Bangkok in 3 Days — The Perfect Itinerary
Bangkok Travel Guide

Bangkok in 3 Days

Temples at sunrise, street food at midnight, and rooftop cocktails between — the essential Bangkok experience, hour by hour.

✍️ Travel Thailands 📅 April 2026 ⏱️ 15 min read
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3
Days
18+
Experiences
$35
Daily Budget
10M+
Residents
400+
Temples

Understanding Bangkok's
Neighbourhoods

Bangkok is vast. Before you plan anything, it helps to know where the key areas are and how they differ in character.

⛩️

Rattanakosin

Old City · Temples

Bangkok's historic heart. Home to the Grand Palace, Wat Pho, and Wat Arun. Touristy but unmissable.

🥟

Chinatown (Yaowarat)

Food · Energy · Night

Gold shops, street food stalls, and legendary night markets. Best experienced after dark.

🏙️

Sukhumvit

Modern · Nightlife · Malls

Bangkok's modern spine. Sky trains, rooftop bars, international restaurants, and the Asok area.

🌊

Chao Phraya

River · Tha Maharaj

The lifeblood of old Bangkok. River ferries, riverside temples, and stunning sunset views.

01

Temples, the Grand Palace & the Old City

Bangkok's historic core — golden spires, sacred Buddhas, river sunsets, and the best pad thai of your life.

Grand Palace Bangkok
☀️ 6:30 AM — Morning

Breakfast Like a Local at Or Tor Kor Market

Start early — Bangkok's temples are cooler and less crowded before 9am, and the best breakfast stalls sell out fast. Or Tor Kor Market near Chatuchak is widely considered Bangkok's finest fresh market. Pick up a bag of ripe mangoes, Thai iced tea, and a sticky rice parcel for a true local breakfast.

How to get there: Take the BTS Skytrain to Mo Chit station, then a short walk. Alternatively, grab a Grab taxi from your hotel — morning traffic isn't yet at full chaos.
☀️ 8:00 AM — Morning

The Grand Palace & Wat Phra Kaew

Thailand's most famous — and frankly awe-inspiring — landmark. The Grand Palace compound houses the sacred Wat Phra Kaew (Temple of the Emerald Buddha), which contains a tiny jade Buddha regarded as the most sacred image in the country.

500 THB entry (~$14) Open 8:30am–3:30pm
Dress code strictly enforced — no bare shoulders, no shorts, no flip-flops. Sarongs can be borrowed free at the gate. Allow 1.5–2 hours minimum. Ignore anyone outside telling you it's "closed for cleaning today" — it's never closed. This is a well-known scam.
☀️ 10:30 AM — Mid-Morning

Wat Pho — The Reclining Buddha

A short walk south of the palace, Wat Pho is one of Bangkok's oldest and largest temple complexes. The centrepiece is the extraordinary 46-metre Reclining Buddha, coated in gold leaf and housed in a narrow building that forces you to crane your neck to take it all in. The feet alone are 5 metres tall and inlaid with mother-of-pearl.

200 THB entry 260 THB massage (30 min)
Pro tip: Wat Pho is the birthplace of traditional Thai massage. There's a reputable massage school on-site — a perfect reward after the morning's temple walk.
🌤️ 12:30 PM — Lunch

Lunch at Tha Tian Market

Just outside Wat Pho's back gate, Tha Tian Market is a covered riverside market where Bangkok locals eat. Grab a plastic stool, order from one of the stalls, and look out over the Chao Phraya river. Try the pad thai or boat noodles — this is where they were perfected.

02

Markets, Canals & the River

Floating markets at dawn, Chatuchak's chaos, and a rooftop cocktail as the city lights up.

Bangkok Floating Market
☀️ 6:00 AM — Early Morning

Damnoen Saduak Floating Market

Leave Bangkok before sunrise to catch the floating markets at their most atmospheric. Damnoen Saduak is the most famous — a labyrinth of canals where vendors sell produce, crafts, and cooked dishes from wooden boats. It's touristy but undeniably photogenic.

Tip: Hire a long-tail boat (500–700 THB for 1 hour) to explore the canals beyond the market. The neighbourhoods of wooden stilted houses, orchid farms, and coconut plantations are the real treasure.
☀️ 10:30 AM — Mid-Morning

Amphawa Floating Market

On the way back, stop at Amphawa — a smaller, more authentic canal-side market town that most tourists skip. Browse the weekend market stalls selling handmade goods, fresh seafood, and Thai sweets, and grab a traditional boat-noodle soup (30–40 THB per bowl) at one of the canalside restaurants. Far less crowded than Damnoen Saduak and genuinely charming.

🌤️ 1:00 PM — Afternoon

Chatuchak Weekend Market

Back in Bangkok, spend the afternoon at Chatuchak Weekend Market — one of the world's largest markets, with over 15,000 stalls spread across a 35-acre site. Open only on Saturdays and Sundays, it's an overwhelming and utterly brilliant bazaar covering vintage clothing, handmade jewellery, antiques, plants, street food, furniture, ceramics, and frankly anything else you can imagine.

