Kaweewat arrived in Bangkok by way of Thailand’s south, trading sea breeze for city haze. At Time Out, he writes with a sideways smile and a sense of observation, often drawn to the strange beauty of people, film and the sounds that stitch a day together – from bubblegum pop to minimal techno. No coherence, still works. When asked how he survives the modern condition, just a shrug “Caffeine and Beam Me Up by Midnight Magic,” he says, like it’s the most obvious answer in the world.

Kaweewat Siwanartwong

Kaweewat Siwanartwong

Staff writer, Time Out Thailand

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Articles (89)

Must see Bangkok Design Week highlights

Must see Bangkok Design Week highlights

When you think of the citywide festivals that get locals excited, Bangkok Design Week should be in your top three. This year it returns with the theme DESIGN S/O/S, inviting everyone to switch on creative mode, unleash their wildest survival ideas and make them happen in reality, whoever you are. The concept imagines a world where uncertainty strikes every day. Here, design isn't just about creating beautiful things but becomes a tool for questioning society: the way we live our lives, cope with change and imagine the future of cities and people. The event wraps up this weekend, so time is running out. This year, Time Out went wandering along the routes of design events scattered around the city, exploring where design is working and who it's working with. We've picked out nine design highlights from BKKDW2026 that we reckon aren't just there to look pretty. These projects are clearly answering the same question as us: how can design actually help to ‘do/give/survive’? What events should you check out? Let's get stuck in.
The best things to do in Bangkok this weekend (February 5-8)

The best things to do in Bangkok this weekend (February 5-8)

February turns up like an old friend who knows the drill. Truth is, some of the city's best events and happenings pile back into Bangkok's cultural calendar around now. The first weekend sets the tone, with Bangkok Design Week leading the charge. Its 2026 theme, DESIGN S/O/S, drops the grand speeches and asks for work that actually holds. Ideas circle around domestic resilience, outward-looking collaboration and futures that last beyond a season.  Elsewhere, Human Resource Center quietly unsettles office logic, asking visitors to choose between ambition and release, while 8+1 Circuit of Stories reopens New World Mall as a keeper of memory, threading Banglamphu and Khaosan through voices and objects that refuse polish. Music shifts gears too. The National Molam Project strips Paradise Bangkok back to acoustic form, letting Isan roots speak plainly without amplification. As evening settles, Sahamongkol Film's outdoor cinema turns Kasetsart University into a shared living room. Mats spread, snacks circulate and films play without ceremony. Nearby, Open Airwaves invites anyone curious about sound to record, experiment or simply listen, building a living archive of the city through small, honest moments. Taken together, the month feels less about spectacle and more about presence. So don't just waste your month scrolling through the same old feeds. Get out there and see what the city's actually saying. Get ahead of the game and start planning your month with our list of the top th
Art exhibitions in Bangkok this February

Art exhibitions in Bangkok this February

February always shows Bangkok at its most performative. Bangkok Design Week rolls through town, collectors sharpen their opinions, gallerists rehearse enthusiasm and suddenly everyone is very busy being seen. It's loud in the cultural sense but also oddly useful. This is the moment to take stock and plan how the year might look beyond opening night chatter. Across the city, sculpture rubs shoulders with glossy photography while big exhibitions compete with smaller spaces quietly doing the most interesting work. Some shows lean on spectacle, others on ideas that take a while to land. Together, they sketch a scene that feels ambitious, occasionally overwhelming and far more varied than it gets credit for. From niche project rooms to stubbornly experimental galleries and museums built for crowds, Bangkok is stacked with work that provokes, comforts, confuses and sometimes does all three at once. Not everything deserves equal attention though. If time and energy are limited, a little guidance helps. So start here. These are the exhibitions worth stepping out for right now, with updates dropping weekly as the city keeps moving. Consider this a gentle nudge rather than a rulebook. Grab a pen, mark your calendar and let the rest of February sort itself out. Stay one step ahead and map out your plans with our round-up of the best things to do in Bangkok.   Get ahead of the game and start planning your month with our list of top things to do this February. Whether you're a regular gal
The Big Mango glimpses Jesper Haynes’ Big Apple decade

The Big Mango glimpses Jesper Haynes’ Big Apple decade

New York has been photographed to death. Every alley mythologised, every night flattened into attitude. What Jesper Haynes offers instead is something quieter and more unsettling: a record of being there without rehearsing what it might later become. New York Darkroom, his recent exhibition in Bangkok, looks back at downtown New York in the late ’80s and ’90s without soft focus or hero worship. Faces are close. Streets feel narrow. Nothing performs for the camera. Photograph: Jesper Haynes Speaking to Haynes, what becomes clear is that this work is not about legacy. It is about attention. About what happens when you show up night after night, shoot one frame instead of ten and trust that whatever remains will explain itself later. His photographs, featuring figures such as Andy Warhol, Willem Dafoe and John Lurie alongside friends, lovers and strangers, feel less like cultural artefacts than private evidence. Proof that something happened. Proof that he was there. This is not nostalgia. It is memory with its elbows out. Before New York became a story When I ask Haynes whether the New York he photographed felt historic at the time, he doesn’t pause. ‘Simply immediate,’ he says. No sense of witnessing a future legend. No awareness of living inside a reference point. Just now. That matters. The photographs in New York Darkroom don’t announce themselves as documents of an era. They are too absorbed in the moment for that. Haynes arrived in New York as a teenager after Andy Warh
The best things to do in Bangkok this February

