Bangkok
Grand Palace
How to visit Bangkok's Grand Palace and Wat Phra Kaew: the 500-baht ticket, the dress code enforced at the gate, what time to arrive, and an honest verdict on the most crowded sight in the city.
Where
Bangkok, Thailand
Opening hours
Daily 08:30–16:30, with the last tickets sold at 15:30. It rarely closes for royal ceremonies, but check royalgrandpalace.th the day before if your trip is tight.
Tickets
500 baht (about £11.40) for foreign visitors, covering Wat Phra Kaew and the Queen Sirikit Museum of Textiles. Children under 120cm free; Thai nationals free with ID. Optional audio guide 200 baht (about £4.50). If you're underdressed, the cover-up is a refundable deposit of roughly 200–300 baht (about £4.50–£7) that you get back on returning it, not a charge.
Time needed
1.5–2 hours for Wat Phra Kaew, the Emerald Buddha and the palace courtyards. Go earlier rather than longer — the open courtyards are brutal in midday heat.
In short
Visiting Grand Palace
Buy the 500-baht (about £11.40) foreigner ticket at the gate — it covers Wat Phra Kaew and the Emerald Buddha plus the Queen Sirikit Museum of Textiles, and there's no advance booking to worry about. The thing that actually catches people out is the dress code: cover shoulders and knees or you're sent to the loan counter for a cover-up against a refundable deposit of roughly 200–300 baht (you get it back when you return the garment). Arrive at the 08:30 opening to beat the heat and the tour-group wall, allow 1.5–2 hours, and don't fall for the 'palace is closed today' tuk-tuk scam outside.
How to visit without getting turned away at the gate
The Grand Palace is the former royal residence and, inside its walls, Wat Phra Kaew — the Temple of the Emerald Buddha, the most sacred Buddhist site in Thailand. You buy a single 500-baht ticket (about £11.40) at the gate; there’s no advance booking and no timed-entry slots, so the planning is genuinely simple. That ticket also covers the Queen Sirikit Museum of Textiles in the same compound, and an audio guide is an optional 200 baht (about £4.50).
The thing that actually catches people out is the dress code, and it’s enforced at the entrance, not waved through. Shoulders and knees must be covered: no shorts, no sleeveless or see-through tops, no ripped jeans, no leggings worn as trousers. Turn up underdressed and you’re sent to the loan counter for a sarong or trousers against a refundable deposit of roughly 200–300 baht (about £4.50–£7) — you get it back when you return the garment, so it costs you a queue and ten minutes, not the money. Wear loose long trousers and a sleeved top from the hotel and you walk straight in.
One more local trick to ignore: tuk-tuk and well-dressed “guides” loitering near the gate who tell you the palace is closed today — a public holiday, a special ceremony — and offer to take you somewhere better. It’s a scam to route you to gem shops and tailors. The palace is open daily 08:30–16:30; walk past them to the official ticket windows.
When to arrive — and the honest take
Arrive at the 08:30 opening. The courtyards are open and unshaded, Bangkok’s heat builds fast, and the tour groups land mid-morning and don’t let up — getting there first buys you cooler air and clearer photos of the mosaic-covered chedis before the crush. Last tickets sell at 15:30, but the afternoon is the worst of both heat and crowds. Allow an hour and a half to two hours inside.
See it once, and treat it as the formal, busy showpiece it is rather than a quiet temple. Wat Phra Kaew’s gold-and-mirror-glass surfaces and the small jade Emerald Buddha high on its altar are worth the trip, but you won’t have a contemplative moment in there. The smart move is to pair it with Wat Pho — home of the giant Reclining Buddha, ten minutes’ walk south and far calmer — and do both in one cooler morning rather than spreading temples across a hot afternoon.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Bangkok city guide.
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