Best Restaurants in Thailand: Fine Dining, Local Gems & Where to Eat
Before you’ve even ordered anything, Thailand has already fed you. The smell of lemongrass and charred chilli hits you somewhere around arrivals, following you through the taxi rank, down the hotel corridor, and into your dreams. By six in the morning, the streets of Bangkok are already crackling with wok smoke and the flat clatter of cleaver on board. By noon, you’ll have eaten better from a plastic stool than in most European restaurants with tablecloths and a sommelier. This is, in short, a country that takes food personally – and so should you.
For the luxury traveller, Thailand presents a rather magnificent problem: the best meal of your life could cost four thousand pounds and arrive on hand-thrown ceramics with an emoji-based menu, or it could cost four pounds and arrive in a plastic bag. Often the gap in pleasure between these two experiences is smaller than you’d expect. The gap in Instagram content, however, is considerable.
This guide covers the best restaurants in Thailand across every register – from world-ranked fine dining rooms to the hawker stall that nobody outside the neighbourhood knows about. Whether you’re in Bangkok for one night or spending three weeks island-hopping through the south, this is where to eat, what to order, and how to do it without booking three months in advance (or, in some cases, exactly how to book three months in advance).
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The Fine Dining Scene: Bangkok on the World Stage
Let’s not bury the lead. Bangkok is, right now, one of the most exciting fine dining cities on the planet. Not “exciting for Southeast Asia.” Not “punching above its weight.” Just genuinely, objectively, world-class. The 2025 World’s 50 Best Restaurants list makes the case rather forcefully, placing four Bangkok restaurants in the top thirty. That is not a coincidence. It is the result of a generation of Thai chefs who trained abroad, came home with serious technique, and decided the world needed to understand Thai cuisine on entirely different terms.
Gaggan sits at the top of the heap – ranked sixth in the world and named Best Restaurant in Asia for 2025. Chef Gaggan Anand is a difficult person to categorise, which is presumably the point. His progressive Indian cuisine, filtered through French, Japanese, and Thai sensibilities, arrives on an emoji-only menu. You eat with your hands. You lick the plate. At some point there will be music. It is theatrical and technically extraordinary in equal measure, and the fact that it works as well as it does is something of a culinary miracle. Book as far ahead as humanly possible. Then book further.
A few minutes across town, in the atmospheric tangle of Chinatown’s Yaowarat district, Potong holds court in a century-old Sino-Portuguese shophouse that is, frankly, one of the most beautiful restaurant spaces in the world. Chef Pichaya “Pam” Soontornyanakij is cooking in her family’s ancestral home, which gives the whole experience a weight and intimacy that most tasting menus – however technically accomplished – struggle to achieve. The food honours her Thai-Chinese heritage without ever feeling like a heritage exercise. Ranked thirteenth in the world in 2025 and awarded Highest New Entry, it is already difficult to get into, and will only become more so. You have been warned.
Then there is Sorn – ranked seventeenth in the world – where Chef Supaksorn “Ice” Jongsiri has done something remarkable: he has taken the ferociously hot, uncompromising flavours of Southern Thai cooking and placed them in a fine dining context without defanging them in the slightest. The dishes are hot. Genuinely, memorably hot. They also taste of something – of specific places, specific soils, rare local ingredients that you won’t find anywhere else on earth. It is the kind of food that makes you understand why people talk about “a sense of place” as though it were a good thing rather than a platitude.
For something more European in sensibility, Sühring in the Sathorn neighbourhood is the project of German twin brothers Matthias and Thomas, who have created a quietly exceptional restaurant that layers their native German influences with Italian, Dutch, and Thai touches. Scallop with pumpkin and kelp. Kagoshima A5 wagyu with kintoki carrot and oxtail. It is precise, warm, and unmistakably serious. Ranked twenty-second in the world. Dress accordingly.
Rounding out Bangkok’s extraordinary run in the global rankings is Le Du, positioned at number thirty in the world. Chef Thitid “Ton” Tassanakajohn has built his restaurant around a simple but demanding premise: that Thai cuisine, cooked with classical technique and seasonal discipline, needs no apology and no exotic framing. Le Du – loosely translated from Thai as “seasons” – follows the agricultural calendar of Thailand’s regions, building each menu around what is genuinely at its peak. It is elegant, restrained, and quietly persuasive. It will also likely change how you think about Thai food for the rest of your life, which at these prices seems entirely fair.