The best things to do in Bangkok this February

January drags its feet like it has nowhere else to be, while February slips past almost apologetically. After the detoxes, dry weeks and financial self-discipline that open the year, Bangkok responds with a calendar that refuses restraint. The city seems to exhale all at once, stacking romance, release and late nights into four compact weeks.   Music does much of the heavy lifting. Givēon Live in Bangkok lands as the month's emotional centre, all velvet heartbreak and cinematic restraint. His baritone carries regret with a strange tenderness, backed by a full band built for drama rather than efficiency. Elsewhere, RomRom and Transport offer their own kind of therapy, sweaty and communal, with lineups that prioritise feeling over neatness. The Modern Sound from Isan shifts the mood again, letting regional rhythms take over bodies before anyone has time to overthink.   Cinema plays its part too. Skyline Film turns rooftops into temporary confessionals for lovers, friends and solo romantics, while Japan Expo reminds the city how easily pop culture, food and fandom blur together when given enough space. February doesn't ask for grand plans. It just suggests showing up, staying out a little longer and letting the month do what it does best. Stay one step ahead and map out your plans with our round-up of the best things to do in Bangkok.
10 Muay Thai gyms across 10 Bangkok districts

10 Muay Thai gyms across 10 Bangkok districts

Muay Thai is both a sport and a martial art that's been woven into Thai society for centuries, from the Sukhothai, Ayutthaya and Thonburi periods right through to Rattanakosin. Even though the world spins faster every day and plenty of things have changed, Muay Thai still stands as an important national identity. At the same time, it's never stood still but has adapted and evolved with the times. Culture from outside has gradually blended naturally with Thai roots. The result is Muay Thai that's gone beyond being a fighting art in the ring, expanding into dimensions of branding, lifestyle and contemporary creativity, reflecting how the sport has evolved in the big city context and its role on the world stage today. Before Muay Thai went global, it began with bare hands, kad chueak wrapped with raw thread. Fighters wore prajieds on their left and right arms, mongkol on the head, short pants, no shirt and bare feet. Meanwhile, the referee in purple cloth and royal sash stood supervising the game. The atmosphere was thus not unlike a ritual awakening the fighter's spirit before the bell rang. Photograph: Muay Siam Magazine Today, Muay Thai might live in a gym next to the BTS, with classes after work and gloves instead of kad chueak. But its true essence hasn't disappeared. Anyone who's truly trained knows that every punch, every elbow, still connects to the original roots of this fighting art. Muay Thai from each region has a different signature. The North emphasises footwork,
Bangkok’s alphabet of frustration, affection and survival

Bangkok’s alphabet of frustration, affection and survival

Coming back to poke Bangkok where it already aches is perhaps not how most creative projects like to announce themselves. Yet that is precisely how Bangkok Pains feels when it returns, slightly smug, knowingly sharp and irritatingly accurate. Invisible Ink, the Creative Agency behind last year’s Bangkok Pains board game, is back with another affectionate assault: Bangkok Pains – The Alphabet Poster. It scratches the same itch as its predecessor, the kind that only appears after years of living here, when affection and exhaustion start sharing the same sentence. This time the medium is deceptively gentle. A Kor Kai to Hor Nok Hook alphabet practice sheet, the kind that once hovered above childhood desks, learning corners and dusty classroom walls. The familiar cadence of Thai consonants is still there, but the meaning has been quietly rerouted. Gor Gai has left the coop. Hor Nok Hook has flown off somewhere quieter. In their place come readings written by the city itself, spelling out daily irritations with the precision of someone who has been stuck at Asoke junction long enough to observe everything else happening around them. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Invisible Ink (@invisibleink.asia) I approach the poster with the particular defensiveness of someone who has lived in Bangkok long enough to recognise themselves in the joke. Some letters make me laugh out loud. Others make me stare for a moment longer than expected. It is
Seven Bangkok art exhibitions to see before January ends

Seven Bangkok art exhibitions to see before January ends

New Year, new art exhibition to look forward to. More art, better conversations and plenty of afternoons that'll start with good intentions and end with you wandering around galleries instead of dealing with your inbox. The city shifts between tiny spaces hidden down side streets, experimental rooms that push you a bit and museums that aren't shy about showing off. Each one gives you a different reason to stick around, ask questions or just stare at something for longer than you meant to. Some exhibitions demand your full attention. Others plant ideas that only land properly later when you're on the BTS heading home. Together they make a cultural landscape that feels restless and generous, never happy with just one way of looking at things. We've pulled together seven exhibitions worth knowing about right now. If your diary's packed but your curiosity's louder, these are the shows worth shuffling things around for.   Stay one step ahead and map out your plans with our round-up of the best things to do in Bangkok.   Get ahead of the game and start planning your month with our list of top things to do this January. Whether you're a regular gallery-goer or just art-curious, these are Bangkok’s best spots to live the art life. From alleyway masterpieces to paint-splashed corners you might walk past without noticing, here are our top spots to see street art.
Bangkok’s top 16 concerts of 2026

