He 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

Senior Staff Writer, Time Out Thailand

Follow Kaweewat Siwanartwong:

Articles (105)

The best things to do in Bangkok this May

The best things to do in Bangkok this May

We've hit month five now, and yes, May marks the start of rainy season. But rain or shine, events don't wait around. Plans roll on regardless, and this month's looking pretty packed. Bangkok Pride Festival leads the charge with its city-spanning parade and proper programme, joined by Drag Bangkok Festival and Thailand's Drag Star. Coffee gets equal billing as World of Coffee Bangkok lands alongside Thailand AeroPress Championship, bringing brewers, baristas and plenty of caffeine-fuelled buzz. The music lineup's strong this month. Kraftwerk rocks up with a full multimedia show, whilst Hanumankind stops by on his Asia tour. Reggae gets its moment through Reggae Rumble Thailand Tour, and J.I.D delivers sharp lyricism on the God Does Like World Tour. Then Laufey adds a gentler touch with her Bangkok date. Away from the stage, the annual Neilson Hays Library Book Sale offers a slower pace – shelves of secondhand finds inside one of the city's most elegant buildings. Keeping track of what's coming? Our Bangkok’s top concert roundup for 2026 stays updated with the latest gigs worth marking in your diary. Stay one step ahead and map out your plans with our round-up of the best things to do in Bangkok. Subscribe to our free Time Out Bangkok newsletter and get the very best of the city delivered straight to your inbox.
The best things to do in Bangkok weekend (May 7-10)

The best things to do in Bangkok weekend (May 7-10)

The long holiday finally winds down, and the first bursts of rain make Bangkok feel slightly more breathable. Evenings open up just enough to justify staying out, which works out well because the city packs the weekend with art, music, screenings and a few stranger detours worth building a night around. Start riverside at Asiatique The Riverfront Destination, where Better World Better Future turns climate anxiety into something unexpectedly immersive through multisensory tech and a genuinely disorienting 9D cinema. In Ari, Bar Lookkrung Ari leans fully into luk krung nostalgia with satin-smooth classics and fruit-led cocktails, while Bangkok Kunsthalle hosts the final Disco Hut residency with Spencer Sweeney and Tawan Wattuya spinning Thai funk and deep-cut selections pulled from personal crates. Later in the evening, Chula Museum shifts into night-market mode with student-made finds and a one-night Sea-nema screening focused on ocean change, while film fans can catch Sakar Pant’s Hijo Aja Ka Kura at TK Park as part of the Contemporary World Film Series.LHONG 1919 rolls out free outdoor screenings under glowing lanterns across three nights. And then there's the big one: Kraftwerk arrive in Bangkok with their Multimedia Tour, where visuals, sequencing and machine-precise sound design lock together so tightly it barely feels human. In the best possible way. 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. Su
Art exhibitions this May

Art exhibitions this May

May lands, rain follows, and Bangkok shifts gear. Showers start to roll through, parks turn lush, and the city picks up a quieter kind of energy. Staying in sounds tempting, but galleries aren't having it. Doors stay open, lights stay on, and new exhibitions keep popping up across town. This month's properly busy without trying too hard. Spaces fill with fresh work, each show offering something different – reflective painting here, more experimental setups there. You can dip between them over a few afternoons, ducking out of the rain when you need to, then heading back out once it clears. Not sure where to start? A handful of exhibitions are worth your time right now, each for different reasons. Keep an eye on listings too, as new openings turn up steadily. Consider it a decent excuse to step outside, even when the weather's telling you otherwise. 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 May. 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 best value hotels for under B10,000 a night

Bangkok’s best value hotels for under B10,000 a night

Want the luxury experience without the eye-watering price tag typical of 5-star hotels in major cities around the globe? Bangkok is home to some of the world’s leading hospitality brands offering levels of service perhaps unmatched elsewhere. But here’s the twist: Bangkok is also incredibly great value for money. Joining the ranks among Time Out’s best cities list, seasoned travellers will be quick to notice that it stands out for being one of the best places to visit in the world at far less than you might expect to pay elsewhere. So we set ourselves a challenge: find the best hotels in Bangkok where a night typically costs B10,000 or less, but the experience feels far beyond the room rate. In places like London, New York or Paris, this price point might barely get you a decent boutique room, but here that same budget unlocks a very different level of hospitality.  Sprawling suites, river views, award-winning dining, museums, galleries and parks all within arms reach – the options are vast but our criteria are simple: exceptional rooms that feel more luxurious than the rate suggests and something you can brag about when you get back home. So, whether you’re visiting the city or planning a blowout staycation, these hotels prove that Bangkok might just be the best place in the world to experience a city stay without that eye-watering check-out bill.  
Four flea markets right now

