Old City – temples & slow life
Square moat, ancient walls, dozens of temples and small streets. Perfect if you want to walk everywhere and feel the historical side of Chiang Mai.
Thai Culture Tours Blog
Articles about destinations, local culture and our excursions to help you plan your perfect trip to Thailand.
Chiang Mai
Chiang Mai is Thailand’s mountain capital in the north – calmer than Bangkok, cooler than the islands and full of temples, cafés, green hills and creative energy. This guide helps you understand what the city really feels like, where to stay, what to see and how to combine Chiang Mai with Bangkok and Phuket.
Bangkok is energy, Phuket is sea – Chiang Mai is calm. The city is big enough to have everything you need, but small enough to feel walkable and human. Mornings are cool, evenings are soft, and the rhythm is slower than in the south.
You wake up to monks collecting alms in the Old City, spend the day between temples and cafés, then watch the sunset from a mountain or rooftop before ending the day at a night market. It’s a place where many travellers say: “I could live here for a while.”
Your experience changes a lot depending on the area you choose. Four zones matter the most for first-time visitors:
Square moat, ancient walls, dozens of temples and small streets. Perfect if you want to walk everywhere and feel the historical side of Chiang Mai.
Trendy cafés, co-working spaces and boutique hotels west of the Old City. Good for digital nomads and travellers who like a contemporary vibe.
Riverside stays feel romantic and relaxed, while the Night Bazaar area is practical and full of markets, food stalls and shops.
Chiang Mai is one of Thailand’s spiritual centres. Even if you only visit a few temples, these three will give you a great feeling for the city:
See Wat Phra That Doi Suthep early, with fewer crowds and panoramic views over Chiang Mai.
View on Viator
Northern Thailand is all about green hills, forests, waterfalls and village life. From Chiang Mai you can reach national parks, rice terraces and ethical elephant sanctuaries on easy day trips.
Spend time with rescued elephants in an ethical setting—no riding—plus hotel pickup and lunch.
View on ViatorChiang Mai is famous for its food. The most iconic dish is Khao Soi – a rich curry noodle soup with crispy noodles on top. You’ll also find northern sausages, chilli dips, sticky rice and endless street food.
Shop at a local market and cook classic northern Thai dishes with a local instructor.
View on ViatorThe most popular time is the cool, dry season from November to February – comfortable temperatures and many festivals. The hot season that follows can be warm but still enjoyable if you plan activities for mornings and evenings.
Some years there is a period with haze in the wider region, usually around late February to April. It changes from year to year – some seasons are lighter, some heavier – but even then most travellers still enjoy temples, markets, cafés and mountain trips closer to the city.
Chiang Mai fits perfectly into a classic Thailand itinerary: start with the temples and food of Bangkok, relax on the beaches around Phuket and then cool down in the mountains of the north.
If you’re still planning your route, you can also read our guides for Bangkok for first-timers and Phuket for first-timers to see how everything fits together.
Once you have a feel for the main areas and temples, you can start adding more specific places and experiences. These names often come up when travellers talk about their favourite memories of Chiang Mai:
If you like the mix of temples, mountains and villages, you can explore them with a guide on our Explorers Expedition Tour, which combines waterfalls, jungle and local life around Chiang Mai.
To orient yourself before you arrive, you can open the city in Google Maps and check distances between the areas mentioned in this guide.
Open map in Google MapsA few guided experiences that many travellers book together with this destination:
Waterfalls, the Twin Pagodas, and a nature trail in Thailand’s highest national park.
View on ViatorDiscover these experiences with local guides