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Photograph: Red Bull Dance | The best things to do in bangkok this weekend
Photograph: Red Bull Dance

The best things to do in Bangkok weekend (May 28-31)

Rainstorms, rooftop moons, indie gigs and enough desserts to survive Bangkok’s mood swings

Kaweewat Siwanartwong
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You’re hot and you’re cold. Pretty much Bangkok’s entire personality right now. One minute the city’s drowning under dramatic rain clouds, the next everyone’s melting beside a motorbike taxi queue. Still, slightly unhinged weather rarely stops anyone here from making weekend plans, and staying home sounds far less interesting.

Start with Busui Ajaw, where an entire Akha house rebuilt inside a gallery quietly traces disappearing traditions and northern Thai identity through personal objects and worn timber surfaces. Afterwards, cool down at Dessert Exchange Vol.3, a sugar-heavy gathering soundtracked by music references, homemade cakes and the kind of conversations that usually happen after two brownies too many.

If you prefer fresh air between rain showers, Happitat’s lawn festival with GROUNDCONTROL offers picnic blankets, mushroom installations and enough market stalls to justify wandering around for hours pretending you’re ‘just browsing’. Meanwhile, Bangkok’s anime crowd descends on Anime Festival Asia at Queen Sirikit National Convention Center for cosplay, concerts and very serious merch shopping.

End the weekend staring at the sky during Saturday’s Blue Moon, which sadly arrives nowhere near blue, but still gives everyone a decent excuse to grab rooftop drinks and romanticise cloud formations for an evening.

Map out the rest of the month with our guide to what’s on, and keep an eye on our picks of Bangkok’s best things to do.

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What's on this weekend?

  • Things to do
  • Yaowarat

An entire Akha house now stands in the middle of Bangkok, carefully dismantled from a village in northern Thailand and rebuilt piece by piece inside an art gallery. Roof panels, woven bedding, timber floors and weathered household objects all carry marks of the people who once lived among them, quietly tracing a way of life that grows more fragile with each passing generation.

The Akha are an Indigenous ethnic group whose communities are spread across the mountains of northern Thailand, Myanmar, Laos and southern China, known for their intricate textiles, spiritual rituals and deep connection to land and ancestry. In recent decades, migration, tourism and rapid development have reshaped many of those traditions. Through memory, craftsmanship and personal histories, The Preservation of Fire by Busui Ajaw keeps those stories alive a little longer.

May 15-November 1. Free entry. Bangkok Kunsthalle. 2pm-8pm

  • Things to do
  • Ari

As AI settles deeper into everyday routines and the shape of work keeps shifting, ThinkFest 2026 leans into a quieter question: what kind of life still feels worth building? Under the theme ‘Everybody Changes’, the festival turns Ari into a walkable circuit of talks, workshops, exhibitions and live performancves spread across neighbourhood venues.

The format works best when you don’t overplan it. Start near Ari BTS Exit 3, follow whichever crowd of soundtrack catches your attention and let the day unfold from there. Collaborators including Loveis Entertainment, What The Duck and Pantang Artwork bring their own energy into the mix, keeping the route varied without feeling overly programmed.

May 29-31. Free entry. Register via here. Across Ari. 1pm-10pm

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Sweat it out with Yinglee Srijumpol at Chatuchak's luk thung dance floor

Bangkok’s favourite post-work sweat session returns to Chatuchak Park this May, after two wildly packed rounds that turn the city’s aerobic plaza into a full-blown luk thung dance floor by sunset. ‘Muan Na Han’ sees Yinglee Srijumpol headline the evening once again, bringing her signature morlam bangers back to the park on May 21 from 5pm onwards. Joining her are teacher Mod and teacher Sai, who keep the crowd moving long after the warm-up stretches end. Office workers swap laptops for fan-claps, aunties outdance twenty-somethings and strangers quickly become backup dancers. 

May 28. Free. Aerobic Plaza in Chatuchak Park. 7pm onwards

  • Things to do
  • Charoenkrung

Factories, pipelines and scarred coastlines sit at the centre of this striking photography exhibition by Sukrit Patjuntadusit, which examines the environmental cost carried by Rayong Province. Human presence lingers quietly throughout the series, whether through industrial structures, contaminated water or damaged landscapes altered over time. What sets the show apart is Sukrit’s use of the ‘film soup’ technique. Wastewater gathered from real industrial sites becomes part of the film development process itself, allowing chemicals to stain, corrode and warp the negatives. Pollution doesn’t simply appear as subject matter here – it physically reshapes the photographs. A free documentary screening and discussion session also takes place on Saturday June 6 from 1pm to 3pm.

