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Chiang Rai, Thailand
Chiang Rai

Northern Thailand

Chiang Rai

The surreal White and Blue Temples make a long 12-hour round trip from Chiang Mai; stay one night if you want the Saturday walking street too, and go November to February for clear skies.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 8 Jun 2026

Best as

Day trip from Chiang Mai, or 1 night

From Chiang Mai

~3-3.5h each way by bus or car (185km)

Airport

Chiang Rai (CEI), ~8km from town; direct from Bangkok

Best months

Nov-Feb; avoid Mar-Apr burning season

In short

Chiang Rai at a glance

Chiang Rai is Thailand's far-north temple town, and for most UK travellers it's a day trip from Chiang Mai (about 3 to 3.5 hours each way) built around three surreal man-made sights: the snow-white Wat Rong Khun, the cobalt Blue Temple, and the black-timbered Baan Dam art house. A day trip works if temples are all you want, but it's a long 12-hour round day; if you'd rather see the town, the Saturday walking street and the giant Guan Yin Buddha without the rush, stay one night. Whichever you pick, go in the cool, clear November-to-February window and avoid the March-April burning season, when farm smoke can grey out the whole north.

The short version

  • Most people do Chiang Rai as a day trip from Chiang Mai: ~3 to 3.5 hours each way, so budget a 12-hour door-to-door day.
  • The three signature sights are man-made and recent: the White Temple (฿200 / ~£4.50), the free Blue Temple, and the Black House art museum (฿80 / ~£1.80).
  • These are working temples, so cover shoulders and knees; the White Temple lends sarongs but it's slow at the desk.
  • Stay one night if you want the giant Guan Yin Buddha, the Saturday walking street and a relaxed evening rather than a coach dash.
  • Visit November to February for the cleanest air; March and April bring agricultural burning that hazes over the north and pushes 40°C heat.
  • There's a small airport (CEI) with cheap direct flights from Bangkok if you'd rather skip the road from Chiang Mai entirely.

Chiang Rai sits in Thailand’s far north, about 185km and three-plus hours from Chiang Mai, and almost everyone comes for the same three things: Chalermchai Kositpipat’s blinding-white Wat Rong Khun, the cobalt Blue Temple in town, and the black, bone-strewn art estate of Baan Dam. None of them is ancient — the White Temple was only begun in 1997 and is still being finished — but together they’re like nothing else in the country, which is exactly why the coaches roll in from Chiang Mai every morning. The catch is the distance: a day trip is a 12-hour round, with five or six hours actually on the ground.

That makes Chiang Rai a genuine choice rather than a default. If the temples are all you want, a group tour or the Green Bus does it in a day and you’ll be back in Chiang Mai for dinner. If you’d rather see the town’s clock tower light show, the giant Guan Yin Buddha on the hill, and the Saturday walking street without watching the clock, give it a night. Whichever you pick, the calendar matters more here than almost anywhere: come in the cool, clear November-to-February window and steer clear of the March-April burning season, when farm smoke greys out the whole north.

The structured planning below — the temples and their real baht fees, where to stay if you do stay, how to get in from Chiang Mai or Bangkok, and a realistic budget in pounds — picks up from here. Entry, safety and health facts are covered on the Thailand country guide.

Keep a first trip focused: book the big timed sights, then leave room for neighbourhoods and food.

Top things to do in Chiang Rai

Wat Rong Khun (White Temple)

There's no advance booking and no skip-the-line for Wat Rong Khun — you pay ฿200 (~£4.50) at the gate, and Thai nationals go free, so foreigners queue at the same desk. The trick isn't a ticket type, it's timing: arrive at the 08:00 opening or after about 16:00, because between 10am and 2pm the Chiang Mai day-trip coaches turn the white bridge into a slow shuffle. Allow 45 minutes to an hour, cover your shoulders and knees, and treat it as a living art project begun in 1997 rather than an ancient temple.

45 min £4.50

Blue Temple (Wat Rong Suea Ten)

Almost nobody buys a standalone Blue Temple ticket — Wat Rong Suea Ten is a working temple with free entry (drop a donation), and the thing you actually book is the half-day Chiang Rai tour that pairs it with the White Temple. From Chiang Mai that runs about £27-36 per person including transport; if you're already in Chiang Rai, a Grab or a hired songthaew for the temple loop is the move. Go right at the 07:00 opening or after about 16:00 to dodge the midday coach crush in a small, single-hall temple, and allow 20-40 minutes inside. Cover shoulders and knees: it's a real temple, not a photo set.

20-40 min
No tickets required Read the guide

Where to stay first

The areas that make a first visit easier — not an exhaustive directory.

Clock Tower / town centre

£ value

The compact heart of Chiang Rai, around the golden clock tower (it does a short light-and-music show at 7, 8 and 9pm). Everything's walkable from here: the night bazaar, cafes and the Saturday walking street. The obvious base if you stay over.

Best for: First overnight, walkability, evening markets

Near the night bazaar / bus terminal

£ value

Handy cluster of guesthouses and budget hotels by the main night bazaar and the in-town bus station, so you can drop a bag and walk to dinner. Functional rather than scenic, but the most convenient for an arrive-by-bus, leave-next-morning stop.