Bangkok’s top 16 concerts of 2026

So 2025 was pretty huge for live music in Bangkok, wasn't it? We had Doja Cat, BLACKPINK, TV Girl, The Smashing Pumpkins and Tyler, The Creator all gracing stages across the city. Not a bad lineup.   The good news? 2026 is looking just as packed. Alright, Oasis might not be on the cards just yet, but there's still a serious roster of artists lined up to play Bangkok stadiums and arenas over the coming months. And rumour has it even more big names are yet to announce tours like BTS.   Givēon, Central Cee, Taeyong, Kraftwerk... the list goes on. Whether you're into R&B, grime, K-pop or electronic legends, there's something coming your way. Here are the best major gigs heading to the capital this year.   RECOMMENDED: Confirmed: Tomorrowland Thailand officially debuts on December 11-13 After 12 years, Studio Lam is closing with an epic 49-night farewell party
Three reading events this January

Three reading events this January

No matter what time of year you visit Bangkok, this teeming, eccentric and buzzing city will always be filled with events, culture and things to do. And right now we're talking about books. Bangkok is a bookworm's paradise with readers tucked away in corners all across the city. In fact, there's so much going on that you'll inevitably experience a bit of decision paralysis. Hey, we've been there too, but Time Out has your back.   Ready to start turning pages? Here are three reading events in Bangkok. And if you're more of a borrower? Head to these lovely Bangkok libraries.
Best New Year's Eve events in Bangkok

Best New Year's Eve events in Bangkok

Bangkok nights are always lined with choices, but New Year’s Eve turns the dial up to 11. With a dizzying number of rooftop countdowns, pulsating club nights and luxurious riverside dinners, the sheer volume of options can be genuinely overwhelming. Tempted to just stay in with a playlist and a few drinks? We get it. But trust us: if you're ready to ring in 2026 with a bang, the capital has lined up a well-rounded roster of parties for you to peruse. Whether you're after a fancy champagne-fuelled affair with views over the city or a sweaty club night that goes until sunrise, there's genuinely something for everyone this year. The only catch? You'll want to sort yourself out pretty sharpish. New Year's Eve tickets in Bangkok have a habit of vanishing faster than anything, and trust us, FOMO on January 1 hits different. So before you end up refreshing sold-out event pages at 11pm on December 30, have a look through our picks for the best ways to spend December 31 in the Thai capital. From riverside countdowns to club takeovers, here's how to say farewell to 2025. Stay one step ahead and map out your plans with our round-up of where to find Christmas magic in Bangkok.
Where to find Christmas magic in Bangkok

Where to find Christmas magic in Bangkok

Hard to believe December has slipped in again, but here we are, watching Bangkok swap its usual gleam for something a little more golden. No snow here, obviously, but there's still plenty of sparkle once the fairy lights go up along Sukhumvit and those enormous Christmas trees start appearing in every mall atrium. Jangly carols drift through night markets, bars get that extra twinkle and the whole city shifts into celebration mode. With everything happening at once, the season can feel a bit overwhelming. Luckily, Time Out is here to guide you through everything you need to make your yuletide in Bangkok a truly merry occasion.  If you fancy a proper Christmas dinner without the stress of brining, basting or staring into your oven wondering if you've just ruined everything, Bangkok's got you sorted. The city's mastered the art of letting you celebrate without any of the usual chaos. Grand hotel dining rooms roll out gleaming roasts and generous spreads, cosy pubs do turkeys to perfection, neighbourhood spots serve up comforting plates and even curry houses create festive specials that feel wonderfully familiar. Consider this your starting point for finding the brightest, warmest corners of Christmas spirit across Bangkok, places where the season feels effortless, inviting and just indulgent enough to make December worth savouring.  Get ahead of the game and start planning your month with our list of the top things to do this December. Stay one step ahead and map out your plans

Listings and reviews (1335)

Reading in the District

Reading in the District

Heading to Bangkok Design Week 2026 around Phra Nakhon, consider slipping a book into your bag. Rommaninat Park hosts Reading in the District, a modest pop-up library tucked beneath a generous tree. It links independent bookshops with the city’s green pause, turning shade and grass into a temporary reading room. Shelves hold a thoughtful mix of titles, while bean bags, mats and low seating circle the trunk like an informal club no one has to join properly. You can read for an hour, skim a few pages or simply sit and watch the afternoon stretch out. The appeal sits in its lack of urgency. No programme to follow, no checklist to complete. Just paper, quiet conversation and the feeling of borrowing time from the city. It is the kind of place you stumble across, then stay longer than planned.   Until February 8. Free. Rommaninat Park, 11am-10pm
Merchants of Song Wat

