnight stop. Not for short trips.
The border crossing Chiang Khong / Huay Xai. If going by land or boat, you cross here before continuing downriver.

Why go?

  • Kuang Si Falls: Tiered turquoise waterfalls that look unreal.
  • Morning alms: Observe respectfully from a distance and do not block the route.
  • The vibe: Sleepy, romantic, and early nights. Perfect reset.

Building a Thailand itinerary?

Pair Chiang Mai with Bangkok for contrast, then add islands or the south if you want a beach finish.

Thailand Travel Guide
Bangkok Guide

Chiang Mai FAQs

How many days do you need in Chiang Mai?

Three days is the sweet spot for most travelers. Two days works for highlights. Five days is where Chiang Mai starts to feel like a lifestyle city, not a checklist.

Yes, and it has never been easier. Thailand’s Destination Thailand Visa (DTV) is active for remote workers. It allows stays of up to 180 days per entry (with extensions possible) and is valid for multiple years. If you are falling in love with the city during your trip, this is the visa to look up immediately.

Yes. Bangkok is energy and scale. Chiang Mai is slower, greener, and easier for food wandering and day trips.

It is the hazier period (typically mid-Feb to early April) when smoke from regional agricultural burning can impact visibility and air quality. Use the IQAir app to monitor it. If you are sensitive, plan your dates around it or build flexibility into your route.

For most first-timers: Sunday Walking Street. For a similar vibe on another night: Saturday Night Market. For more local daytime market energy: Warorot Market.

Yes. Old City is walkable and Grab or Bolt rides are simple for anything farther out.