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Old City temples (Wat Chedi Luang, Wat Phra Singh, Wat Chiang Man), Thailand
Old City temples (Wat Chedi Luang, Wat Phra Singh, Wat Chiang Man)

Northern Thailand

Old City temples (Wat Chedi Luang, Wat Phra Singh, Wat Chiang Man)

More than thirty temples inside Chiang Mai's walled old town — the earthquake-cracked ruin of Wat Chedi Luang, the revered Wat Phra Singh and the oldest, Wat Chiang Man — all walkable in a morning.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 17 Jun 2026

Where

Chiang Mai, Thailand

Opening hours

Most temples open early morning to around 17:00–18:00 daily, with the main viharns sometimes closing for ceremonies; come early for cool air and quiet courtyards. Hours vary slightly by temple and can change for Buddhist holidays. Confirm current hours and prices on the official site.

Tickets

Free — many of the old-city temples ask no entry fee at all, while a few of the larger ones (such as Wat Chedi Luang and Wat Phra Singh) charge a small amount, roughly £0.50–£1 (about ฿20–฿50). Carry a little cash for these and for donations.

Time needed

Allow a half-day morning, roughly 3 to 4 hours, to walk between the three main temples and dip into a few smaller ones on the way.

In short

Visiting Old City temples (Wat Chedi Luang, Wat Phra Singh, Wat Chiang Man)

Chiang Mai's walled old town holds more than thirty temples in a grid you can walk in a single morning. Wat Chedi Luang's earthquake-cracked brick ruin is the standout, Wat Phra Singh the most revered and Wat Chiang Man the oldest. Most are free or charge a token amount, and modest dress is expected at all of them.

A morning inside the walls

Chiang Mai’s old town is a near-perfect square ringed by a moat and the remains of its red-brick walls, and packed into that grid are more than thirty temples — enough that you can simply walk and let the spires pull you from one courtyard to the next. The honest way to do it is on foot in a single morning, starting early while the air is cool and the courtyards are quiet, before the heat and the tour groups arrive.

Three are worth building the walk around. Wat Chedi Luang is the standout: a colossal brick chedi, partly brought down by a sixteenth-century earthquake and left in its broken grandeur, looming over the compound. Wat Phra Singh is the most revered and the grandest, gold-trimmed and busy with worshippers and monks. Wat Chiang Man is the city’s oldest, smaller and calmer, with its elephant-buttressed chedi tucked in the northern corner. They sit within about a kilometre of each other, so stringing them together is straightforward.

Cost, dress and doing it right

The money side is gentle. Many old-city temples charge nothing at all, and the larger ones — Chedi Luang and Phra Singh among them — ask only a small fee, roughly £0.50 to £1 (about ฿20–฿50). Carry a little cash for these and for a donation box if you wish, and you are set for the morning.

Dress is the thing to get right. Cover your shoulders and knees, skip vests and short shorts, and be ready to slip your shoes off before entering the prayer halls. A light scarf or sarong does the job and packs small; a few temples lend wraps at the door, but do not count on it. These are working places of worship, so keep your voice down, do not point your feet at Buddha images, and step aside for monks.

Allow three to four hours, weave in a couple of the smaller temples you pass, and break for an iced coffee when the heat builds — the old town is dense with cafes, and pacing it slowly is the point.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Chiang Mai city guide.

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Old City temples (Wat Chedi Luang, Wat Phra Singh, Wat Chiang Man) FAQs

What should I wear to the temples?
Cover your shoulders and knees — no vests, short shorts or short skirts — and be ready to remove your shoes before entering the main prayer halls. A light scarf or sarong is useful to throw over bare shoulders, and a few temples keep wraps at the door. Dress modestly and you will be welcome everywhere; turn up in beachwear and you may be turned away from the viharns.
Which of the three is the must-see?
Wat Chedi Luang for most people — its huge brick chedi, partly toppled by a sixteenth-century earthquake, is the most dramatic structure in the old town. Wat Phra Singh is the grandest and most revered, busy with worshippers, and Wat Chiang Man is the city's oldest and quietest. If time is short, pair Chedi Luang with whichever of the other two is nearest your route.
Can I walk between them?
Easily. All three sit inside the moated old-city grid within about a kilometre of each other, and the streets between are flat and lined with smaller temples, cafes and guesthouses. A morning on foot is the natural way to see them; go early to beat the midday heat, and duck into a cafe when you flag.