Navigate by section: Section 2&3 for antiques and decor, Section 4 for fashion and clothing, Section 27 for food and eating. Budget 2–3 hours and comfortable shoes are essential.
🌙 7:00 PM — Evening

Sunset at a Bangkok Rooftop Bar

Bangkok's rooftop bar scene is world-class, and watching the sun sink behind the city skyline from 60 floors up is a genuinely unforgettable experience. The best options:

Sky Bar at Lebua (State Tower) — 800 THB+ per drink, but you're buying the view and the fact that this is where The Hangover II was filmed. Dress code applies.
Octave Rooftop Lounge (Marriott Sukhumvit) — three floors of outdoor terrace, 360° views, and cocktails from 400 THB. More relaxed dress code.
Vertigo & Moon Bar (Banyan Tree) — dizzying 61st floor open-air deck. Jaw-dropping on a clear night.
"Bangkok doesn't ask you to take it slow. It asks you to keep up — and rewards you handsomely when you do."
— Travel Thailands
03

Modern Bangkok — Art, Shopping & One Last Feast

The city's creative, contemporary side — street art, world-class malls, hidden cocktail bars, and a goodbye dinner you'll talk about for years.

Modern Bangkok Skyline
☀️ 9:00 AM — Morning

Bangkok Art & Culture Centre (BACC)

Start your final day at the Bangkok Art & Culture Centre, a striking contemporary building near Siam housing rotating exhibitions of Thai and international artists. It's air-conditioned (a blessing), free to enter, and gives you a window into Bangkok's thriving creative scene most tourists miss entirely.

Free entry Open 10am–8pm (Tue–Sun)
🌤️ 11:30 AM — Late Morning

Siam & Central World Shopping District

Bangkok's shopping malls are attractions in their own right. Siam Paragon houses a luxury car showroom and an entire basement food court that rivals many cities' best restaurants. CentralWorld and IconSiam on the river are equally impressive — the latter even has an indoor floating market.

🌤️ 2:00 PM — Afternoon

Charoen Krung Street Art & Creative District

Wander the backstreets of Charoen Krung, Bangkok's oldest road and now its most exciting creative district. Murals by international street artists cover warehouse walls. Stop into Warehouse 30 for galleries and design shops, or Jam Factory for architecture, books, and excellent coffee.

🌙 7:00 PM — Evening

Farewell Dinner at Bo.lan or Le Du

End your Bangkok journey with a meal at one of the city's two Michelin-starred Thai restaurants. Bo.lan serves refined traditional Thai in a beautiful restored house, while Le Du offers modern Thai tasting menus that have earned it Asia's top rankings. Book weeks ahead — these tables are the hottest in the city.

Bo.lan: 1,500–2,500 THB Le Du: 2,000–3,500 THB
Thai Street Food

Where to Eat

The dishes you cannot leave Bangkok without trying — and exactly where to find the best versions.

Pad Thai

The national dish. Go to Thip Samai on Maha Chai Rd — the queue is always long for a reason.

60–100 THB

River Prawns

Charcoal-grilled giant river prawns at T&K Seafood, Yaowarat. Order two minimum.

200–400 THB

Khao Man Gai

Silky poached chicken over fragrant rice. Best at Boon Tong Kee near Amarin Plaza.

55–80 THB

Boat Noodles

Tiny bowls of intensely flavoured pork or beef noodle soup. Order five or six at once.

20–35 THB/bowl

Mango Sticky Rice

The quintessential Thai dessert. Or Tor Kor Market has the best version in Bangkok.

80–120 THB

Street Skewers

Moo ping (grilled pork skewers) with glutinous rice — the ultimate Bangkok breakfast snack.

10–15 THB each

Practical Tips for Bangkok

Everything you need to navigate the city like a local, from transport to temple etiquette.

🚇 BTS Skytrain

Avoid traffic completely. Best for Sukhumvit, Silom, and Chatuchak. Buy a Rabbit Card for discounts on fares (16–59 THB).

🚇 MRT Subway

Covers Chinatown, Silom, and Chatuchak with interchange stations connecting to BTS. Fares range 17–42 THB.

Chao Phraya Boat

Old City temples and riverside access. Orange flag boats run all day and cost only 15–40 THB — often faster than taxis.

📱 Grab App

Metered, reliable, no haggling. Fixed price shown in app before booking. Typically 80–200 THB for most inner-city trips.

🚕 Metered Taxi

Insist on the meter (~35 THB flag fall). Pink and green taxis are generally more reliable than yellow-black.

🛺 Tuk-Tuk

Short hops and local experience only. Negotiate first (50–150 THB), never take "free" offers — they lead to gem shops.

Transport at a Glance

TransportBest ForTypical CostPro Tip
BTS SkytrainSukhumvit, Silom, Chatuchak16–59 THBBuy a Rabbit Card for discounts
MRTChinatown, Silom, Chatuchak17–42 THBConnects to BTS at interchange stations
Chao Phraya BoatOld City temples, riverside15–40 THBOrange flag boats run all day
Grab CarAnywhere, door-to-door80–200 THBFixed price shown in app before booking
Tuk-TukShort hops, local experience50–150 THBNegotiate first, never take "free" offers

⚠️ Bangkok Traffic Warning: Rush hour (7–9am, 5–8pm) can turn a 5km journey into a 45-minute ordeal. Plan temple mornings before 9am and use the BTS or MRT wherever the lines reach. For cross-city trips, the Chao Phraya boat is often faster than any road option.

Before You Go Checklist

Download Grab app and set up payment before arriving
Pack modest temple clothing — or a light scarf for shoulders and waist
Get a SIM card at the airport (300–500 THB for unlimited data)
Download Google Maps offline for Bangkok
Reserve restaurants for Day 3 farewell dinner well in advance
Bring small-denomination Thai Baht for street food and tuk-tuks
Check temple opening times — most restrict access on Buddhist holidays
Book temple experiences that require advance booking

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