Merchants of Song Wat

Song Wat turns playful without losing its sense of history. For Bangkok Design Week, the district becomes a walkable board game, stretching across streets that once carried trade, gossip and daily deals. Building on the earlier manhole cover project, this new chapter invites visitors to play merchant, navigating landmarks and stories that shaped the neighbourhood’s working life. Set along Song Wat Road at Tuk Khaek, Merchants of Song Wat reimagines the area as a network of warehouses and shops. Players move as caravans, trading goods, striking bargains with local businesses and slowly building their own corner of commerce. The rules stay friendly, the visuals clear, drawing from familiar colours and signs around the area.    Until February. Free. Song Wat, 2pm-8pm on weekdays and 1pm-7pm on weekends.
Kluay Sity

Kluay Sity

Mobella returns to Bangkok Design Week with the easy confidence of a regular, this time joined by HOOM, a debut name keen to test familiar materials beyond furniture. Upholstery shifts from domestic comfort to public encounter, wrapping fabric and foam around one of Bangkok’s most recognisable street symbols: the traffic cone. What once signalled warning now reads as invitation, reshaped as a soft beanbag that encourages passersby to slow down and sit for a while. Playfulness carries a sharper undercurrent. Cones quietly dictate movement across pavements and roads, nudging bodies to stop, wait or change direction. Here, that authority softens. A symbol of control becomes a shared resting point, opening gentle reflection on how everyday objects organise urban behaviour without much notice. The result feels familiar yet slightly disorienting, a reminder that design can rewrite habits without raising its voice.   Until February 8. Free. General Post Office, 11am-10pm
Phayanchana Portraits

Phayanchana Portraits

This project stretches the idea of wannarup far past its familiar edges. Portraits appear not through likeness but through language, drawing on figures whose influence spills across art, music, film, sport, faith and public life. Each subject arrives with a history already formed, a public presence shaped by work, belief and contradiction. Here, Thai script does the heavy lifting. Names become structure, with a first consonant anchoring the composition while vowels and tonal marks carry feeling and movement. Faces are never copied. Instead, identity emerges through rhythm, spacing and weight, allowing character to surface without mimicry. Typography becomes portraiture, design becomes biography. What results feels intimate yet restrained, a reminder that who we are is often written long before it is seen.   Until February 8. Free. General Post Office, 11am-10pm
People Pavilion

People Pavilion

Walking toward People Pavilion, the first impression arrives before any explanation. A broad installation stretches across the plaza, open and unguarded, coaxing passersby closer without instruction. Curiosity does the rest. This isn’t a pavilion built to be admired from a distance. It works as a testing ground, asking how Bangkok’s urban framework might feel if restraint and generosity shared equal weight. Every choice here leans towards using less and leaving lighter traces, without draining the experience of pleasure. Structure and use are considered together, making sustainability feel practical rather than worthy. Art brushes up against architecture, with environmental thinking threaded quietly through both. Visitors aren’t rushed through. You’re encouraged to sit, drift, linger. The pavilion becomes a soft rehearsal for a city that values rest as much as movement, offering a glimpse of how public space could feel kinder to bodies and surroundings alike.   Until February 8. Free. Phranakhon, 11am-10pm
New World New Pulse

New World New Pulse

One of Bangkok Design Week 2026’s quiet standouts unfolds without spectacle or noise. It poses a gentle provocation: how might Bang Lamphu’s long-held sense of celebration be retold through present-day light, colour and movement. Fawn (Myarab – Fawn), a kinetic sculpture by Wit Pimkanchanapong, draws from shared memory rather than nostalgia. Joy lingers here, carried through a form that sways softly, guided by music rather than mechanics. Set within New World Mall, a site suspended between myth and neglect, the piece feels almost tender. The building’s stillness meets low-energy motion that rises and falls like breath. Nothing is forced. Past and present sit side by side, not competing but listening. The result feels less like revival and more like recognition, a reminder that places remember even when people stop paying attention. Until February 8. B149-199 via here. New World Mall, 8pm-9pm
8+1 Circuit of Stories

8+1 Circuit of Stories

Steel doors slide open again at New World Mall, a place once synonymous with weekends, first dates and air-conditioned escape. Long dormant, the building now hosts 8+1 Circuit of Stories, an exhibition mapping Banglamphu to Khaosan through shared memory rather than nostalgia. Eight surrounding neighbourhoods sit alongside one economic strip, from Khaosan Road to Phra Athit and Phra Sumen, forming a loose circuit shaped by lived experience. Residents speak first here. Voices, photographs, worn objects and half-remembered details anchor the work, gathered and reimagined by five artist-designer collectives. The mall becomes a hinge between past and present, holding fragments without polishing them too smoothly. Wandering through the installations feels less like sightseeing and more like listening in on a long conversation already underway. What emerges is not a landmark story, but a portrait of place built from ordinary lives and stubborn continuity.   Until February 8. Free. New World Mall, 11am-10pm
D/Objects

D/Objects

The moment you step through the doors, the mood feels closer to an open studio than a commercial showcase. This is a room built for possibility, where Thai creatives test ideas in public and let unfinished thoughts breathe. Work sits comfortably alongside conversation, less display case and more shared table. The guiding belief that design shapes lifestyle feels quietly convincing here, not shouted from a wall. Nothing is elevated beyond reach. Objects and concepts slip easily between daily use, making and reflection, blurring the line between process and outcome. What stands out is how invention stretches past surface appeal. These projects reshape habits, nudge perspectives and gently reframe how people relate to their surroundings. Nothing screams luxury or distance. Instead, everything feels usable, lived with and slowly transformative, the kind of influence that settles in over time and only later reveals how much it has changed you.   Until February 8. Free. TCDC, 10.30am-7pm
Bangkok Design Week Bike Trip

