
Bangkok Thailand
Things to do in Bangkok in November 2026
By Tripnostic Research · Updated June 3, 2026
For Bangkok in November 2026, build the day around dated events, seasonal conditions, venue hours, and booking windows. Dated picks to verify first include Bangkok International Festival of Dance and Music 2026 and Loy Krathong Festival 2026. Check the dated events and venue hours below before assigning fixed dates.
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Bangkok in November 2026
Weather
Temperature
90°F / 76°F
32.3°C / 24.5°C
Precipitation
13d
2in · 50.1mm
Daylight
11.6h
Cool season starts mid-November. Hotel prices begin climbing toward the December–February peak. One of the best months to visit.
Events & festivals
- Nov 1 – Nov 30
Bangkok International Festival of Dance and Music 2026
A month-long festival featuring international and local performances of classical music, ballet, opera, and traditional Thai dance at venues across Bangkok. — Tickets required for individual performances; book in advance for popular shows.
Source: festival research
- Nov 15
Loy Krathong Festival 2026
Loy Krathong is a traditional Thai festival celebrated by floating decorated baskets (krathongs) on waterways to pay respects to the water spirits. In Bangkok, major celebrations occur along the Chao Phraya River with lantern releases, cultural performances, and fireworks. — No advance booking required for public celebrations; some river cruises and special events may require tickets.
Source: festival research
Planning checklist
- 1Check the 2 dated Bangkok events for anything that overlaps your exact November dates before assigning fixed sightseeing days.
- 2Confirm weekly closed days for museums, markets, and major sights even though Thailand has no national public holidays in November.
- 3Group each Bangkok day by nearby neighborhoods, then validate the saved places against your trip dates before exporting the checked route to Google Maps.
Build your Bangkok plan for November
Start fresh — type or paste places you're considering — and Tripnostic checks every one against your November dates: opening hours, closures, what needs booking ahead, and which Bangkok events overlap your trip. Already have a list from a friend or an AI itinerary? Paste it and we'll check that too.
Build my Bangkok planAbout Bangkok
City overview
Bangkok is the densely-packed Thai capital where 14th-century royal temples sit a BTS Skytrain stop away from glass-tower malls. The city sprawls along the Chao Phraya river — the river is still the fastest way across the historic core — and the neighborhoods feel like separate cities pressed together: Rattanakosin's gilded palace district, Sukhumvit's expat-and-skybar belt, Yaowarat's Chinatown food alleys, Khao San's backpacker corridor.
Food & drink
Bangkok's food scene is the city's headline attraction — street stalls outnumber restaurants, and Yaowarat (Chinatown) and Banglamphu both have evening food alleys where most dishes are under 100 baht. The Thai canon (pad thai, tom yum, green curry, som tam, mango sticky rice) is everywhere, but the city is also a destination for regional Thai cooking (Isaan in the north-east, southern Muslim-Thai curries) and Chinese-Thai dishes invented here over a century of immigration. Bangkok currently holds more Michelin stars than any other Thai city.
Top sights
Ranked for November suitability using weather, setting, ratings, and review volume.
- AWat Pho (Temple of the Reclining Buddha)
- BGrand Palace & Wat Phra Kaeo (Temple of the Emerald Buddha)
- CWat Arun (Temple of Dawn)
- DWat Saket (Golden Mount)
- EJim Thompson House
- FYaowarat Road (Chinatown food street)
- GLumphini Park
- HChatuchak Weekend Market
- IChao Phraya Express Boat (orange flag line)
- JTalad Rot Fai Ratchada (Train Night Market)
1Wat Pho (Temple of the Reclining Buddha)
4.8★ · 7,982indoorOpen dailyA 46-metre gilded reclining Buddha plus the country's oldest massage school — both inside the same temple complex, walking distance from the Grand Palace via MRT Sanam Chai.
2Grand Palace & Wat Phra Kaeo (Temple of the Emerald Buddha)
4.7★ · 42,902indoorOpen dailyWalled royal complex built in 1782, still used for official ceremonies. Wat Phra Kaeo inside holds the country's most-revered Buddha image, carved from a single block of jade.
Strict dress code: shoulders, knees, and upper arms must be covered. Sarongs are sold at the entrance.
3Wat Arun (Temple of Dawn)
4.7★ · 44,351indoorOpen dailyThe porcelain-encrusted spire on the Thonburi (west) bank of the Chao Phraya, climbable for a panoramic city view. The cross-river ferry from Tha Tien costs a few baht and runs throughout the day.
Show 7 more sights
- 4Wat Saket (Golden Mount)
- 5Jim Thompson House
- 6Yaowarat Road (Chinatown food street)
- 7Lumphini Park
- 8Chatuchak Weekend Market
- 9Chao Phraya Express Boat (orange flag line)
- 10Talad Rot Fai Ratchada (Train Night Market)
Neighborhoods
1Rattanakosin (Old Bangkok)
The historic royal island between the river and Khlong Banglamphu. Grand Palace, Wat Pho, the National Museum, and most of the city's tourist-postcard sights cluster here. Quiet after dark.
