Thailand's lush eastern province · home to the country's largest cathedral · a 300-year riverside old town · a world-famous gem-trading market · waterfalls and a misty mountain pilgrimage peak · and the kingdom's sweetest tropical fruit
About 245 km east of Bangkok near the Cambodian border, Chanthaburi is a green, river-fed province famous for tropical fruit and precious gems. Its 300-year riverside old town is lined with Sino-Portuguese shophouses and faces Thailand's largest cathedral across a footbridge; the city's gem market still draws traders from around the world. Just beyond town lie waterfalls, a misty pilgrimage mountain and quiet beaches — and in season, the orchards drip with durian, rambutan and mangosteen. Uncrowded, affordable and deeply local, it's one of the East's most rewarding slow-travel stops.
Chanthaburi is small and easy to get around. Most visitors base themselves in one of four areas — the riverside Old Town, the central city and gem-market zone, near the bus terminal, or out by the beaches and orchards. Pick the one that matches what you came for.
The 300-year heart along the Chanthaburi River — Sino-Portuguese shophouses, cafés, guesthouses and the footbridge to the cathedral. Everything is walkable and deeply atmospheric.
The lively commercial core around Si Chan Road's gem market — hotels, restaurants, banks and shops. The most convenient base, with the weekend gem trade right on your doorstep.
The newer district around the bus terminal and main roads — resorts with pools, big-name value hotels and easy parking. Handy for road-trippers and anyone arriving by bus.
The coastal and rural fringe south of town — quiet beaches, seafood, fruit orchards and breezy resorts. A relaxed base if you have a car and came for nature over nightlife.
Selected for their handy locations across the city centre, the riverside Old Town and the resort fringe — from poolside resorts to riverside boutiques. Compare prices across 3 booking platforms in one click.
Chanthaburi's best-known resort — leafy grounds, large pools, tennis courts and spacious rooms, a short drive from the city centre and the bus terminal.
The city's main full-service hotel — a rooftop pool, big breakfast and comfortable rooms right in the centre, walking distance to the gem market and shops.
A stylish, modern hotel with a striking pool and contemporary rooms just outside the centre — great value and a favourite with couples and road-trippers.
A calm riverside boutique resort wrapped in greenery, with a pool and easy access to the old town — a peaceful retreat close to the water.
A large riverside hotel with a pool, spa and restaurant overlooking the Chanthaburi River — comfortable rooms and sunset views a short hop from the centre.
A charming little riverside guesthouse right in the old town — clean, friendly and walkable to the cathedral footbridge, with the best location for the money.
Found your ideal neighbourhood? Compare prices from three leading booking platforms — Chanthaburi has great-value stays in every district, from old-town guesthouses to riverside resorts.
Chanthaburi gave Thailand its famous "sen chan" rice noodles, and its kitchens lean on fresh seafood, wild herbs and the province's legendary fruit. From crab noodles to durian, here is what you absolutely cannot miss.
Chanthaburi's signature dish — the province's famous thin "sen chan" rice noodles stir-fried with fresh crab meat, egg and bean sprouts. The very same noodle made world-famous by pad thai, here served the local way with crab.
Signature DishThe province's most beloved home dish — pork belly slow-stewed with the sour young leaves of the local chamuang tree, sweet, tangy and rich. You'll find it almost nowhere else in Thailand.
Eastern ClassicWith a long Gulf coastline, Chanthaburi serves superb, well-priced seafood — blue crab, blood cockles, mantis shrimp and grilled fish at riverside and beachfront restaurants. Don't miss the local fish sauce and shrimp paste.
Coastal PlentyChanthaburi is Thailand's durian capital — the orchards here grow much of the world's supply. In season (roughly April–June) try creamy Monthong or prized Kan Yao fresh from the source, plus durian chips and sticky rice.
King of FruitAlongside durian, the orchards burst with mangosteen — the cool, sweet "queen of fruit" — plus rambutan, longkong and salak. Buy them by the kilo at roadside stalls and fruit buffets across the province in season.
Orchard FruitSticky rice with coconut and beans roasted in bamboo (khao lam) is a Chanthaburi roadside icon. In the old town, hunt down traditional Thai-Chinese sweets, mango sticky rice and homemade ice cream in heritage shophouse cafés.
Sweet TreatsChanthaburi pairs a walkable riverside old town and a grand cathedral with a famous gem market, waterfalls and a misty pilgrimage mountain just outside town. Here are the sights you shouldn't miss.
The largest Catholic cathedral in Thailand — a graceful French Gothic landmark facing the old town across a footbridge. Built by Vietnamese-Catholic settlers, its twin spires and stained glass are Chanthaburi's defining sight.
City LandmarkA 300-year street of Sino-Portuguese shophouses along the Chanthaburi River — heritage cafés, galleries, the old Chinese shrine and homestays. The atmospheric historic heart, best explored slowly on foot.
Historic CoreOne of the world's great gem-trading streets — every weekend, dealers cluster at folding tables sorting sapphires and rubies under daylight lamps. Watch the trade, browse the shops and learn why Chanthaburi is the "City of Gems".
Gem TradingA beautiful year-round waterfall in lush rainforest, where shoals of soro-brook carp swim in the clear pools. A royal stupa and pyramid sit beside the falls — an easy, shady half-day trip south of the city.
Waterfall · NatureA misty mountain crowned by a giant Buddha footprint, one of Thailand's great pilgrimage climbs (open roughly Jan–Mar). The rest of the year it's prized for jungle trails, waterfalls and cool forest air.
Pilgrimage PeakA breezy clifftop pull-off on the scenic coastal road, with sweeping views over the Gulf and one of the prettiest curving-road photo spots in the East. A favourite sunset and road-trip stop south of town.
Scenic ViewpointTwo days is a great first taste of Chanthaburi — day one for the cathedral, riverside old town and gem market, day two out to a waterfall and the scenic coast. Easy to tweak to your own pace.
Essential info and getting-around tips to help your Chanthaburi trip run smoothly from the very first step.
Chanthaburi has no airport. Frequent buses run from Bangkok's Ekkamai and Mo Chit terminals (about 4–4.5 hrs), or it's an easy self-drive down Highway 3/344. Many visitors combine it with Rayong or Trat.
Carry cash for markets, fruit stalls and street food. Cards and PromptPay QR are accepted in hotels and larger shops, and ATMs are easy to find (expect a per-withdrawal fee). Gem deals are cash-based — buy with care.
A rental car or scooter is by far the easiest way to reach the waterfalls and coast — songthaews and Grab are limited outside the centre. The old town and gem market are compact and very walkable.
Pick up a tourist SIM (AIS, TrueMove or dtac) at any convenience store, or activate an eSIM before you arrive. 4G/5G coverage is strong in town, patchier on remote mountain trails.
Click any pin for details — plan your route with ease
Chanthaburi has great-value stays in every district — from old-town guesthouses to riverside resorts. Pick your ideal neighbourhood and start comparing right now.
A good trip doesn't end at one city — 3 eastern Thailand destinations easily reached from Chanthaburi.