Bangkok Design Week Bike Trip

Grab a bike and follow a thoughtfully mapped route connecting standout moments from Bangkok Design Week, each stop chosen for curiosity rather than checklist culture. Expect a steady rhythm, with roughly 20 to 30 minutes at every location, enough time to look closely, chat with fellow riders and let each project settle before moving on. Guiding the journey is Wee Viraporn, a long-time activist who treats design as a practical tool for shaping fairer, more liveable streets. Riders are welcome to bring their own wheels or rent one at the starting point. Those arriving with personal bikes should remember a sturdy lock, as pauses are part of the experience. Helmets are non-negotiable, not as a rule to spoil the mood but as quiet care for everyone involved. Think of the ride as a moving conversation carried across neighbourhoods rather than a race between landmarks. February 6-7. Free. Register via here. General Post Office, 4.30pm onwards
Skim pages on bean bags at Reading in the District

Skim pages on bean bags at Reading in the District

Heading to Bangkok Design Week 2026 around Phra Nakhon, consider slipping a book into your bag. Rommaninat Park hosts Reading in the District, a modest pop-up library tucked beneath a generous tree. It links independent bookshops with the city’s green pause, turning shade and grass into a temporary reading room. Shelves hold a thoughtful mix of titles, while bean bags, mats and low seating circle the trunk like an informal club. You can read for an hour, skim a few pages or simply sit and watch the afternoon stretch out. The appeal sits in its lack of urgency. No programme to follow, no checklist to complete. Just paper, quiet conversation and the feeling of borrowing time from the city. It is the kind of place you stumble across, then stay longer than planned.   Until February 8. Free. Rommaninat Park, 11am-10pm
Record half-formed songs in an orange booth at One Bangkok's no-expertise Open Airwaves

Record half-formed songs in an orange booth at One Bangkok's no-expertise Open Airwaves

Open Airwaves turns the idea of a recording studio inside out. Set in a public garden, it offers a fully equipped booth for anyone curious about sound, whether you make music for a living or have only ever hummed ideas to yourself. DJ decks, microphones and production tools sit ready, no investment required, no expertise assumed. You turn up, try things out and see what happens. What makes it stick is the intention behind it. This collaboration between One Bangkok and Bangkok Community Radio treats songwriting as a way of noticing the city. Small emotions, half-formed stories and casual experiments are recorded and kept, forming a living audio archive of urban life. Some pieces will surface online, others simply exist. A place to test ideas, listen differently and leave a trace, however rough, of how Bangkok sounds right now.   Until February 8. Free. One Bangkok, 3pm-9pm
Let sound do slow work at Garden Grooves

Let sound do slow work at Garden Grooves

Chris and Vitaly, better known as Kratom for Peace, return to the garden with the kind of patience most live sets have forgotten. Their sound unfolds slowly, built from ambient guitar loops and art-noise textures that refuse to hurry. Notes stretch, repeat and dissolve, forming a landscape rather than a track list. You listen with your whole body, not just your ears. This is music that asks for stillness. Feedback hums like weather, resonance hangs in the air and time seems to soften around the edges. Nothing aims for climax. Instead, the pair shape a space where attention drifts and settles again, somewhere between meditation and quiet endurance. It feels inward-facing, almost private, despite being shared. Come early, find a comfortable spot and let the evening recalibrate. This is less about being entertained and more about allowing sound to do the slow work it does best. February 7. Free. Register here. Yellow Lane, 3.30pm-6.30pm

News (242)

Silent Theatre Festival is back with four brilliant performances

Silent Theatre Festival is back with four brilliant performances

You know that moment when you're watching a brilliant performer and you realise you haven't heard a single word, yet you've understood everything? That's the magic of Silent Theatre Festival. No subtitles needed, no language barriers, just pure storytelling through movement, rhythm and the kind of physical comedy that makes your sides hurt. Photograph: Silent Theatre Festival The festival lands at Bangkok Art and Culture Centre (BACC) on March 21-22, taking over the Studio Room on the fourth floor. House of Mask and Mime theatre group put the whole thing together, gathering artists from Japan, Czechia and Thailand who prove that sometimes the best stories are the ones told without words. This year brings four different shows, each with its own flavour of wordless brilliance. Photograph: Silent Theatre Festival Zeroko's teatime is Japanese artist Zeroko's contemporary mime piece built around a tea ceremony. Sounds simple, right? Except every tiny gesture carries weight, every movement invites you into this strangely relaxing world. The show shifts with each performance too, as Zeroko improvises based on the room's energy and what the audience brings. You leave feeling like you've just had your favourite brew, that warm fuzzy feeling lingering long after. Photograph: Silent Theatre Festival Silly Little Things comes from Trygve Wakenshaw, one of Europe's top mime artists. The Czech-based performer digs into life's tiny moments that somehow lead to friendship, awkwardness
Bangkok launches one-stop digital booking for public spaces