Four flea markets right now

What’s your weekend looking like? Club nights, bar-hopping or a slow wander through a flea market?  If the latter sounds more your speed, you’re in luck. Four flea markets are on the horizon, each bringing its own mix of vintage finds, handmade pieces and low-key people-watching. Here’s the breakdown of what’s coming and where you’ll want to be.
Julian Marley is set to perform in Bangkok this May

Julian Marley is set to perform in Bangkok this May

This will be the first time a Marley heir has performed alongside Thailand's top reggae artists, which is pretty monumental when you think about it. Julian Marley, the son of Bob Marley himself has linked up with The Uprising for what’s shaping up to be a milestone gig. He and Alexx Antaeus just scored a Grammy nomination for Best Remixed Recording with their amapiano take on ‘Jah Sees Them’. When he talks about dabbling in different genres, he makes it sound completely natural, like it's just part of the journey. And his father's influence? Still there, always present, guiding everything he does. It's not just Julian Marley taking the spotlight. You've got some Thai reggae legends on this bill too. JOB2DO are there with all the tracks everyone knows and loves, doing what they do best with that easy, laidback feel. Malaiman Downtown bring their own unmistakable  flavour, and then there's INJA, who basically shows up to set the whole place on fire. Jamaican reggae heritage meets Thailand's homegrown talent, all on one stage. If you plan to go, here’s what you need to know before the night starts. When is Julian Marley performing in Bangkok? Julian Marley is set to play a one-night-only live show in Bangkok on Friday 22 May. Where is Julian Marley performing in Bangkok? Julian Marley brings his signature sound to the stage at UOB LIVE, located within Bangkok’s EM District and perched atop the Emsphere. The venue can host up to 6,000 guests, accommodating concerts, entertainment
Art exhibitions this April

Art exhibitions this April

Summer lands in Bangkok’ April with a bit of force, and it has everyone hunting for shade come mid-afternoon. Parks and gardens start looking fuller and greener, though the real action's happening indoors – galleries are filling up with fresh exhibitions just as Songkran creeps closer. The city feels busier without being louder, just more switched on to what's about. Ditching the aircon at home suddenly makes proper sense. Most galleries give you somewhere cooler to breathe, and something decent to look at that isn't glowing at you from a screen. Drifting from one space to another becomes a bit of a routine. Not sure where to kick off? A few exhibitions are standing out across the city right now, each with its own rhythm and point of view. It's worth popping back regularly since new shows crop up steadily, giving you yet another excuse to get outside even when the heat's doing its best to keep you in. 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 April. 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.
Watch free Italian films at House Samyan this April

Watch free Italian films at House Samyan this April

The Italian film industry doesn't do subtle. It rocks up like a Fellini fever dream – all sweeping gestures, crumbling palazzos and someone in outsize sunglasses chain-smoking whilst quoting Sartre. But occasionally it loosens the collar, ditches the silk scarf and lets a few fresh voices slip through. MovieMov – Italian Film Festival is one of those moments. Running April 21-24 at House Samyan, with English and Thai subtitles, the lineup brings just enough introspective angst to properly derail any plans for easy viewing. These aren't your standard arthouse exports either. The festival grows from initiatives involving students, young professionals and local institutions.
The best things to do in Bangkok this April

The best things to do in Bangkok this April

It's probably not time to ditch the AC just yet, but April is still the month where you can wave goodbye to the old year in the Thai calendar without shedding a tear. Thai New Year is here, which means the city starts to properly wake up – parks get busier, restaurant tables spill out onto pavements, and suddenly there's a flood of festivals and events worth getting excited about. Summer is long here, and with it comes Songkran, the festival everyone's been waiting for. Bangkokians are more than ready to make a celebratory splash, and that long holiday? Perfect timing to explore the city's stunning parks, museums, galleries and – let's be honest – its night life scene. Things are hotting up now, so it's time to shake off that winter hibernation and get stuck into what Bangkok does best: fantastic green spaces, world-class museums and galleries, plus restaurant and bar offerings that are genuinely unbeatable. There's loads happening this month, and we've rounded up some of the best bits to help you make the most of it. Trust us, you won't want to spend April indoors. Stay one step ahead and map out your plans with our round-up of the best things to do in Bangkok. Subscribe to our free Time Out Bangkok newsletter and get the very best of the city delivered straight to your inbox.
Bangkok’s best music venues and live houses

