
Hotels in
Riverside (Charoenkrung).
Bangkok on the Chao Phraya — legendary riverside hotels, creative warehouses and temples by boat.
Why stay in Riverside (Charoenkrung).
The neighborhood in three honest paragraphs — no tourism brochure.
Riverside stretches along Charoenkrung, Bangkok's first paved road and the corridor where the city introduced itself to the world. The grand colonial-era hotels line the Chao Phraya — among them the Mandarin Oriental, which once hosted Joseph Conrad and Somerset Maugham — while former trading warehouses have been remade into galleries and weekend markets.
The Charoenkrung Creative District reclaimed the old godowns of Talat Noi into design studios, specialty-coffee shops and artist-run spaces without erasing the Chinese motorcycle workshops and hidden Chinese shrines in the lanes. The river does the heavy lifting: Chao Phraya Express boats and cross-river ferries put the Grand Palace, Wat Arun and Chinatown within minutes.
Staying in Riverside means trading convenience for atmosphere. You wake to the sound of long-tail boats, have breakfast watching the river traffic and reach Wat Arun by ferry. You are, however, a long walk from the BTS and the mega-malls of Sukhumvit.
5 reasons to sleep here
- 01Grand historic hotels on the Chao Phraya
- 02Boat access to the Grand Palace and Wat Arun
- 03Charoenkrung and Talat Noi Creative District
- 04River views and waterfront dining
- 05Chinatown (Yaowarat) minutes away
Brutal honesty
Not for everyone. Continue if you:
- ✓Couples on a romantic trip or honeymoon
- ✓Travellers focused on historic temples and culture
- ✓Architecture and colonial-art enthusiasts
Look elsewhere if you:
- ×You need BTS at your door — Riverside runs on boats and limited rail
- ×Shopping malls and modern rooftop bars are your priority — head to Sukhumvit
- ×You want a lively nightlife scene nearby
4 recommended hotels in Riverside (Charoenkrung).
Editorial curation · no markup
One for every budget. Direct booking via official partner Hotellook — auto-compares Booking, Hotels.com, Expedia, Agoda.
Mandarin Oriental Bangkok
Legendary riverside hotel since 1876, host to writers and royalty. Award-winning spa across the river, service from another era. An absolute icon.
Why here: The most historic hotel in Asia, on the Chao Phraya. For a milestone occasion or an unforgettable honeymoon.
The Peninsula Bangkok
Y-shaped river tower with a three-tier pool, a private fleet of hotel boats and rooms that frame the full width of the Chao Phraya. Flawless service.
Why here: Modern luxury with the best river views and a shuttle boat to cross. For those who want both outlook and elite service.
Sala Rattanakosin Bangkok
A small boutique with a rooftop bar facing the illuminated Wat Arun at night. The view alone justifies the stay.
Why here: The best Wat Arun view in the city from a rooftop. An intimate boutique for romantic couples.
Riva Surya Bangkok
Riverside hotel near Khao San Road, with a pool, waterfront dining and contemporary rooms. Good access to the temples.
Why here: Strong value on the river, close to the Grand Palace. For those who want a river view without a luxury price tag.
Loftel 22 Hostel
Award-winning design hostel in Talat Noi, at the heart of the Creative District. Private rooms, an espresso bar and art on every wall.
Why here: For backpackers and creatives who want to sleep inside the Creative District at hostel prices.
How to get here.
Airport, metro, taxi and walkability — with real costs, not brochure prices.
From the airport
From Suvarnabhumi (BKK), Riverside is 35 km: Airport Rail Link to Phaya Thai + BTS to Saphan Taksin (by the river), or a metered taxi direct (350–450 THB, 50–70 min with tolls). From Don Mueang (DMK): taxi 400–550 THB.
Metro and train
Saphan Taksin station (BTS Silom Line) sits next to Sathorn Pier, the main gateway to the river-boat network. MRT Sanam Chai serves the temple area. Most movement in Riverside happens on the Chao Phraya itself.
Taxi and Uber
Use Grab or a metered taxi for land trips. But the best "taxi" here is the boat: the Chao Phraya Express and cross-river ferries reach Wat Arun and the Grand Palace for a handful of baht. Many hotels run their own shuttle boats.
On foot
Good along Charoenkrung and the lanes of Talat Noi — the Creative District rewards a slow walk. For cross-city travel you rely on boats and the BTS. Intense heat makes regular shade stops essential.
Where to eat nearby.
4 restaurants worth the detour. No tourist trap, no paid reservation, no hidden markup.
01
฿฿฿฿Le Du
Creative Thai
399/3 Silom Soi 7
Named Best Restaurant in Asia in 2023, chef Ton's seasonal Thai tasting menu pushes local ingredients into new territory. Book weeks ahead.
02
฿Wattana Panich
Beef noodle soup
336-338 Soi Ekkamai 18
The same stockpot has been simmering for over 40 years. The deep, dark beef noodle soup is a Bangkok institution. Cash, queue, no reservation.
03
฿฿฿80/20
Modern Thai
1052-1054 Charoenkrung Road
Michelin-starred on Charoenkrung, 80% local ingredients, creative Thai tasting menu. Reservations essential.
04
฿฿Hong Sieng Kong
Sino-Thai
734 Soi Wanit 2, Talat Noi
A riverside restaurant-gallery inside an old Talat Noi mansion, with views of the Chao Phraya. Sino-Thai cooking in a genuinely cinematic setting.
When to go.
High season, low season, sweet spot and when to skip. No romanticizing.
High season
November to February (dry and cool). Flagship hotels rise 40–70%. Best weather and best river light.
Low season
May to October (rainy season). Short afternoon downpours, rates drop 30–40% and the iconic hotels become more approachable.
Sweet spot · Voyspark recommendation
November and early December: dry skies, clear light and before the year-end price spike.
Skip if
You cannot handle humid heat: skip March to May. You need fast land transport everywhere: Riverside is boat territory.
Voyspark AI
Want a full plan in Riverside (Charoenkrung)?
Flights + hotel + restaurant bookings + curated experiences. All within your Taste Genome, in under 90 seconds.