Bangkok launches one-stop digital booking for public spaces

Anyone who's tried booking government premises for events in Bangkok knows the pain. The endless back and forth, the weeks of waiting (sometimes months), the approvals that arrive only to find the actual staff on site haven't been told what's happening. It's enough to make anyone want to give up. Photograph: Music in the Park But things are changing. Bangkok Metropolitan Administration (BMA) has been working to turn urban spaces into actual public spaces again, the kind people can genuinely use rather than just walk past. First they compiled data on what spaces exist and started making the whole application process less of a headache. Film crews got to try it out first through a One Stop Service, then BMA opened things up to festivals and all sorts of activities across the city. The result? Events popping up all over Bangkok, bringing proper life back to shared spaces that have sat empty for too long. Now, BMA has launched an official public space booking platform that handles everything in one place. The website cuts out most of the faff, sorting applications and coordinating with the agencies that manage each space before your event day even arrives. This means organisers can actually plan things properly and the city gets to host new ideas without everyone losing their minds in the process. Here's how the booking works: Photograph: Better Bangkok For film shooting (BFMCC) Submit your application with all the documents attached (staff review them within one to three wo
Thailand’s digital payments surge 143 per cent as tourists ditch cash

Thailand’s digital payments surge 143 per cent as tourists ditch cash

These days, buying stuff doesn’t take much effort. You grab your phone, scan a QR code and you’re done. No fumbling for cash, no awkward moments wondering if you've got enough change. It's the kind of convenience that slides into your routine without you really noticing.   And it turns out Thai people aren't the only ones hooked on it. Thailand's cross-border QR code payment apps are quietly being adopted by foreign tourists, particularly visitors from China. Photograph: paywise   Thai QR, a homegrown cross-border payment app, is seeing serious traction with inbound travellers. According to National ITMX (NITMX), December 2025 alone saw transaction values smash through B809 million, a 143 per cent jump from the year before. Chinese tourists lead the charge, with visitors from Malaysia and Laos following close behind. The numbers paint a picture of a city that's genuinely ready to welcome the world, from street food vendors and taxi drivers to shops dotting tourist neighbourhoods. Photograph: moneyandbanking But Thai QR isn't purely about moving money around. It's a bit of infrastructure quietly making the city function better, helping Thai businesses sell with less hassle and nudging Thailand closer to becoming Asia's digital payment hub. The system now links up with global platforms like Moreta, Alipay, WeChat Pay and UnionPay. Meanwhile Kasikorn Bank has teamed up with Meta to launch Meta Pay, a new service letting shops on Facebook and Messenger take payments directly
Planning a trip to Saigon? Put this cocktail bar on your list!

Planning a trip to Saigon? Put this cocktail bar on your list!

Vietnam is literally becoming the place to visit in Southeast Asia, and Saigon (or Ho Chi Minh City, if you're being formal) is leading the charge. The city's creative scene is absolutely buzzing right now, and if you're after a cocktail experience, Time Out Bangkok has found somewhere pretty special. We're talking about Ômm Mixology, Vietnam's first mixology concept bar, born from a belief that cocktail culture here could move beyond instant gratification. At Ômm, mixology isn't about theatrics or molecular showmanship. It's a structured dialogue between craft, culture and human connection, where drinks are composed like artworks rather than assembled from recipes. The philosophy is simple but radical for Vietnam's bar scene: less sweetness, more depth. Balance over spectacle. Restraint as a form of expression. Photograph: Omm Mixology The whole operation is curated by Japanese mixologist Shuzo Nagumo, who's a bit of a legend in the bar world. What sets Nagumo apart isn't just technique, it's culinary thinking. His approach to mixology is fundamentally rooted in kitchen disciplines, treating ingredients with the same respect and precision a chef gives to seasonal produce. This culinary foundation shapes everything at Ômm, from how botanicals are sourced to how flavours are layered, balanced and allowed to speak without interference. You can tell from the moment you walk in that something different is happening here. In a city that rarely slows down, Ômm feels intentionally
Bangkok's biggest hospitality & foodservice trade show, THAIFEX - HOREC Asia, returns for its third year this March

Bangkok's biggest hospitality & foodservice trade show, THAIFEX - HOREC Asia, returns for its third year this March

Running a hotel, restaurant, cafe, or bar can feel like an endless juggling act. There's the startup stress, finding suppliers who actually show up, dealing with staff shortages and watching costs creep ever higher. But here's the thing – innovation and tech are genuinely making life easier for operators, and if you went to THAIFEX – HOREC Asia last year, you'll be pleased to hear it's back. This massive trade show gathers the best innovations for the hospitality and foodservice sector under one roof. Running from March 11 to 13 at IMPACT Muang Thong Thani Challenger Hall 1 and 2, the event brings together thousands of products from over 600 brands across more than 40,000 square metres. That's a serious amount of ground to cover between 10am and 6pm across three days. Photograph: THAIFEX - HOREC Asia The whole point is making restaurant, bar, cafe and hotel operations easier while boosting profitability and keeping pace with global trends. Instead of chasing multiple suppliers or burning time on trial and error, everything comes together in one place. You get kitchen equipment, front of house tech and connections with brands and operators from over 80 countries (that's more than 20,000 industry professionals). Visitors gain fresh inspiration, practical knowledge and access to the latest products and innovations, all of which can be applied directly to their own businesses, all in one event. Here's what you'll find across the zones. Bakery and Ice Cream dives into equipment
Japanese Film Festival strikes back with 15 films