Now-June 23. Free entry. 2/F, Fotoclub BKK. 11am-8pm

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  • Things to do
  • Rattanakosin

Northern Thailand arrives in Bangkok for a weekend at Nerb Nerb Market, a relaxed gathering organised by craftspeople and independent makers from Phrae Province. Making its first pop-up appearance in the capital, the event brings together more than 26 vendors selling handmade goods, community products and small-batch creations shaped by the slower pace of life up north. Expect woven crafts, thoughtful design pieces and locally sourced drinks alongside comforting food from Kham Pa, the northern Thai restaurant known for hearty dishes that remind plenty of diners of home.

May 29-31. Free entry. PA PRANK. 11am-8pm

  • Things to do

Asia’s biggest food trade fair returns on an even larger scale this year, spreading across 12 exhibition halls and bringing together more than 3,300 exhibitors from 60 countries. THAIFEX – Anuga Asia draws everyone from global suppliers to independent brands, all chasing the next big shift shaping how the world eats and drinks.

A new innovation-focused hall puts future food technology, fresh market launches and rising startup talent front and centre, while the European Union steps in as official partner region with a showcase centred around sustainable food and beverage products. Another notable addition arrives with PLX Asia, Southeast Asia’s first B2B platform dedicated to private label and contract manufacturing, launching with an executive seminar on May 29.

May 26-30. Free entry. IMPACT Arena. 10am-6pm

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  • Things to do
  • Khlong Toei

Forget rushing through gallery spaces and pretending to understand everything after a quick glance at the wall text. This new public programme encourages visitors to slow down, spend time with contemporary art and actually talk about what they’re seeing. Set within (In)visible Presence, the museum’s current exhibition exploring sound, scent, light and unusual materials, the session centres around Hiroshi Sugimoto and his celebrated Theaters series. Conversations circling photography, cinema, memory and the strange way time stretches inside darkened theatres. The small-scale format keeps things intimate too, with space for only 15 participants, making it closer to a thoughtful group discussion than a formal museum tour.


May 29. B550 for Thais and B770 for non-Thais. Tickets here. Dib Bangkok, 3pm-3.30pm

  • Things to do
  • Silom

Durian season gets a late-night soundtrack at HORN, where cult favourite radio collective Durian Radio throws a party dedicated to Thailand’s most divisive fruit. Expect DJs, drinks and a crowd united by questionable cravings and good music, all wrapped up in the sort of gathering that starts casually and somehow ends at closing time. Organisers promise ‘voices of durian farmers’ alongside plenty of playful energy, with the whole thing landing somewhere between underground club night and surreal community fair. The lineup features Bunnyman, JWP., La Yumar and UN!X. One ticket gets you one drink, though durian and alcohol remain strictly separated for obvious reasons.


May 30. B300 via here and B500 at the door. HORN. 10pm-3am

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  • Things to do
  • Thon Buri

Set your alarm early. A 5km neighbourhood run traces the river’s edge before crossing the unmistakable Krungthep Bridge, trading traffic for soft morning light and open views. The group meets at Avani+ Riverside Bangkok Hotel at 6.15am, with Rolling Run Club and lululemon setting the pace, inviting everyone to celebrate Pride this year through movement, connection and a bit of self-love.

Once the route wraps, don’t rush off. A guided recovery session follows, led by lululemon’s crew, easing tired legs with proper stretches rather than guesswork. Coffee lands, music picks up and the crowd settles at SEEN Restaurant & Bar for a laid-back post-run hang. Schedule runs as follows: 6.15am-7am warm-up, 7am-8am run, 8.30am-midday stretch session and coffee rave.

May 30. Free. Avani+ Riverside Bangkok Hotel. 6.15am. For more information, please contact avaniplus.bangkok@avanihotels.com.

