Where to stay in Chiang Mai
Stay inside the walkable Old City moat for temples, choose Nimman for cafes and nightlife, the Ping riverside for a quiet pool, or Santitham for value.
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In short
Where to stay in Chiang Mai
For a first Chiang Mai trip, stay inside the Old City moat unless you have a clear reason not to. Almost every temple is a flat 15-minute walk away, the Sunday Walking Street runs through it and every tour van picks up here, so you barely need Grab. Choose Nimmanhaemin if cafes, coworking and a younger evening matter more than Lanna atmosphere, the Ping riverside if you want a pool and quiet over walkability, and Santitham if value across a longer stay is the point.
The short version
- Best all-rounder: inside the Old City moat.
- Best value: Santitham.
- Best atmosphere for cafes and nightlife: Nimmanhaemin (Nimman).
- Best for families and a quiet pool: the Ping riverside.
- Avoid basing yourself around the year-round Night Bazaar just because it sounds central; it is a shopping strip, not a sleeping strategy.
Best areas to book
Old City (inside the moat)
ยฃยฃ mid-rangeThe moat-ringed square is the cleanest first-timer base: Wat Chedi Luang, Wat Phra Singh and Wat Chiang Man are all within a 15-minute walk, and the Sunday Walking Street fills Ratchadamnoen Road right through it. The real trade-off is noise and crowds on Sunday night, when the whole grid clogs; pick a guesthouse a couple of sois off Ratchadamnoen rather than on it, and aim for the quieter Tha Phae or Wat Phra Singh corners over the backpacker-dense Loi Kroh end.
Best for: First-timers, temple-walkers, no-Grab stays
Nimmanhaemin (Nimman)
ยฃยฃ mid-rangeThe stylish strip just west of the moat by Chiang Mai University: speciality coffee, the One Nimman plaza, rooftop bars and the city's strongest coworking and digital-nomad scene. It suits a younger evening and fast wifi over Lanna texture, and it is a 10-minute Grab from the temples. The trade-off is that it is the priciest part of town for what you get and the soi traffic and bar noise run late, so ask for a room set back from Nimmanhaemin Road itself.
Best for: Cafe culture, coworking, younger travellers
Ping Riverside (Charoenrat / Wat Gate, east bank)
ยฃยฃยฃ premiumColonial-style resorts and pool hotels line the Ping along Charoen Prathet and Charoenrat roads, with riverside restaurants and the Saturday Night Market at Wat Gate nearby. It is the family and slow-travel pick: you wake to birdsong rather than motorbikes, and the better hotels here have proper gardens and pools the Old City guesthouses can't fit. The catch is that you rely on Grab for the temples and walking streets, so it is wrong if you want to walk everywhere.
Best for: Families, couples, quieter stays with a pool
Santitham
ยฃ valueA workaday local quarter wedged between the moat's north-west corner and Nimman: cheap rooms, dense local food stalls along Santitham market and far fewer tourists than the strip it borders. It is the value pick for longer or repeat stays, putting you a short walk from Nimman's cafes and a 10-minute Grab from the temples for a fraction of Nimman's rates. Accept a less polished base and the odd unlovely street and your nightly spend drops noticeably.
Best for: Value, longer stays, a local feel
Wat Ket (east bank, around Wat Ket Karam)
ยฃยฃ mid-rangeThe quiet heritage lane on the Ping's east bank just over Nawarat Bridge: low-rise guesthouses, a couple of riverside cafes and a genuinely residential feel a 12-minute walk from Tha Phae Gate. It suits travellers who want calm and a sense of old neighbourhood without paying riverside-resort rates. The trade-off is thin dinner options after dark right on the lane, so you'll cross the bridge or order a Grab for variety.
Best for: Quiet, heritage feel, second-time visitors
The simple choice
If you are booking in a hurry, filter for the Old City inside the moat first, then compare Santitham if Old City prices look high for the dates. That single rule keeps most first-timers out of the two common traps: paying Nimman or riverside-resort rates when you mainly want temples, or basing around the Night Bazaar and discovering it is a traffic-heavy shopping strip rather than a place to sleep. Only step outside the moat when you have a specific reason โ cafes and coworking point to Nimman, a pool and quiet point to the Ping.
Compare Old City hotelsSafety and noise
Thailand is broadly safe for tourists, and Chiang Mai is calmer than Bangkok or the islands; GOV.UK's main flags here are petty theft and the very high road-accident rate rather than violent crime. For where you sleep, that mostly means noise: a room a couple of sois off Ratchadamnoen in the Old City, or set back from Nimmanhaemin Road, beats one on the main drag, especially on Sunday-market night or if you've arrived jet-lagged off a long-haul connection. The bigger safety call is transport, not the neighbourhood โ resist booking somewhere remote that nudges you onto a rented scooter, given Thailand's road record.
Budget vs splurge
Chiang Mai is one of the best-value cities in Thailand, so the gap between bases is small in pound terms. A clean Santitham or Old City guesthouse runs from roughly ยฃ12-ยฃ25 a night, a smart Nimman boutique or teak Old City hotel ยฃ35-ยฃ70, and a riverside pool resort on the Ping ยฃ80-ยฃ160. The honest splurge is the Ping riverside, where the extra buys you a garden and a pool you'll actually use in the heat; the honest saving is Santitham, a few minutes' walk from the same Nimman cafes at a fraction of the rate.
Prices use ยฃ1 โ เธฟ44 (June 2026) and shift with the November-February high season โ book the cool, clear months well ahead.
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