Best Thai restaurants in KL

The city's best places for Thai food

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Warm up with spicy soups, deep-fried meats and creamy curries at the city’s best Thai restaurants.

  • Thai
  • Kota Damansara
The best Thai restaurant in KL by a mile, Erawan has been receiving consistent critical acclaim for as long as the five years it’s been operating. The mastermind behind the restaurant’s success is Thailand-hailed Chef Korn, who works in the kitchen to produce fit-for-a-king food made from carefully sourced ingredients. As much as it’s a joy to sit down to extravagantly presented dishes like the love letter salad (grilled river prawn salad with a dressing of lime, tamarind and kaffir lime juices) and Alaskan king crab in red curry, it’s inspiring to watch Chef Korn prep and present his food with unrelenting precision. Coconut milk is strained from scratch, tom yam is prepared upon individual orders, seasoning is balanced to pitch perfection while vegetables are carved and contoured into intricate flower petals. If the Michelin inspectors ever visited KL, we’d gladly point them in the direction of Erawan.
  • Thai
  • Damansara
Straying slightly from authentic home-style Thai food, Kompassion is a great bet for when you feel a little adventurous. While safer Chiang Rai-style classics like phanaeng curry with pork loin and hang lay curry with pork belly make appearances, we like Kompassion best for its modern iterations like pork satay with kimchi, pork belly with soft-shell crab, cod with chilli, wasabi and lime, and avocado and bean sprout salad. The Thai iced coffee is a blast of cool creaminess at the end of an always exhilarating meal.
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  • Thai
  • Seksyen 17

Formerly known as Lai Thai, Kedai Makanan Frame Thai can no longer be considered PJ’s best-kept secret – this bustling mini mart-restaurant has now emerged as one of the go-to places in town for Thai street food. Although the shop’s dreary ambience is not particularly enticing, Lai Thai has steadily won over new fans by serving immensely satisfying pork dishes (definitely go for the braised pork leg and the punchy stir-fried minced pork with basil) as well as selling packaged goods and condiments from Thailand.

  • Thai
  • Petaling Jaya
The freshest face to join the city’s nascent legion of porcine-friendly Thai restaurants is Thai Camp, which opened to glowing reviews in January 2014. The cosy Taman Paramount establishment is renowned for its stir-fried roasted pork with red curry and Thai coconut milk chicken soup among other belly-warming dishes.
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  • Thai
  • Petaling Jaya
PJ’s grand dame of Thai cuisine has been around for over 30 years, and with good reason. This unassuming neighbourhood eatery is rich with affordable Thai offerings, including the onion-heavy kerabu salad with boneless chicken feet and Thai asam curry prawn.
  • Thai

Napa, the new kid on a block off Sri Hartamas, specialises in long-lost Thai delicacies but doesn’t skimp on all the more familiar flavours, either. Start with the yum cha om goong kai mod dang, a salad of ant eggs (!) and shrimp, served with crispy acacia in a spicy lime dressing. Some standouts include char-grilled Australian Angus beef strip loin with homemade panang curry; pan-fried squid egg with spicy coriander lime sauce and mint leaves; and slow-cooked marinated lamb shank in a sweet and sour sauce, all best paired with a frosty glass of Singha beer. 

If you’re in the mood for classics (but elevated), go for deep-fried stuffed chicken wings, Surat Thani crab fried rice, and end on a sweet note with a do-it-yourself dessert: crispy pancakes with egg yolk angel hair, Thai meringue, sesame and shredded savory coconut.

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  • Thai

Greetings from the most interesting Thai restaurant you might’ve never heard of: The SIAM Thai Cuisine, located within M City, delivers a one-two punch with accomplished cooking and drama, drama, drama. Chef Narut — whose culinary experience includes two years at R.HAAN, a renowned two Michelin-starred restaurant in Bangkok — along with Aunty Nita and their team of seven Thai chefs have a hit on their hands with the tomyum syphon, a one-of-a-kind, theatrical dish of tomyum flame-torched and served in a syphon, filled with aromatics and herbs. 


Also don’t miss: the signature steamed fish with chili, lime and garlic; kai look kei, an authentic Thai dish featuring soft-boiled eggs fried and servied in a sweet and savoury sauce; and pad thai, prettily encased in an egg net (the traditional way) and served with fresh prawns, chili flakes and peanuts.

  • Thai

It’s easy to wonder if the Michelin Guide-awarded Bangkok outpost is worth the parking fee at Pavilion Kuala Lumpur. We’re here to tell you our answer is yes, because this is not your ordinary phad thai, even if the stylings do lean street. Order the phad thai kung mae nam yang, the signature rice noodles stir-fried with eggs, tofu, and a secret 18-ingredient sauce, served with bean sprouts, lime wedges, and grilled blue river prawns. If you’re not keen on seafood, there are chicken, beef, and even vegetarian variants.


While you’re there, sample the miang khana (meaning “many bites”), the do-it-yourself salad wraps of young kale leaves served with mixed chicken crackling, onions, peanuts, salty-sweet shrimp paste sauce, and other toppings.

Guide to Thai food
Guide to Thai food
Learn the intricacies of Thai food by region, as advised by Chef Korn of Erawan Classic Thai & Fusion.
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