  • Things to do
  • Events & Festivals

Bangkok’s anime crowd gets a very busy weekend when Anime Festival Asia takes over Queen Sirikit National Convention Center with concerts, cosplay and enough merch temptation to destroy most monthly budgets. The programme packs in live performances, fan panels and screenings aimed squarely at anyone raised on anime marathons and late-night gaming sessions. One of the biggest draws comes from SPYAIR, whose song ‘Orange’ soundtracks Haikyuu!!, while Kikunosuke Toya, best known as Denji in Chainsaw Man, joins fan sessions expected to attract very long queues. Cosplay competitions return too, alongside the Asian premiere of Sparks of Tomorrow for attendees chasing early bragging rights.

May 30-31. B250 at the door. Queen Sirikit National Convention Center. 6pm-10pm

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  • Things to do
  • Charoenkrung

Bangkok’s indie crowd gets a properly cosy night out when Yellow Fang headlines Step Off Track, a live music gathering built around laid-back energy and good company rather than packed festival mayhem. The beloved all-female trio brings its dreamy guitars and hazy melodies to a more intimate setting, giving longtime fans and curious newcomers a rare chance to catch the band up close. From tiny indie venues to international festival stages, Yellow Fang continues carving out its own lane without chasing trends, which probably explains why the group still sounds so distinctive years later. Opening the evening is Laugh Laugh Laugh, serving bright indie-pop hooks and youthful charm before the main set begins.

May 30. B250 via here. Marshall Livehouse. 6pm onwards

  • Things to do
  • Pathum Wan

Thailand’s street dance scene gets another major spotlight moment when Red Bull Dance Your Style returns to Bangkok for its third year. The competition kicks off the search for the country’s top freestyle dancers, with 12 finalists and four wild cards battling for a place at the World Final in Zurich this October. There’s plenty of high-stakes face-offs, inventive routines and the sort of crowd reactions that can make or break a round in seconds. More than 3,000 spectators are expected to pack the venue, while special performances from MILLI, Joke iScream and Bangkokboy keep the energy high between battles.

May 30. Free entry. Hua Lamphong Train Station. 6pm

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  • Things to do
  • Nong Khaem

Bangkok’s picnic crowd gets a proper excuse to stretch out on the grass when Happitat teams up with GROUNDCONTROL for a laid-back lifestyle festival in the middle of Bangna’s greenery. Think picnic blankets, slow afternoons and more than 80 vendors selling crafts, fashion, snacks and drinks, all spread across a wide open lawn designed for lingering. Art workshops and interactive activities run throughout the weekend, while a towering mushroom installation rising more than four metres above the grounds is almost guaranteed to dominate everyone’s camera roll. Visitors can also wander through the flower-filled ‘Fairy Circle’ experience inside Lumis Theater Hall, with live music and pet-friendly spaces helping the whole thing settle into an easy weekend rhythm.

May 30-31. Free entry. Happitat at The Forestias. 10am-7pm

  • Things to do

After winning over Thai fans at Summer Sonic 2024, Laufey confirms her first solo show here with Laufey: A Matter of Time Tour in Bangkok. A solid return, all things considered. She blends jazz, classical and contemporary pop with carefully arranged melodies and lyrics that stay with you long after the final note. The tour follows her win at the 68th Annual Grammy Awards, where A Matter of Time takes Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album. Produced by Spencer Stewart and Aaron Dessner, the record refines her sound with a sharper emotional edge. With over 4.25 billion Spotify streams, Billboard chart highs, Forbes 30 Under 30 and TIME Women of the Year, she’s clearly operating well beyond niche status.

May 31. B1,800-4,300 via here. Impact Arena. 7pm

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  • Things to do
  • Silom

Before anything else, a bit of homegrown pride takes centre stage. Bangkok Pride Festival returns under the theme ‘Patch the World with Pride’, with a parade stretching 4.8 kilometres from Chong Nonsi to Rama I. Expect a 300-metre rainbow flag rolling across Silom Road, longer than any previous year and impossible to miss. At Suphachalasai Stadium, Rabiab Wathasin brings mor lam to the Pride Stage, grounding the celebration in local culture while reflecting LGBTQ+ stories of resilience. Alongside it, Drag Bangkok Festival and Thailand's Drag Star raise the stakes for the city’s drag scene. Dress up if you want to be seen, but keep the history in mind.