Bangkok’s best music venues and live houses

2026 makes one thing obvious: Thailand’s music scene sits at an all-time high. Big concerts get announced months, sometimes a year, ahead. Artists keep releasing new albums without pause. Across Bangkok, the livehouse scene steadily spreads, pulling more people out on weeknights. Music culture right now looks lively, busy and hard to ignore.  What makes today’s livehouses stick is their intimacy, a rarity in large concert halls. You stand just a few steps from your favourite artists and catch every move on stage up close. The atmosphere stays relaxed and open. Come alone, bring a date, or gather a group of friends, it all works. Many venues sit within easy reach of BTS or MRT, and ticket prices stay friendly enough not to sting. Live music, suddenly, feels far more within reach. So here’s the plan. Time Out lines up 15 venues and livehouses across Bangkok, from cosy indie spots to full-production stages. Get your ears ready and start ticking them off – your next favourite band waits somewhere on this list. RECOMMEND: Bangkok’s top concerts of 2026
Bangkok’s top 29 concerts of 2026

Bangkok’s top 29 concerts of 2026

We keep this article updated regularly to make sure everything stays accurate and current, pop back anytime for the latest. 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
7 Chiang Mai restaurants worth the journey north

7 Chiang Mai restaurants worth the journey north

Bangkok doesn't really do slow. The city runs hot – always another plate to try, another bar to find, another corner of the night to chase down. Sometimes you just need out. Not far, but far enough: somewhere the air is cooler, the pace drops and the view stretches past concrete and neon. Chiang Mai answers that call. Head north and the landscape shifts, mountains roll in, the Ping River winds through and centuries of Northern Thai culture sit quietly on every corner. The food up here has its own character too: bold, rooted and built on recipes that haven't needed fixing. This guide is put together by the Koktail Thailand Restaurant Guide, spotlighting restaurants where mountain panoramas and riverside vistas do more than set the scene – they're part of the meal itself. Local ingredients take centre stage, each dish a small piece of the larger story that Northern Thailand has been telling for a very long time. RECOMMEND: Best egg noodles in Bangkok Bangkok’s top 13 steakhouses Confessions of a Bangkok food voyeur

Listings and reviews (1599)

Drift down to LHONG 1919 for three free riverside nights of back-to-back films

Drift down to LHONG 1919 for three free riverside nights of back-to-back films

Few Bangkok evenings settle in quite as nicely as this. LHONG 1919 marks the birthday of the Mazu Goddess with three nights of free open-air screenings beside the Chao Phraya, where lanterns glow against old wooden facades and boats drift slowly past in the background. From 6pm onwards, two films screen back-to-back each night, giving people plenty of reason to linger in the courtyard with a drink. The line-up swings comfortably between blockbusters and local favourites: Superman and Mufasa: The Lion King on May 9, Jurassic World and Panda Plan on May 10, then Thai crowd-pleaser Nak Loves Mak Sooo Much! paired with The Stone on May 11. Easy, sociable, and worth building an evening around. May 9-11. Free entry. LHONG 1919. 6pm onwards
Speed-date your way through ten rounds and an unreleased Shake Shack burger

Speed-date your way through ten rounds and an unreleased Shake Shack burger

Dating apps take the night off for this one. OMG Matchmaking teams up with Shake Shack for an evening of speed dating paired with an early taste of a burger that has not officially landed on the menu yet.  Around 60 carefully selected singles rotate through more than ten quick-fire conversations, keeping things moving fast enough to dodge awkward pauses. The atmosphere leans more dinner party than networking event, with separate Thai and international group options keeping conversations easy-going rather than painfully forced. The burgers probably help too.  May 9. B1,099 via here. Shake Shack, One Bangkok. 6pm-9pm
Catch TK Park's 2026 film series opener with a sharp Nepalese family comedy

