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Wat Arun, Thailand
Wat Arun

Bangkok

Wat Arun

How to visit Bangkok's Wat Arun: the cross-river ferry from Wat Pho, when to go for the light, the dress code that gets people turned away, and whether the Temple of Dawn is worth the ฿200.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 9 Jun 2026

Where

Bangkok, Thailand

Opening hours

Daily 08:00–18:00, last entry around 17:30. Confirm before you go, as Buddhist holidays can shorten hours.

Tickets

฿200 (about £4.50) for foreign visitors; free for Thai nationals. A sarong to cover up is free to borrow at the gate.

Time needed

About an hour inside the grounds; add the few-minute ferry each way, and longer if you stay across the river for sunset.

In short

Visiting Wat Arun

Wat Arun's draw is the 70m porcelain-studded central prang, best seen two ways: up close from inside the grounds (฿200 for foreign visitors), and as a silhouette from the opposite east bank at sunset, which is free. Pair it with Wat Pho across the river — the Tha Tien cross-river ferry is about ฿5 (฿7 since an April 2026 fare rise) and takes a few minutes. Cover shoulders and knees or you'll be sent to the sarong stall before they let you in.

How to get there, and the dress code that catches people out

Wat Arun sits on the west bank of the Chao Phraya, directly opposite Wat Pho and the Grand Palace. The simplest approach is also the best: finish at Wat Pho, walk three minutes to Tha Tien pier, and take the cross-river ferry — about ฿5 (raised to ฿7 in an April 2026 fare update), a few minutes’ crossing, which lands you almost at the temple gate. Pay cash at the pier desk before you board. The spires growing as you cross the water is the entrance most people remember.

Entry is ฿200 for foreign visitors (Thai nationals go free), paid at the gate — there’s nothing to book ahead and rarely a real queue. The catch is the dress code: shoulders and knees covered, for men and women, no vests or shorts. It’s checked at the entrance, and underdressed visitors get sent to borrow a sarong before they’re let in. Turn up already covered and you walk straight through.

When to go, what you can climb, and is it worth it?

Two facts shape the timing. First, the upper steps of the 70m central prang have been roped off in recent years for safety — you can still climb the lower terraces for the river view and a close look at the broken-porcelain mosaic that covers the whole tower, but not to the top. Second, the temple’s best face is its silhouette. Go early (from 08:00) to walk the grounds in cooler air with fewer people, then for the real payoff cross back to the east bank near Tha Tien at dusk and watch the prang light up over the water — that view is free and the best in central Bangkok. Allow about an hour inside, plus the ferry each way.

Worth it, and it gives you two sights for one ฿200 ticket. Pair it with Wat Pho (the reclining Buddha) on the same morning since they share the ferry, and save the floodlit river view for the evening rather than trying to do everything in the midday heat.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Bangkok city guide.

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Wat Arun FAQs

How much is the entrance fee for Wat Arun?
It is ฿200 per person for foreign visitors (around £4.50), paid at the gate; Thai nationals enter free. There is no need to book ahead — you buy on arrival and there is rarely a real queue.
Can you climb the central prang at Wat Arun?
Not to the top. The steepest upper steps of the main prang have been roped off in recent years for safety, but you can still climb to the lower terraces for the Chao Phraya river views and a close look at the broken-porcelain mosaic.
What is the dress code for Wat Arun?
Shoulders and knees must be covered for everyone, men and women — no vests, shorts or short skirts. It is enforced at the entrance; if you arrive underdressed they hand you a sarong to borrow, but it is quicker to turn up already covered.
Is Wat Arun worth visiting?
Yes, and it works two ways for the price of one. Pay the ฿200 to walk the grounds and climb the lower terraces, then cross back to the east bank near Wat Pho at dusk to watch the prang light up over the river — the best free view in central Bangkok.

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