May 31. Free. Chong Nonsi Canal Park (Silom Road). 3pm

Catch Gawdland perform — Asia's first drag world champion, live in Bangkok

Belonging sits at the centre of Chakaruna’s latest evening programme, and few artists carry that story quite like Gawdland. Just weeks after winning RuPaul's Drag Race UK vs The World – becoming the first Asian champion in the franchise’s international history – the Bangkok-born performer returns home with a new stage production that folds drag, theatre, choreography and pop spectacle together. The show traces her journey from discovering drag as a kid in Bangkok to standing beneath global spotlights with a crown on her head. Timing matters, too. Thailand’s same-sex marriage law and Bangkok Pride’s rapidly growing crowds suggest a city reshaping how community gathers, celebrates and looks after its own.

May 30. B1,000-2,000 via here. SPHERE Hall, EMSPHERE. 7pm

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Catch the blue moon rising over Bangkok

A Blue Moon lands over Bangkok on May 31, though anyone expecting a glowing sapphire orb may want to manage expectations early. The name has nothing to do with colour and everything to do with timing, marking an extra full moon squeezing its way onto the calendar. Still, odd lunar scheduling quirks are charming in their own nerdy way. This particular full moon also doubles as 2026’s most distant micromoon, meaning it sits at the furthest point from Earth during its orbit and appears slightly smaller than usual. Not tiny enough to spark panic, thankfully, but noticeable for anyone paying attention. Grab a rooftop spot or somewhere with minimal city glare and start looking up from early evening onwards.

May 31. 6pm onwards

  • Things to do
  • Prawet

MunMun Srinakarin opens MMAD Gallery with six exhibitions from the first artists selected through the MMADness is Calling project, giving emerging names space to experiment across installation, sculpture, sound and textiles. Psyche and Flesh turns suffering and memory into tactile forms, while Upper’s What Lies on Top of the Mountain pairs animation, towering canvases and atmospheric audio to unpack the awkward quiet after intimacy. Elsewhere, Jhanyar’s 24/7 Objects reframes Bangkok’s pavements and everyday clutter with a sharply observant eye for city life. Steam Stream drifts through water and rice fields, Sunburn The Kid reconstructs discarded fabric into new textile works and Fish Are Friends introduces scrap-metal fish puppets for anyone carrying around a little low-level loneliness.

May 7-June 21. Free. MMAD GALLERY. 11am-7pm

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  • Wine bars
  • Nong Khaem

A handful of works from Jan Bican’s Destiny’s Child exhibition find settle temporarily into Chenin Bangkok, the tucked-away Sukhumvit 31 wine bar where contemporary art now quietly coexists with candlelight and natural wine. The Czech artist first showed the series at Vanich House, though several works remain in Bangkok after others return to Prague for collectors and studio storage. Bican often describes Bangkok as a second home, and the setting suits the work unusually well. The paintings and installations spread naturally across both floors, somewhere between dinner conversation and after-hours reflection. Come for Chenin’s thoughtful food and natural wine list, then wander upstairs and see what lingers after an exhibition technically ends.

Daily. Free. Chenin Bangkok. 7pm-midnight

  • Things to do
  • Yaowarat

Bangkok Kunsthalle welcomes Brooklyn-based Thai collective Elekhlekha as its latest artists-in-residence, turning the space into a constantly shifting laboratory for sound, storytelling and live visual experimentation. Running across two months, the residency unfolds through research sessions, performances and collaborative installations. One standout arrives with Lomwong, an open-studio collaboration featuring Thai musicians and artists working inside immersive surround sound, moving floor projections and a Yamaha Disklavier piano sitting directly at the centre of the room.

May 23, 31, June 13 and 20. Free. Bangkok Kunsthalle. 1pm-4pm

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  • Things to do
  • Siam

Inner Spectrum slows things down considerably, gathering abstract and semi-abstract works from five artists interested less in explanation than emotional residue. Across layered textures, shifting compositions and large stretches of deliberate emptiness, the exhibition explores memory, anxiety and the mental static modern life leaves hanging around our heads. There’s no polished escapism here, thankfully. Just uncertainty, silence and room to sit with both.

May 23-June 12. Free. Art Jewel Gallery, Siam Paragon. 10am-10pm

  • Things to do
  • Ratchaprasong

C.P.S. Coffee Roaster leans heavily into Thai nostalgia with new DIRTY and COLD BREW collections inspired by local desserts, fruit stalls and childhood sweets. The drinks move between creamy textures, soft sweetness and rich coffee notes without tipping too aggressively into sugar overload. Expect playful nods to familiar Thai flavours alongside chilled combinations built specifically for Bangkok afternoons where walking outdoors starts to feel like a tactical error.