Catch TK Park's 2026 film series opener with a sharp Nepalese family comedy

TK Park kicks off its 2026 Contemporary World Film Series with a Nepalese hit already drawing strong word-of-mouth. Produced by Pant Productions, the film pulls together familiar faces from Nepal’s screen industry, led by veteran actor Santosh Pant alongside his son Sakar Pant, who directs. The story follows four families navigating migration, marriage pressure and the strange emotional maths of children leaving home for opportunities abroad. Humour lands dry and quick, musical moments keep things moving, and the family tension feels recognisable even when the setting shifts. Nepalese ambassador Dhan Bahadur Oli opens the screening before the series officially gets underway. May 9. Free entry. Reserve via filmforum17@gmail.com. TK Park. 3.30pm
Slip into Chula Museum after dark for its free Night Museum Market

Slip into Chula Museum after dark for its free Night Museum Market

Chula Museum stays open late for one of those low-key after-dark events that tends to pull a surprisingly mixed crowd. Galleries remain open with student-made keepsakes and small-batch finds spread through the space, making it dangerously easy to leave carrying more than planned. The night’s main draw land with Sea-nema Experience, a one-night immersive screening threading together environmental science, contemporary visuals and interactive storytelling around warming oceans and coral reef decline. Food stalls keep the energy up while Bangkok Ratri settles into an easy live set in the background.  May 8. Free entry. Chula Museum. 3pm-9pm
Stumble into Raider's debut at Chim Chim, where his wide-eyed Scoop figures linger long after you leave

Stumble into Raider's debut at Chim Chim, where his wide-eyed Scoop figures linger long after you leave

A new name lands in Bangkok carrying a suitcase full of characters. Raider makes his city debut at Chim Chim with The Guest That Never Left, an exhibition shaped by travel memories and the kind of fleeting encounters that somehow stick. At the centre sit his ‘Scoop’ figures – wide-eyed, slightly uncanny and immediately recognisable  – hovering somewhere between collectible toy and gallery piece. Each one feels loaded with its own quiet backstory, which is probably why they stay in your head longer than expected.  May 7 onwards. Free entry. Chim Chim, Siam@Siam Design Hotel Bangkok. 7pm-11pm
Lose yourself in Guatemala's layered ink-and-belief worlds

Lose yourself in Guatemala's layered ink-and-belief worlds

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
Catch Spencer Sweeney's final Disco Hut residency

Catch Spencer Sweeney's final Disco Hut residency

Bangkok Kunsthalle closes out Disco Hut with a softer kind of finale. Spencer Sweeney returns to the decks with selections pulled from his own shelves – loose, personal, and gloriously unconcerned with what an algorithm might recommend. Tawan Wattuya joins him for a run through 70s Thai funk, all warm basslines and sly rhythm changes. The temporary booth shifts away from full-throttle club energy and settles into something slower, stranger and more communal. People drift in, stay longer than expected and let the records take over.  May 7. Free entry. Bangkok Kunsthalle. 7pm-11pm
River Flows in You

River Flows in You

Kan Limsathaporn takes River Flows in You by Yiruma as a starting point, letting its familiar melody settle across a series of landscapes shaped by water. Rivers and streams stretch across the canvases, never fixed, always shifting, as if the scene refuses to stay the same for long. Each painting holds a small pause, though nothing truly stops. Colour drifts, edges soften, and time slips past almost unnoticed.  Until April 16. Free. M Floor, Maison Hotel Bangkok, 10am-8pm
Absurd Discovery

Absurd Discovery

Colour takes charge in this punchy crossover show by Hugo Brun, where contemporary art meets furniture with a confident shrug. Chairs, tables and sculptural pieces arrive in vivid contrasts, each one pushing against expectation without losing its sense of play. Brun draws from both city life and the natural world, pairing organic forms with sharper, urban lines. Materials shift from smooth to textured, polished to raw, often within the same piece. The result sits somewhere between functional object and statement artwork, refusing to settle neatly in either camp. It’s bold without shouting, inventive without trying too hard, and just the right amount of unexpected. Until June 29. Free. G/F, Siam Discovery. 10am-8pm
Blind Spots: Panels, Paravents and Screens

Blind Spots: Panels, Paravents and Screens

Distance does the talking in this quietly considered show by Apichaya Wannakit, curated by Stefano Rabolli Pansera. Developed in part during a residency at Palazzo Monti, the paintings read as self-portraits with a twist. Not likeness, not direct observation, but what lingers after – fragments of memory, softened impressions, traces that refuse to settle. A series of paravents anchors the presentation. These folding screens act as both barrier and stage, concealing as much as they reveal. You catch glimpses, then lose them again. Image slips between surface and structure, never fully fixed. Until May 31. Free. Bangkok Kunsthalle. 2pm-8pm
Description Without Place