Local Gems: Where Locals Actually Eat
The world-class restaurants above deserve every supillon of their reputation. But if your entire Thai food experience takes place in tasting menu rooms with mood lighting and amuse-bouches, you have rather missed the point. Thailand’s true culinary identity lives on the street, in the shophouse, in the air-conditioned local restaurant with laminated menus and a television showing a soap opera in the corner.
Bangkok’s Chinatown district – beyond the extraordinary Potong – rewards wandering at any hour. The Yaowarat road itself comes alive after dark with roast duck vendors, oyster omelette stalls, and barbecued seafood priced per kilogram, the tray of raw prawns and crab brought to your plastic table as a kind of edible menu. Nobody here is performing authenticity for tourists. They are simply cooking.
In Chiang Mai, the northern capital, the food culture is distinct from Bangkok’s in ways that matter. The dishes are softer, earthier, more influenced by neighbouring Burma and Laos. Khao soi – a rich coconut curry broth with egg noodles, crispy fried noodles on top, and your choice of protein – is the dish you will eat daily and never quite get enough of. The best versions come from small shopfront restaurants that have been serving the same recipe for decades. Ask locally. Everyone has a favourite. Everyone is right.
In the south, particularly around Krabi and Phuket, the Muslim-influenced cooking of the coastal communities produces dishes of considerable depth – massaman curry that has been simmering since before you woke up, roti canai served with condensed milk for breakfast, fresh grilled fish seasoned with nothing but turmeric and sea salt. These are not hidden gems in any Instagram-friendly sense. They are simply good food, in places where good food has always been taken for granted.
Beach Clubs and Casual Dining by the Water
Thailand’s islands have a way of adjusting your standards for casual eating. What would be considered a noteworthy restaurant in most cities is simply where you have lunch after your morning swim. The barefoot aesthetic and paper napkins are deceptive – the cooking underneath them can be excellent.
Koh Samui has evolved significantly in the past decade and now offers a genuine range of beachfront dining options, from grilled whole fish at table-in-the-sand establishments to more polished beach club environments serving wood-fired pizza alongside Thai dishes, with cocktail lists that do not shame themselves. The key, as with most things in Thailand, is to follow the smell and trust your instincts over any ranking on a travel app.
Koh Lanta and the quieter islands of the Andaman Sea remain more genuinely local in character. Here, a beachside dinner means a table on the sand, a fire nearby, and an enthusiastic argument over whether you want the red curry or the green one. Both, usually, is the correct answer.
Phuket’s beach club scene is more developed and – since we are being candid – occasionally more interested in its own aesthetic than in the food it serves. There are exceptions. The better venues on the island’s west coast combine competent Thai and international cooking with genuinely beautiful sea views and drinks programmes that make the most of fresh fruit in ways that European bars have not yet managed to replicate.
Food Markets: The Real Education
If you want to understand Thai food – not just eat it, but actually understand it – you need to spend time in a food market. This is non-negotiable.
Bangkok’s Or Tor Kor market, adjacent to the Chatuchak Weekend Market in the north of the city, is regarded by many food professionals as the finest fresh produce market in Southeast Asia. The quality of the tropical fruit alone is worth the journey – rambutan, mangosteen, durian (an acquired taste delivered, depending on your hotel’s policy, either in the street or with social consequences), rose apples, and custard fruit at levels of ripeness that would never survive a European supermarket supply chain. There are prepared food stalls here too, and the standard is extraordinary.
The Bangkok Street Food Tour is one of the genuinely great ways to navigate the city’s eating culture without spending your entire holiday slightly lost in an unfamiliar neighbourhood. A good guide will take you through the lanes of the old town and into Chinatown, through Thonburi and along the riverside, building a picture of how the city eats across different communities, times of day, and price points. You will eat a great deal. Plan accordingly.
Chiang Mai’s Saturday and Sunday Walking Street markets are tourist-facing but not tourist-only. The northern food here is genuinely good: sai oua sausage, nam prik ong (a pork and tomato chilli dip that makes everything else taste bland by comparison), and steamed sticky rice eaten with the fingers in the traditional northern manner.
What to Order: The Essential Dishes
A word on the classics, because they are classics for a reason. Tom yum goong – the sour, lemongrass-fragrant prawn soup – is the flavour profile of Thailand distilled into a bowl. Pad krapow, the minced meat stir-fry with holy basil and a fried egg on top, is what Thai people eat when they are hungry and want something deeply satisfying rather than impressive. It is the Thai equivalent of beans on toast and should be ordered without apology at any hour of the day.
