Our top Thailand tours and excursions

Thailand is overflowing with guided tours and excursions, but not all are created equal. That’s why we only ever recommend the best of the best: the experiences guaranteed to get you under the skin of Thai culture.   

Bangkok street market

Bangkok after dark

Bangkok is the city that never stops eating, as you’ll discover on this late-night tuk-tuk tour of the city’s finest street-food spots and drinking holes. 

From Michelin-starred crab omelettes to fishball soup, and from drunken noodles to chive dumplings, Bangkok cuisine is much, much more than just pad thai (though there’s that, too). Zipping through the streets in the back of a tuk-tuk, your guide will take you beyond the usual tourist hotspots and deep into the after-hours food culture of the city, stopping in for cold drinks at hidden bars and street-food treats at thronging night markets. In between bites, you’ll also hop out to explore some Bangkok landmarks — including chedi temple spires glowing golden against the night sky. 

Boat on canals of Bangkok

Kings & khlongs: Half-day tour of the canals of old Bangkok

Before Bangkok became famous for its busy nightlife and glitzy malls, it was known as the “Venice of the East”: threaded through with hundreds of canals (or khlongs) and lined with teakwood homes and shrines.  

A half-day tour of Thonburi will introduce you to a little slice of that old Bangkok, where transport is by longtail boat instead of skytrain, and where life still moves at a lazy pace in teakwood villages along the khlongs. After puttering past old shophouses and temples, whose eclectic architecture reflects the region’s centuries of trade, you’ll disembark to explore an icon of Bangkok: the sparkling, mosaic-encrusted temple of Wat Arun. From here, it’s a short walk to the Grand Palace, whose magnificent complex of over 100 buildings has been the seat of Thai royalty for over two centuries.

Muay Thai boxers competing in the ring in Bangkok

Muay Thai Masterclass

Born during the wars with Burma in the 18th century, Muay Thai is known as the “Art of Eight Limbs” because it makes use of eight points of contact: fists, feet, knees and elbows.

Meet your trainer at a local gym, learn the key techniques, then head on to the stadium for the main event. Go backstage to see the pros prepare, then grab a ringside seat for the fight — including the traditional, dance-like “ring-sealing” ritual. Meet the champion later for a photo op! 

Girl looking up at gilded arch in front of golden temple in Chiang Mai

Half day Chiang Mai's spiritual side

Beginning in the old town centre and working outwards to the peak of Doi Suthep, trace Chiang Mai’s spiritual heritage from city-centre chedis, up the longest naga stairway in Thailand to one of the North’s most sacred sites.

Stop in along the way at Wat Pha Lat, an enchanting “hidden jungle temple” tucked away from the crowds, and arrive at Doi Suthep in time for the evening ceremony, when monks’ chanting drifts across the landscape as the sun begins to set. 

Blue Temple with white Buddha statue at top of stairs

Full day art scene of Chiang Rai

Get beneath the skin of this eccentric beacon of creative culture as you take in the dazzlingly kitsch vision of Buddhism at the White Temple, contemplate the meaning of life and death at the hellish Black House, then peruse scripture art at the strikingly contemporary Blue Temple. Grab lunch at an arts community with a local art expert, then round off the day in the hills at the home and gallery of a local potter. 

Ruins of Sukhothai historical park

Sukhothai Historical Park

It was during the age of Sukhothai that Thai culture as we know it was born.

Hop on a tuk-tuk tour to uncover the 700-year-old remnants of this extraordinary city — which invented the Thai alphabet, spread Theravada Buddhism and presided over a golden age of the arts. Stop in at some of nearly 200 temples and spires spread out between trees, paddies, ponds and villages, and soak up the atmosphere of one of the great pre-modern civilisations.