2Sukhumvit
A long east-west axis along the Sukhumvit Line BTS — international restaurants, rooftop bars, condo towers, and most of the city's nightlife. Each soi has its own character: Thonglor for craft cocktails, Asok for shopping, Nana/Soi Cowboy for the controversial side.
3Silom & Sathorn
The financial district by day, Patpong night market and Silom Soi 4 after dark. Embassies, towers, the start of the Silom Line BTS at Sala Daeng. Closer to the river than Sukhumvit.
4
Siam Square
The commercial centre — Siam Paragon, MBK, CentralWorld, Siam Discovery all within a 500m radius. The BTS Siam interchange is the closest thing Bangkok has to a single geographic centre.
5Yaowarat (Chinatown) & Phahurat
Multi-storey gold shops, neon signage, and the city's densest concentration of Chinese restaurants and street-food vendors. Phahurat, the adjacent block, is Bangkok's Little India — Sikh temple, sari shops, samosa stalls.
6Banglamphu / Khao San Road
Backpacker district north of Rattanakosin — cheap guesthouses, tuk-tuk touts, 7-Elevens, and the famous Khao San Road party strip. Quieter Soi Rambuttri parallel has bars and street food.
Day trips
80km / 1.5h by train from Hua Lamphong, or 2h by bus
Ayutthaya
The former Thai capital sacked by the Burmese in 1767. The UNESCO-listed ruins of brick temples and beheaded Buddha statues are a half-day if you rent a bicycle on arrival.
100km / 1.5h by minibus from Victory Monument
Damnoen Saduak Floating Market
The most-photographed floating market in Thailand — wooden boats stacked with mango, papaya, noodle bowls. Touristy but iconic; arrive before 09:00 to see it before the day-tripper crowds.
130km / 2.5h by train from Thonburi station
Kanchanaburi & the Bridge over the River Kwai
World War II history (the Death Railway, JEATH War Museum, Allied war cemetery) plus the Erawan waterfalls in the nearby national park. Doable as a long day or better as an overnight.
Getting around
The BTS Skytrain (Sukhumvit + Silom + Gold lines) and MRT metro (Blue + Purple + Yellow + Pink lines) cover most of the modern city — both run roughly 06:00–24:00. Buy a Rabbit card for BTS at any station (200 baht: 100 stored + 100 issuance). For the historic core stick to the Chao Phraya Express Boat (orange flag, 14 baht) — Bangkok's road traffic is genuinely notorious and the river is faster than a taxi for any palace-and-temple itinerary.
Common questions about Bangkok in November
- Will the places on my list be open when I'm in Bangkok in November?
- Not always. Opening days and hours vary by weekday, season, and holiday. Paste your Bangkok list into Tripnostic and it checks every place against the exact dates you're there, flagging closures before the trip instead of at a locked door.
- How do I plan Bangkok days without crossing the city twice?
- Tripnostic groups your places by neighborhood so each day stays in one or two areas instead of zig-zagging. It also flags what needs booking ahead, so timed tickets and reservations don't fall through.
- Best rainy-day things to do in Bangkok in November
November averages 13 rainy days in Bangkok, so keep these indoor stops as realistic backups.
- Wat Pho (Temple of the Reclining Buddha) — A 46-metre gilded reclining Buddha plus the country's oldest massage school — both inside the same temple complex, walking distance from the Grand Palace via MRT Sanam Chai.
- Grand Palace & Wat Phra Kaeo (Temple of the Emerald Buddha) — Walled royal complex built in 1782, still used for official ceremonies. Wat Phra Kaeo inside holds the country's most-revered Buddha image, carved from a single block of jade.
- Wat Arun (Temple of Dawn) — The porcelain-encrusted spire on the Thonburi (west) bank of the Chao Phraya, climbable for a panoramic city view. The cross-river ferry from Tha Tien costs a few baht and runs throughout the day.
- Wat Saket (Golden Mount) — A 79-metre artificial hill topped by a gold chedi, reached via 344 spiralling steps. The roof-level platform is the best non-rooftop-bar view of the Rattanakosin skyline.
- Jim Thompson House — Six traditional Thai teak houses reassembled into one residence by the American silk merchant who vanished in Malaysia in 1967. Guided tours only; the collection includes pre-Khmer sculpture and Ban Chiang pottery.
- What to pack for Bangkok in November
Pack for November's weather, not a generic Bangkok checklist.
- Light, breathable daytime clothes for average highs around 32°C / 90°F.
- Breathable evening clothes because nights stay near 25°C / 76°F.
- Compact rain gear and shoes that handle wet pavement across about 13 rainy days.
- How many days do you need in Bangkok
- 4 days covers the main Bangkok highlights at a realistic pace. Add 3 extra days if you want the listed day trips.
- Is Bangkok worth visiting in November
- Yes. Bangkok in November: 32.3°C high, 24.5°C low, 50.1mm rain over 13 days, 11.6h daylight. Hot and rainy — afternoon storms, plan indoor afternoons.