Now-May 31. All C.P.S. Coffee Roaster branches.

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  • Things to do
  • Rattanakosin

In ‘Echoes of Us’, Molticha Pongudompanya leans into uncertainty rather than resolution. Figures drift between recognition and disappearance, suspended somewhere between memory, reflection and physical presence. Layering and double exposure shape much of the work, with overlapping bodies and objects creating a sense of movement that never fully settles.

The surfaces carry just as much weight as the imagery itself. Rough brushstrokes soften into hazier textures, while scraped paint leaves behind traces that resemble dust, smoke or fading film negatives. 

May 10-31. Free entry. Joyman Gallery. 11am-6pm

  • Things to do
  • Bangkok Noi

Imprint Project gathers artists from Guatemala whose works carry a strong sense of place through intricate mark-making, texture and inherited symbolism. Hosted at Arun Amarin 23 Art Space, the show moves through daily rituals, spiritual references and fragments of memory without spelling everything out too neatly. The collaboration between ml3print studio and Santa Thekla Atelier de Grabado leaves room for interpretation, which suits the work better anyway. 

May 1-30. Free entry. Arun Amarin 23 Art Space. 11am-4pm

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  • Things to do
  • Yaowarat

Colour takes the lead in CHROMATIC: A Journey Through Neighborhood Color, a photography exhibition tracing people, culture and daily life across three central Bangkok districts: Song Wat, Pak Khlong Talat and Phahurat. Here, colour works as more than surface detail, linking identity, memory and place across each frame. The images capture movement across streets shaped by trade, vendors and long-standing routines, where community life unfolds in steady rhythm. Expect scenes that shift between quiet observation and busier moments, each grounded in everyday experience. The exhibition forms part of WALKK: Bangkok Re-Birth, a wider programme inviting visitors to trace stories shaped by time, changing ways of life and the city’s historic quarters.

Until May 31. Free. TAY Songwat. 9.30am-5.30pm

  • Things to do
  • Siam

First staged in Cheongju Craft Biennale, this group exhibition arrives in Bangkok following a debut as the Invited Country Pavilion in Cheongju, South Korea. The project grows from an ongoing exchange between Thailand and the Republic of Korea, setting craft alongside contemporary art across Southeast and East Asia. At its core sits ‘Elastic Time’, a curatorial thread that questions how time behaves across the region. Forget neat timelines. Here, past, present and future overlap, repeat and quietly reshape one another. The Cheongju edition sets the tone as a cross-cultural conversation, where material, process and memory carry equal weight. Artists approach craft not as something fixed, but as a way to consider what unfolds now, and what might come next.

Until August 16. Free. Jim Thompson Art Center. 10am-6pm

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  • Things to do
  • Siam

sits firmly in the category of places you keep having to return to. But this time, it feels different. The concept leans on the ocean after dark, when sunlight disappears and whole ecosystems carry on unseen. You wander through shifting light, sometimes above the waterline, sometimes beneath it, with bioluminescent creatures flickering softly around you. Details keep catching your eye. A neon wall answers your touch with imagined marine life. Seahorses glow under tinted light, rainforest corners bloom with luminous flora, and a quiet full moon hangs over goldfish. In the shark tunnel, silver ripples mimic night tides, while Gentoo penguins stand beneath drifting northern lights. Even the familiar route feels refreshed, with a small stamp trail guiding the way.

Until September 20. Starts at B449 via here. SEA LIFE Bangkok

  • Things to do

Bangkok does not always demand skyscraper gazing. Sometimes it hands you a pocket-sized booklet and suggests a long walk. The BAC Passport returns with its Winter Edition 2026, turning the city into a living sketchbook where each stamp is an achievement. You pick up the passport, roam between art spaces, collect marks and trade them for souvenirs created by actual artists. It plays out like a cultural scavenger hunt, only with better stories to tell afterwards. This season gathers 27 destinations and splits them across four routes, from Old Town corners to riverbank hideouts. Pick up your passport at one of seven locations, including Ratchadamnoen Contemporary Art Center, Bangkok City Library, Chula Museum, River City Bangkok, Princess Galyani Vadhana Institute of Music, Asvin or Numthong Art Space. You have until May 31 to complete the journey.

 Until May 31. Free. Art spaces across Bangkok.

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