Description Without Place

A white room, stripped back to essentials, sets the tone at Bangkok Kunsthalle. Description Without Place brings the work of Absalon to Asia for the first time, gathering all six of his Cells in one space. These compact, geometric structures read less like architecture and more like propositions: how little do you need to live, and what does that say about who you are? Absalon treats ‘home’ as a condition rather than an address. Each unit offers a tightly controlled environment, designed for solitude, discipline and clarity. No excess, no distraction, just the bare framework of daily existence. Comfort slips, routine sharpens, and the question lingers long after you leave: what actually makes a place yours? Until May 31. Free. Bangkok Kunsthalle. 2pm-8pm
Some

Some

Small moments stack up in Some, the debut solo by Sayaporn Apornthip. Detailed paintings gather people, animals, objects and passing scenes, each one caught mid-thought or mid-action. The title does the heavy lifting: ‘some’ as fragments, ‘sum’ as what happens when they collect. A glance, a pause, a half-forgotten afternoon – all filed together as memory. Sayaporn treats everyday life with care, giving equal weight to the ordinary and the quietly significant. Nothing shouts for attention, yet everything holds it. It’s a gentle reminder that meaning isn’t fixed. At times life adds up neatly, at others it drifts. Either way, these small records stay, offering a moment to slow down and take stock. Until May 28. Free. 6060 Arts Space (white building). midday- 8pm

News (371)

The Weeknd confirms After Hours Til Dawn tour stop in Bangkok this October

The Weeknd confirms After Hours Til Dawn tour stop in Bangkok this October

Bangkok's The Weeknd fans can finally unclench. After weeks of whispers and wishful thinking, Abel Tesfaye confirms the real thing: a full-scale Bangkok date lands at Rajamangala Stadium on October 11. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Abel (@theweeknd) The show doubles as a victory lap for a trilogy that reshapes his world over the past few years, threading together After Hours, Dawn FM and the newly released Hurry Up Tomorrow. Expect a setlist that moves between eras without slowing down, stacking chart-toppers alongside deeper cuts that reward long-time listeners. Photograph: Kevin Mazur This return arrives on a much larger scale. His previous Bangkok stop kept things contained within an arena, but this time the production expands across a stadium, bringing cinematic visuals, towering staging and tightly choreographed lighting that match the darker, more stylised tone he's been working with lately. Bangkok sits within a wider Asia run too, with dates scheduled across Japan, Singapore, Indonesia, Hong Kong, Malaysia and South Korea – putting the city firmly back on the global touring circuit. Photograph: Hiroya Brian Support comes from Creepy Nuts, the duo behind viral track ‘Bling-Bang-Bang-Born’, joining most of the regional shows. Ticket details follow soon via Live Nation Tero. Presales begin May 18 for fan club members, May 19 for VISA cardholders and May 20 through the promoter, with general sale opening May 21. If you plan on going,
Run for free massages and more with these five campaigns

Run for free massages and more with these five campaigns

Right now, a growing number of Bangkok runners are chasing something far more persuasive: a free massage, an onsen soak or a glowing complexion. The city's quietly turned kilometres into currency, with brands swapping step counts for rewards that land somewhere between indulgence and discipline. Momentum, after all, rarely arrives with a grand gesture. It starts small. A few thousand steps. Besides getting your body moving, these campaigns also give you small goals that can motivate you to be a little more active. If you're looking for inspiration to start exercising again, these campaigns are a great place to begin. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Yunomori Onsen & Spa (@yunomori_onsen) Run your way to a soak at Yunomori Onsen & Spa A long day ends better in hot water. Yunomori's step-based rewards make that post-run ritual easier to justify. Clock 6,000 steps and the onsen pass drops by 20 percent. Double it to 12,000 and you're looking at a buy-one-get-one situation. Hit 20,000 and the soak comes free, which feels like the universe quietly applauding your effort. Campaign runs until May 29. If heat therapy isn't enough, hands-on relief waits nearby. View this post on Instagram A post shared by The Healing House Clinic (@thehealinghouseclinic) Trade distance for downtime at The Healing House Clinic Five kilometres earns a 30-minute neck, shoulder and back massage – the exact areas that complain first after a run. Regular runn
M Studio brings Thai films to Cannes 2026 with werebeasts, sorcery and bold scale

M Studio brings Thai films to Cannes 2026 with werebeasts, sorcery and bold scale