Japanese Film Festival strikes back with 15 films

Japanese cinema fans can clear a little space this month. From February 13-22, the Japanese Film Festival returns with a line up that refuses to stay in one lane, pairing well-worn classics with newer releases still carrying the scent of fresh celluloid. The Japan Foundation Bangkok has teamed up with House Samyan, Dude, Movie and Berng Nang Club to screen 15 films that span nearly eight decades of Japanese cinema. We're talking legendary classics like Seven Samurai from 1954 sitting alongside brand new 2025 releases. There's Ghost in the Shell for the anime crowd, documentaries for the curious and thrillers for anyone who fancies an edge-of-seat evening. Photograph: Ghost in the Shell   Every film comes with Thai and English subtitles, so language isn't a barrier. What makes this festival particularly special is how each selection offers a window into Japanese life. You get gorgeous shots of the country's landscapes, glimpses of daily culture and art that feels distinctly Japanese. Photograph: Renoir Already planning your next Japan trip? These films won't help with that wanderlust. If anything, they'll make you want to book flights immediately. Not in Bangkok? The festival travels north with free screenings across three provinces. Khon Kaen gets its turn at MAIELIE Khonkean from February 27-March 1. Chiang Mai hosts screenings at the CIC building Auditorium at Chiang Mai University on the same dates. Chiang Rai rounds things off at Corner, Chiangrai Contemporary Art Mus
Wander through old Thai cinema sets under the stars at Thai Film Archive

Wander through old Thai cinema sets under the stars at Thai Film Archive

If you're still scrambling for Valentine's plans, here's a thought. Instead of the usual dinner date, how about wandering through a romantic film set under the stars? Maya City, a historical replica of Thailand's golden age of cinema, is opening its gates for evening visits this February 13-15, 5pm-9pm. Photograph: Thai Film Archive Night@Maya City Maya Ratri is back for its sixth year, making the Thai Film Archive an after-dark hangout. The event runs across three evenings and lets you explore Thai cinema history in a completely different mood to the usual daytime visits. Photograph: Thai Film Archive You'll find a mix of things to do here. There's the Thai film history museum (atmospheric at night, naturally), live music performances, exhibitions dotted around the grounds, craft stalls selling handmade bits and bobs and food booths serving up tasty treats. Activities run throughout the evening, so you won't be stuck wondering what to do next. Photograph: Thai Film Archive The real draw is the outdoor film history replica city itself. There will be old medicine carts from classic Thai movies, vintage railway carriages, the Black Maria studio and Star Plaza where legendary Thai actors have left their handprints. It's basically an Instagram dream for cinema lovers, but genuinely interesting even if you're not glued to your phone.   Photograph: Thai Film Archive This year's edition gets an extra boost with live performances from Thee Chaiyadej on February 13 and Pijika
Pause for drinks and documentaries at GalileOasis this weekend

Pause for drinks and documentaries at GalileOasis this weekend

One month into 2026 and chances are you've already let work pile up, your to-do list spiral and your heart forget what rest feels like. So here's a thought: take a breather at GalileOasis, a secret garden hiding in Ratchathewi where art, community and nature all meet. On January 30 and 31 from midday-8pm, this end-of-January event brings together carefully selected craft beverages, wines and beers that you can taste and sip while sitting in an actual urban garden in the middle of the city. If you're doing Dry January or just don't fancy alcohol, there are non-alcoholic options too, so everyone gets to enjoy the atmosphere and properly unwind. Plus the whole thing is pet-friendly, which means your four-legged friend gets an invite as well. Photograph:GalileOasis   Beyond the drinks, GalileOasis teams up with Documentary Club, curated by Film I trust, for their 8½ programme. Two documentary screenings open up new perspectives on life, waste and the stories we overlook every day. Tickets cost B40 and B80 and you register through their Google form. On January 30 at 6.30pm, the screening shows The World Before Your Feet from 2018. It follows a man who walks every single street in New York City, covering over 8,000 miles as he discovers the people, lives and stories tucked away in the sprawling metropolis. The next evening on January 31 at 6.30pm brings Scrap from 2022. This one takes you inside the graveyards of throwaway culture, from discarded mobile phones to abandoned aeropl
Jǐng brings authentic Sichuan and Cantonese cooking to a modern casual space

