Central Thailand
Wat Mahathat
Home to the sandstone Buddha head wrapped in banyan roots, the one image everyone comes to Ayutthaya for. Arrive at opening, before the Bangkok coaches turn it into a photo queue.
Where
Ayutthaya, Thailand
Opening hours
Typically open daily from early morning to around early evening (roughly 08:00 to 18:00), with some areas lit at night. Confirm current hours and prices on the official site.
Tickets
A modest entry fee of around 50 baht (roughly ยฃ1.20), or covered by the Ayutthaya Historical Park combo ticket that bundles several temples. Hedge to current official pricing.
Time needed
About 45 minutes to an hour to see the Buddha head and walk the ruins; longer if you're temple-hopping the park.
In short
Visiting Wat Mahathat
Home to the sandstone Buddha head wrapped in banyan roots, the single image everyone comes to Ayutthaya for. The wider ruin of brick prangs and headless Buddhas is worth a slow wander too. Arrive at opening before the Bangkok coaches; by mid-morning you queue to photograph the head.
The head in the tree
Almost everyone comes to Wat Mahathat for one thing: a serene sandstone Buddha head cradled in the roots of a banyan tree, sitting at ground level where the tree slowly grew around it over centuries. Itโs a small, quiet, genuinely moving image, and itโs the photo that defines Ayutthaya. Thereโs a sign asking visitors to crouch down so their head is no higher than the Buddhaโs when posing for a picture โ itโs a point of respect, and staff will gently remind anyone who forgets.
Donโt let the head be the whole visit, though. The wider ruin is one of Ayutthayaโs most atmospheric: rows of headless seated Buddhas in saffron sashes, toppled brick prangs and the stumps of a once-great temple complex razed when the old Siamese capital fell. Entry is cheap โ around 50 baht at the gate โ or itโs folded into the Ayutthaya combo ticket that covers several temples, which pays off the moment you visit more than a couple. Hours run roughly early morning to early evening; check current times before relying on them.
Beating the coaches
The single best piece of advice is to arrive at opening, around 8am. The Buddha head is small, thereโs only one good vantage on it, and the day-trip coaches from Bangkok roll in mid-morning. Once they do, you join a polite but real queue just to get a clear photo, and the open brickwork bakes as the sun climbs. Come at the gates and you get cool air, golden early light and the ruins close to empty โ the difference between a contemplative half-hour and a shuffling scrum.
Is it worth it? Yes, easily. For barely the price of a coffee you get the tripโs signature image and a haunting set of ruins, and Ayutthaya is an easy day or overnight from Bangkok. Just treat the timing as non-negotiable: this is a place that rewards the early riser and punishes the late starter.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Ayutthaya city guide.
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