Another milestone lands, and this one carries a certain national pride. This year, M Studio rocks up to the Cannes Film Festival 2026 with a confident stride, setting up shop at the Marché du Film – the industry's busiest trading floor. Not just a showcase, more a statement: Thai filmmaking stands ready for a bigger conversation. Photograph: Death Whisperer Photograph: The Confession of a Sorcerer The lineup helps make the case. Death Whisperer: Saming The Werebeast leads with scale and bite, expanding a familiar horror universe while sharpening its visual ambition. Folklore with muscle, backed by effects that hold their own against global heavyweights. Alongside it, The Confession of a Sorcerer takes a quieter, more psychological route. Adapted from The Ghost Radio, it threads mysticism through questions of morality, trading spectacle for tension that lingers. Photograph: M Studio Elsewhere, the slate stretches in all directions. GOD SKIN fuses fantasy with underground boxing, layering tattoo technology over bone-crunching action. Then comes The Last Bliss, Exchange and Khong Khaek 2, each adding a different flavour – from introspective drama to genre-driven storytelling aimed squarely at younger viewers with global tastes. Behind the push stands Surachet Asvaroenganan, steering M Studio's international charge with clear intent. This trip isn't about ticking a festival box. It's about presence, positioning and proving range. Thai cinema has long travelled well across t
Coffee takes over BITEC this weekend with tastings, talks and global roasters

Coffee takes over BITEC this weekend with tastings, talks and global roasters

Coffee runs the show for most of us, dictating mornings, meetings and mid-afternoon survival. So let's treat the addiction. World of Coffee Bangkok 2026 lands at Bangkok International Trade and Exhibition Centre from May 7-9, pulling together more than 400 brands from 40 countries and placing Thailand firmly on the map as ASEAN's coffee capital. Photograph: World of Coffee Asia The headline act? The World Cup Tasters Championship, where elite tasters size up flavour profiles at speed, chasing the 2026 title with near-surgical precision. Not far off, Roaster Village lines up an international roster of coffee makers, pouring everything from award-winners to hard-to-find beans that rarely leave their origin. Producer Village, supported by SCATH, shifts the focus closer to home, spotlighting Thai farmers and the craft behind each cup. Photograph: World of Coffee Asia Pick your own caffeine adventure. Cupping Rooms offer structured tastings for anyone keen to sharpen their palate. The SCA Lecture Series brings in industry insiders to unpack trends and techniques without drowning you in jargon. The Community Lounge keeps conversation flowing, while the Brew Bar hands things over to World Coffee Championships winners, each serving precise, competition-level brews using beans sourced across the globe. Doors open 10am-6pm, with an earlier 5pm close on the final day. Tickets via here, come in at B500 for a single day or B1,000 for the full run.
Pak Khlong Talat gets a three-day art takeover this weekend

Pak Khlong Talat gets a three-day art takeover this weekend

Anyone still thinking of Pak Khlong Talat purely as a place for jasmine runs and armfuls of marigolds probably has not wandered through lately. This weekend, Bangkok Art Walk returns to the historic flower market, folding street-side exhibitions, live performances and creative pop-ups into the district’s already chaotic rhythm. View this post on Instagram A post shared by L’On bangkok (@l.onbangkok) More than 30 Thai and international artists spread across the market's winding riverside lanes, turning flower-filled walkways into a shifting mix of paintings, photography and installations while live music drifts through the stalls after dark. You come for orchids or roses, then somehow end up lingering over handmade crafts, chatting with artists or photographing corners of the market you normally rush straight past. Photograph: owen.cassette_1960 Pak Klong Talad already ranks among Bangkok's most visually rewarding neighbourhoods once evening hits and the pavements start overflowing with petals, neon signs and delivery carts weaving through tight alleys. Bangkok Art Walk simply layers something new into that atmosphere without sanding away the market's everyday charm. The event gives people an excuse to slow down and actually look around rather than power-walking through with an armful of flowers. Alongside the exhibitions, expect workshops, small craft stalls and easygoing pop-ups scattered throughout the area, making it very easy to lose an unhurried after
Cooking up Crucial Connectivity