Jǐng brings authentic Sichuan and Cantonese cooking to a modern casual space

The capital’s enormous ethnic Chinese community has been shaping everything from the business scene to the street food landscape here for generations, especially around Yaowarat where Chinatown buzzes with that perfect mix of heritage and hustle. You've got your casual street side spots or the full on formal family banquet venues. Not much in between for when you just fancy really good Chinese food on a random Tuesday or any day. Photograph: Andaz One Bangkok That's the gap Jǐng fills at Andaz One Bangkok. The name means 'scenery' or 'view' in Chinese, which clicks the moment you walk in. Natural light pours through the windows on the L Floor, making the restaurant feel airy and relaxed. Before you start worrying this means the food has gone all fusion and experimental, take a breath. The kitchen runs on pure authenticity. Experienced chefs use techniques they've spent years perfecting. Quality ingredients arrive daily. Traditional preparations get the respect they deserve. Photograph: Andaz One Bangkok The open kitchen steals the show before you even taste anything. It's built like a theatre stage so you can watch the entire performance. Woks crackle and hiss. Flames leap up in controlled bursts. You're eating dinner and watching a masterclass at the same time. Jǐng plants its flag firmly in Sichuan and Cantonese territory. Breakfast is served as a buffet with Chinese-focus selections. It features fish congee that tastes like comfort in a bowl, X.O. sauce omelet with pro
Central World ranks as one of the globe's best New Year's Eve destinations

Central World ranks as one of the globe's best New Year's Eve destinations

Alright, we're a month into 2026 but let's rewind to how Bangkok saw off last year. Turns out the Thai capital sits pretty high on the list of ultimate countdown spots worldwide. When the clock ticks down to midnight on New Year's Eve, certain cities just know how to make it count. Bangkok's Central World has earned its reputation as one of the globe's top five countdown destinations, often dubbed the Times Square of Asia. That's some serious street cred. The venue draws Thailand's biggest New Year's crowd every single year. We're talking cityscape fireworks lighting up the sky, world class production values and confetti raining down as the new year arrives. Choreographed drone displays add a modern twist whilst top artists keep the energy flowing right through to that midnight moment when the whole city collectively welcomes what's next. Central World sits alongside the heavy hitters. Times Square in New York still owns the crown with its iconic ball drop and global TV coverage. London's Westminster brings that British elegance with Thames fireworks framing Big Ben and the London Eye. Taipei 101 launches spectacular pyrotechnics from its skyscraper. Sydney Harbour gets there first with its bridge and Opera House backdrop. But Bangkok holds its own amongst this company. The Thai capital proves you don't need centuries of tradition to create something genuinely iconic.
Perd Tai-Sai Kon Flea Market returns with vintage shopping and rooftop parties

Perd Tai-Sai Kon Flea Market returns with vintage shopping and rooftop parties

If you fancy seeing off January in proper style, there's a market happening at the end of the month that's worth knowing about. Perd Tai-Sai Kon (which translates to Shake Your Butt Flea Market, and honestly that tells you everything you need to know) comes back to Bangkok's Chatuchak area for three nights of vintage shopping and dancing ‘til late. Photograph: Cheeze The market takes over the rooftop of JJ Mall from January 29- 31, kicking off at 4pm and running through to midnight each evening. It brings together some seriously good independent fashion sellers hawking rare finds and quality secondhand pieces all in one spot. Photograph: Cheeze Now here's the thing that makes this one different from your standard market. The organisers booked a massive lineup of DJs across multiple music scenes every single night. We're talking Civic Boys, Club Soma, Nosebleed, Puttisak Somarange, RAVE., Bookkeeper, Rabbitdisco, Skalagoon, Ummata, Vimlenbury, Benji, Bestboi and JJ. The whole setup basically encourages you to shop for a bit, have a drink, dance for a while, then go back to hunting through the vintage racks. Photograph: Cheeze The atmosphere leans into that relaxed evening market vibe that turns into a full party as the night goes on. You can show up as the sun sets, spend an hour or two digging through the stalls, then stick around as things get properly lively. It's the sort of event where you come for the clothes and end up staying much longer than planned. Entry costs
Lisa's full Thailand tourism video just dropped and it's gorgeous!

Lisa's full Thailand tourism video just dropped and it's gorgeous!

We already know Lisa is Thailand's tourism ambassador now, right? Well, after teasing the campaign in early January, they've just released the full video. If you caught the snippets floating around social media, the complete version of Feel All The Feelings is finally here to give you the complete picture of what Lisa's been up to in her new role. Photograph: Tourism Authority of Thailand Photograph: Tourism Authority of Thailand The film puts Lisa front and centre as she explores the kingdom, but instead of just showing off temples and beaches, it focuses on the emotions and experiences you get when you're actually there. Lisa plays the pathfinder, leading viewers through what the Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT) calls 'Unseen' Thai destinations, the kind of places that don't always make it onto the typical tourist trail but locals absolutely love. She's got company too. Thai stars Metawin 'Win' Opas-iamkajorn, Kanawut 'Gulf' Traipipattanapong and Pongtiwat 'Blue' Tangwancharoen join her on screen, helping to show off different corners of the country and the feelings each place brings out. It's not just about where you go but how it makes you feel when you're there. Photograph: Tourism Authority of Thailand Photograph: Tourism Authority of Thailand The official launch happened on January 28, with TAT making a big deal about repositioning Thailand as a 'Quality Leisure Destination'. What that actually means in practice is they want visitors to see Thailand