Bangkok Street Food Itinerary: Chinatown, Tuk-Tuks & Cooking Classes
Bangkok may be the best street-food city on earth — Michelin-listed stalls, the neon sprawl of Yaowarat Road and dishes that cost less than a coffee back home. Here is how to build a full day around eating in Bangkok, from a morning market and cooking class to a late-night tuk-tuk crawl, with the top-rated food tours to book.
At a glance
- 1Morning market & cooking class
- 2Michelin-listed stalls
- 3Yaowarat after dark
- 4Night tuk-tuk food crawl
Morning: market tour and cooking class
Start where Thai cooks start: a wet market. The best Bangkok cooking classes open with a guided market walk — smelling galangal and lemongrass, tasting palm sugar, learning how to judge fish sauce — before you cook four or five dishes like tom yum, green curry and pad thai yourself. Classes run about four hours and start from around $30–40 per person; morning sessions sell out first, so book a few days ahead.
Evening: Yaowarat, Bangkok's Chinatown
Yaowarat Road comes alive after 6pm — charcoal woks, gold shops and queues outside stalls listed in the Michelin Guide. A guided walking tour is the smart move here: guides know which of the hundred stalls to trust and typically feed you 10–15 tastings, from crab omelette to kuay jab pepper soup. One warning: many vendors take Monday off, so plan Chinatown for any other night of the week.
Late: the night tuk-tuk crawl
The night tuk-tuk food tour is Bangkok's signature after-dark experience: three to four hours weaving between street stalls, the 24-hour flower market and floodlit temples, with a dish or two at every stop. Most depart between 6pm and 8pm and cost from around $75 per person with all food included. They book out days ahead in high season (November–February), so reserve early — and arrive hungry, because ten stops is normal.
Street-food smarts
Most street dishes cost ฿50–80 (about $1.50–2.50), so grazing is cheap even without a tour. Follow the local rules of thumb: pick stalls with a queue and fast turnover, eat food cooked to order in front of you, and stick to bottled or canned drinks. If you only have one free evening, spend it in Chinatown; with two, add the old town near Wat Pho, where several Michelin-listed shophouse kitchens hide.
Book the experiences in this itinerary
Top-rated tours for exactly what this plan recommends in Bangkok — prices per person.