Cooking up Crucial Connectivity

The annual trade show for the region’s F&B industry is back in Bangkok with a bang this year. Marking the largest edition to date, THAIFEX – ANUGA Asia 2026 runs from May 26-30 at IMPACT Muang Thong Thani and comes at a time when sourcing decisions across the industry are becoming more critical and more time-sensitive. Across Asia-Pacific, as supply chains struggle to adjust to ever-changing geopolitical developments, buyers have less room for error and decisions made earlier are carrying greater impact. Hence the importance of THAIFEX – ANUGA Asia 2026, which brings together 3,300+ exhibitors from 60+ countries and regions and over 88,000 trade visitors from 140 markets, to create one of the region’s largest points of interaction between buyers and suppliers. Photograph: Koelnmesse Pte Ltd / THAIFEX – Anuga Asia Expect a showcase of ideas as products with 11 trend zones spanning alternative foods, clean label, Halal, organic and curated innovation showcases. Key programmed events include new-to-market reviews of products before they hit the shelves at scale, numerous curated tastings, and THAIFEX – ANUGA Startup, a platform for early-stage F&B ventures to pitch and exhibit live to investors and buyers. The event also sees the 12th staging of the Thailand Ultimate Chef Challenge contested by more than 400 professional and junior chefs from Asia.
Ratchada Train Night Market returns with free live music

Ratchada Train Night Market returns with free live music

After reopening in March at its original home behind Esplanade Ratchadaphisek, RatchadaTrain Night Market wastes little time in slipping back into full late-night chaos. The sprawling bazaar celebrates its return with three nights of free live music, pulling together indie favourites, luk thung legends and molam crews alongside the vintage stalls, smoky grills and ice-cold beers people come for anyway. Photograph: Train night market Ratchada Running from May 15-17, the lineup jumps comfortably between genres without trying too hard to smooth the edges out.. May 15 leans dreamy with guitar-pop outfitLandokmai before Mirrr takes over later in the night. On May 16 luk thung icon Arpaporn ‘Hi’ Nakhonsawan joins Paradise Bangkok for a mix of country anthems and hypnotic molam grooves that feels built for warm Bangkok nights. May 17 closes things out with sets from Yented and Fellow Fellow. Even without the concerts, covering the entire market in one visit is ambitious.Somewhere between the vintage rails, lifestyle shops and endless street food stalls, most people lose track of time anyway. Add live music echoing through the alleys and leaving before midnight suddenly feels unrealistic. At Train Night Market Ratchada, May 15-17, 5pm-1am. Free entry
Bangkok is finally gets its first official Pokémon Center

Bangkok is finally gets its first official Pokémon Center

Bangkok, I choose you! The Pokémon obsession is about to get considerably more serious. After years of side-eyeing Singapore and Taipei, Thailand finally lands its own official Pokémon Center – and not just any branch either. Later this year, CentralWorld becomes home to the first Pokémon Center Bangkok, which also claims the title of the largest Pokémon Center outside Japan. Photograph: Pokémon Pickup Japan For anyone who grew up memorising Pokédex numbers faster than maths formulas, the concept already needs little introduction. Pokémon Center serves as the gathering spot for Trainers of every generation, recreated straight from the anime and games with the kind of detail that makes longtime fans immediately lose composure.  The shop stocks the full spectrum of official goods: trading cards, plush toys, gachapon, art toys, stationery, homeware and souvenirs that somehow convince you that yes, you absolutely need a Snorlax cushion. Exclusive Thailand-only items also seem highly likely, judging by previous overseas branches. Photograph: Pokémon Center Beyond the shopping bags, though, sits the real draw. Pokémon Center Bangkok plans regular community events, card-trading sessions and competitive tournaments tied to the global Pokémon Trading Card Game circuit. Casual fans may turn up for nostalgia, while serious players will be dusting off their decks immediately. Bangkok's Trainers better start shuffling again. Between the tournaments, trading sessions and shelves packed
Pedal-powered water cycling trail is free to try ’til May 15

Pedal-powered water cycling trail is free to try ’til May 15

Activity lovers shouldn't miss 'water cycling' by Punklong – a fresh addition that's shaping up to be a standout along Bang Luang Canal. Trade pavements for pedals and watch Bangkok shift pace as you move along the water, passing timber houses that sit close to the canal's edge. Locals go about their day just a few metres away, giving the whole route a quietly intimate character. Photograph: punklong2026 The journey offers more than calm scenery. Boats drift past with trays of grilled bites and desserts, sending out aromas that make a quick stop feel almost necessary. Fish gather beneath you, ready for a handful of feed, adding a playful pause along the way. Then comes the highlight: a sprawling banyan tree, well over a century old, stretching across the canal to form a shaded green passage that takes the edge off the midday heat. Each boat runs on pedal power alone, keeping things clean and pleasantly quiet while doubling as light exercise. It suits anyone after a low-key outing that still packs a bit of discovery. Looking for a weekend plan that stays close to home yet manages to feel properly different? This one does the job.  Free trial rides run until May 15, with regular pricing to follow. Boats operate daily from 10am-6pm, and updates land on Punklong's Facebook page.
Bangkok waits as The Weeknd hints at a possible return