Best for: Bus arrivals, one-night stays, value

Browse hotels Town centre

Riverside (Kok River)

££ mid-range

A handful of quieter resorts and boutique stays along the Mae Kok river, north of the bustle. Better for a slower, more comfortable night if you've got your own transport; you'll want a Grab or taxi into town for dinner.

Best for: Comfort, quiet, couples with transport

Browse hotels 10-15 min by car

Airport to city centre

Chiang Rai airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
Green Bus from Chiang Mai (Bus Terminal 3 / Arcade) ~3h20 Express ~฿290 (~£6.60); VIP ~฿400 (~£9) Frequent daily; the standard independent way in
Private car / day tour from Chiang Mai ~3-3.5h each way group tour ~฿1,200-1,600 (~£27-36); private car ~฿2,000-3,000 (~£45-68) Best if you want the temples without logistics
Flight Bangkok to Chiang Rai (CEI) ~1h20 flight from ~£40-55 one-way Skips the Chiang Mai road entirely
Airport (CEI) to town ~15 min taxi/Grab ~฿200-300 (~£4.50-7) Airport is ~8km north of the centre
Pre-book a door-to-door transfer

When to go

Sweet spot: November to February is the clear winner: cool, dry days of about 15-28°C, the cleanest air, and comfortable temple-hopping. This is also the most comfortable stretch of the whole north, so it overlaps with Chiang Mai's best season.

Avoid March and April if you can. That's Northern Thailand's burning season, when farmers clear fields and the smoke can push the air quality well into unhealthy levels and grey out the hills, on top of 35-42°C heat. May to October is the green, wet season with afternoon downpours but far fewer crowds; the temples still look striking against storm skies. Songkran in mid-April is fun but adds heat, crowds and the worst of the haze.

What it costs

There are no UK flights direct to Chiang Rai; you route via Bangkok or Chiang Mai. From Bangkok, budget carriers (Thai AirAsia, Thai Vietjet, Thai Airways) fly to CEI in ~1h20 from roughly £40-55 one-way. Most UK visitors arrive overland from Chiang Mai instead, which costs only the bus or tour fare below.

Daily budget per person

White Temple entry ฿200 (~£4.50)
Blue Temple entry Free (donation)
Black House entry ฿80 (~£1.80)
Green Bus from Chiang Mai (Express) ~฿290 (~£6.60)
Group day tour from Chiang Mai ~£27-36
Sample trip: A no-frills Chiang Rai day trip from Chiang Mai runs roughly £30-45 per person: a group temple tour around £27-36 including transport and lunch, plus the ฿200 White Temple fee and a few hundred baht for drinks and the Black House. Doing it independently by Green Bus and Grab is cheaper on paper (~£15-20 of transport) but eats more of the day. A one-night stay adds maybe £20-50 for a central guesthouse or boutique room.

All baht figures use £1 ≈ ฿44 (June 2026). The temples are cheap; what costs you is the road time from Chiang Mai. Carry cash, the White Temple and most stalls don't take cards, and an ATM here charges the same flat ฿220 (~£5) foreign-card fee as the rest of Thailand.

Book the essentials

Where to stay

Browse staysvia Booking.com

Tours & tickets

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Airport transfers

Pre-book a transfervia Welcome Pickups

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Also in Thailand

See the full Thailand guide

Chiang Rai FAQs

Is Chiang Rai worth visiting, or is it just the White Temple?
It's worth a visit for the temples, but be honest about why you're going. The White Temple, Blue Temple and Black House are genuinely unusual and photogenic, and that's what most people come for. If you want more, the giant Guan Yin Buddha, a relaxed Saturday walking street and the surrounding tea hills justify an overnight. If you only want the headline temples, a day trip from Chiang Mai does the job.
Should I do Chiang Rai as a day trip from Chiang Mai or stay overnight?
A day trip works if temples are all you're after, but it's a long day: about 3 to 3.5 hours each way means roughly 12 hours door-to-door for 5-6 hours on the ground. Stay one night if you want to see the town itself, the Big Buddha and the evening markets without rushing, or if you're prone to coach fatigue. Either way, go in the cool, clear November-to-February months.
How do I get from Chiang Mai to Chiang Rai?
The simplest independent option is the Green Bus from Chiang Mai's Bus Terminal 3 (Arcade), about 3h20 for roughly ฿290 Express or ฿400 VIP (~£6.60-9). A group day tour (~£27-36) or private car (~฿2,000-3,000) handles the driving and loops the temples for you. If you'd rather skip the road, there are cheap ~1h20 flights from Bangkok into Chiang Rai's airport (CEI).
What should I wear to the White Temple?
It's an active Buddhist temple, so cover your shoulders and knees: no vests, short shorts or short skirts. The White Temple has sarongs to borrow if you turn up under-dressed, but the desk gets slow at busy times, so it's easier to arrive covered up. The same dress code applies at the Blue Temple and Big Buddha.
When is the worst time to visit Chiang Rai?
March and April. That's the agricultural burning season across the north, when smoke haze can settle over the hills and push air quality into unhealthy territory, all in 35-42°C heat. The cool, dry November-to-February window has the cleanest air and the most comfortable temperatures for temple-hopping.

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