Som tum, the green papaya salad of the northeast, is a dish of controlled aggression – the pounding of the mortar releasing flavours in sequence, the fish sauce and lime and palm sugar balancing against chilli heat and the crunch of green bean and tomato. Order it “pet nit noi” (a little spicy) if you are new to it. Or order it as it comes and discover something useful about your own constitution.
In the south, order the curries – massaman, panang, and kaeng tai pla (fermented fish kidney curry, very much an acquired taste and not recommended as a first foray). For breakfast, try jok, the rice porridge served with soft-cooked egg and ginger, which is the most effective cure for anything that the previous evening’s drinking may have caused.
Wine, Cocktails and Local Drinks
Thailand is not a wine-producing country in any meaningful sense, and the import duties on wine are significant enough to make a decent bottle of Burgundy a fairly painful purchase. The better fine dining restaurants maintain serious cellars regardless, and Gaggan, Le Du, Sühring and their contemporaries offer wine pairing menus that are well worth the expense in context.
The more honest move, however, is to drink what Thailand actually does well. Singha and Chang are the national lagers and should be consumed cold and often, ideally alongside something spicy, ideally at a table that is slightly too close to a road. Soda with fresh lime juice – manao soda – is the drink of the street food circuit, refreshing in a way that nothing else quite matches at thirty-four degrees. Fresh coconuts, served green and young with a straw, are not a tourist affectation but a genuinely sensible hydration strategy.
The cocktail scene in Bangkok has matured considerably and a number of bars – several attached to the Michelin-level restaurants listed above, others operating independently – are now producing genuinely inventive drinks with Thai botanical ingredients. Makrut lime leaf, lemongrass, galangal, butterfly pea flower (which turns your cocktail a photogenic shade of violet, should you require that): the raw material is extraordinary, and the better bartenders are using it well.
Reservation Tips: How to Actually Get a Table
For Gaggan, Potong, Sorn, Sühring, and Le Du, the rule is simple: book early, book directly, and book online through each restaurant’s official reservation system. Gaggan and Potong, in particular, operate on extremely limited seatings with high demand from international visitors – three months ahead is a reasonable minimum, and six is not excessive for peak season travel. Some of these restaurants release cancellation spots closer to the date, which rewards the diligent refresher of booking pages. This is, admittedly, a somewhat undignified position for a luxury traveller but effective nonetheless.
For more casual dining in Thailand, reservations are often unnecessary and occasionally impossible – your favourite noodle stall will not have an OpenTable account. The general approach is to arrive early (Thai restaurants open for dinner around six, the best spots fill by seven), or late (after nine, when the first sitting has turned over). Avoiding the prime dinner hour entirely and eating a large late lunch is the Thai-local approach and the correct one.
For large groups at beach clubs and resort restaurants, call ahead regardless of whether a reservation appears necessary. The combination of a large group, the Thai hospitality reflex, and a brief phone call will almost always secure you a better table than turning up and hoping.
A Final Word on Eating Well in Thailand
The question of where to eat in Thailand is, ultimately, a question of how curious you are willing to be. The country rewards those who follow their nose down an unfamiliar street, who point at something they cannot identify on a menu and order it anyway, who accept that the most memorable meal of their entire trip might take place on a plastic stool next to a canal in a neighbourhood they will never be able to find again. This is not a counsel to ignore the world-class restaurants – those tables at Gaggan and Potong are absolutely worth the planning they require. It is simply a reminder that Thailand’s culinary identity is democratic in the most genuine sense, and that excellent food here does not correlate reliably with price, ambiance, or the presence of a waiter in a uniform.
For those travelling on the Thailand Travel Guide circuit in the way it deserves to be done – unhurried, well-informed, and with sufficient flexibility to eat dinner twice if the situation demands it – the ideal base is a luxury villa in Thailand with a private chef option. This is not merely a comfort consideration. It is a culinary one. A private chef who can source from the local morning market, prepare a northern Thai feast or a southern seafood dinner in your own kitchen, and adjust the heat level to precisely where you need it – this is, arguably, the finest dining experience Thailand offers. The world’s best restaurant is wherever the fish was caught at six this morning and the lemongrass was cut an hour ago.