Bangkok waits as The Weeknd hints at a possible return

A cryptic caption lands online and suddenly Bangkok starts refreshing timelines like it's a competitive sport. Over on Live Nation Tero, a slick tour clip for The Weeknd appears with the teasing line, ‘A Foreshadowing of The Final Leg.’ Not quite a confirmation, not quite nothing either. You get the picture. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Live Nation Tero (@livenationth) Cast your mind back to 2018, when he last took over IMPACT Arena for The Weeknd Asia Tour Live in Bangkok. Eight years on, a return starts to sound less like wishful thinking and more like unfinished business. The real question shifts quickly: if he does land, where hosts a show of that scale this time? For now, the itinerary points west. After Hours Til Dawn Tour runs across Europe from June through early September 2026, with Playboi Carti joining as special guest. Stadium-sized production, a setlist stacked with late-night anthems and that unmistakable voice cutting through it all. Photograph: theweeknd Asia dates? Still under wraps, which only sharpens the speculation. Group chats light up, fan accounts dissect every hint and Bangkok waits, equal parts hopeful and impatient. Already planning the outfit? Fair enough. Can’t wait to hear big tunes at full volume? Keep your eyes on updates here or via Live Nation Tero.
This new Emporium market skips resellers and lets owners tell the tale

This new Emporium market skips resellers and lets owners tell the tale

In a city obsessed with the new, something quietly sentimental sets up shop above the mall floor. Pre-Loved Market makes a case for objects with history – the scuffed chair, the dress that's seen a few good nights. Held at Emporium, inside Friend Friend, this recurring weekend series is organised by Vintage Agent, a name already known among those who favour character over polish. But this isn't your usual secondhand sprawl. Sellers aren't traders working margins – they're the original owners. You get anecdotes, a bit of nostalgia and the occasional reluctance to let go. Photograph: vintageagentbkk It all kicks off May 9-10 with Reunion – Shared Together, a gentle starting point where personal treasures change hands. June 13-14 follows with Personal Expression – Wear it. Live it. Own it., bringing racks that say more than any trend report. July 11-12 picks up pace through Active Life, while August 8-9 softens everything again with Mom – Everyday love, a quietly emotional edit of daily essentials. By September 12-13, Wellness – Wish You Well gathers items centred on care, before October 10-11 wraps things up with Festive Memory, a collection of keepsakes and gifts ready for their next chapter. It runs every second Saturday and Sunday from May to October, 10am to 8pm. Entry costs nothing, but chances are you leave with something. If not a purchase, then at least a story you didn't arrive with.
Here's your Skyline Film rooftop programme for May

Here's your Skyline Film rooftop programme for May

Early May deserves something slower. Swap packed bars for a glasshouse screening where greenery frames the screen and evening air does half the work. For three nights (May 1-3), SAMA Garden teams up with Skyline Film for a small run of open-air films, set within a leafy structure at BITEC BURI.  Another nice touch: pets are welcome. Dogs curl up by your feet, cats in carriers settle beside you, and nobody minds. It's low-key, a little whimsical and just the right kind of sociable.  Late May brings a change of scene for anyone bored of sofa screenings. Up on the rooftop at River City Bangkok, eight films roll out across three nights from May 21-23, each with its own mood and genre, all set against the slow shimmer of the Chao Phraya.  Have a look at what's showing and see if anything grabs you. Here's what's screening across the weekend: Friday May 1 Photograph: Fox Searchlight Pictures 500 Days of Summer – 5.30 pm (screening starts at 6.15pm) Tom meets Summer, and what begins as a bright, easy connection slowly fractures through a mosaic of memories. The story skips backwards and forwards, tracing the gap between expectation and reality. Sweet, awkward, quietly devastating. Growth rarely arrives neatly, and this one doesn't pretend otherwise. Photograph: GTH Bangkok Traffic (Love) Story – 8.15pm (screening starts at 8.45pm) Mei Li hits 30 and watches romance slip further out of reach. Then comes Loong, a BTS engineer who brings a flicker of possibility to her routine. The