Thailand's smallest province, an hour southwest of Bangkok · the famous Maeklong umbrella-pulldown railway market · Amphawa's weekend floating market and firefly boat tours · the tree-wrapped chapel of Wat Bang Kung · and the freshest seafood at Don Hoi Lot
Just about an hour southwest of Bangkok where the Mae Klong River meets the Gulf, Samut Songkhram (locals call it Mae Klong) is Thailand's tiniest province — a maze of tidal canals, coconut groves and salt flats. It's famous for the Maeklong Railway Market, where vendors fold their awnings back as a train rumbles through, and for Amphawa, the country's most atmospheric weekend floating market, where evening boat tours drift out to watch fireflies. An easy day trip or a lazy overnight from the capital.
The province is tiny, so you're never far from the action. Most visitors base themselves around Amphawa for the floating market and fireflies, near Maeklong town for the railway market and transport, by the river in a klong-side homestay, or out at the coast near Don Hoi Lot. Pick the one that matches what you came for.
The most popular base — wooden homestays and boutique hotels right by the canal where the weekend floating market and firefly boat tours begin. Buzzing on Fri–Sun evenings, sleepy midweek.
The provincial centre, beside the Maeklong Railway Market and the train and van terminals. Convenient and walkable, with local hotels, fresh markets and easy transport to Bangkok.
Quiet homestays and resorts tucked among the coconut groves and canals around Wat Bang Kung and Bang Khonthi. Cycle the orchards, paddle the klongs and watch fireflies from your own jetty.
Out where the Mae Klong meets the Gulf — seafood restaurants on stilts, sea-breeze resorts and the famous razor-clam sandbar. Low-key and great for fresh seafood at sunset.
Selected for their locations around Amphawa, the riverside klongs and the coast — from canal-side homestays to wellness retreats. Compare prices across 3 booking platforms in one click.
A serene riverside wellness resort minutes from the Amphawa floating market — spa treatments, a pool and a quiet canal-side setting for an overnight escape.
Thai-style villas right on the Amphawa canal, with a spa and a riverside restaurant — step out to the weekend floating market and firefly boats at your door.
A friendly riverside resort with rooms overlooking the water and an easy walk to the heart of the Amphawa market — great value for a weekend by the klong.
A tranquil eco-boutique resort set among coconut groves on the Mae Klong River — spacious villas, a riverside pool and complimentary evening firefly boat trips.
A cosy wooden resort on stilts right over the Amphawa canal — wake to long-tail boats gliding past and the floating-market bustle just along the boardwalk.
A clean, well-run value hotel in central Mae Klong, walking distance from the famous railway market and the train and van terminals — handy for car-free visitors.
Found your ideal area? Compare prices from three leading booking platforms — Samut Songkhram has charming stays in every corner, from Amphawa canal homestays to riverside resorts.
This is estuary country, so the food is all about the water — razor clams from the mudflats, giant river prawns, salt-farm produce and the snacks and sweets sold from boats at Amphawa. Here is what you absolutely cannot miss.
The province's signature shellfish, gathered from the Don Hoi Lot sandbar at the river mouth. Stir-fried with garlic, chilli and Thai basil or quickly blanched — sweet, tender and unmistakably local.
Signature DishHuge Mae Klong river prawns grilled over charcoal until the heads turn rich and creamy, served with a fiery seafood dipping sauce. A must at the riverside and floating-market eateries.
Riverside ClassicAt Amphawa, vendors cook from boats moored along the canal — order noodle soup or smoky pad thai handed up on a plate as you sit on the wooden steps above the water. Pure floating-market theatre.
Floating MarketThe canals are lined with coconut groves, and farmers boil the flower sap into fragrant golden palm sugar. Watch it made at a local orchard and taste it fresh — soft, caramel-sweet and nothing like the packaged kind.
Local ProduceAmphawa's market is famous for old-fashioned Thai sweets — coconut custards, grilled sticky-rice parcels, fried quail eggs (khai nok krata) and tiny pancakes, all sold from stalls and boats at dusk.
Market SweetsMae Klong is renowned across Thailand for its short, fat steamed mackerel, sold in little woven baskets. Pan-fried until crisp and eaten with chilli dip and rice — a humble, beloved taste of the Gulf coast.
Local IconTiny Samut Songkhram packs in a one-of-a-kind railway market, the country's best evening floating market, firefly cruises and atmospheric temples among the coconut groves. Here are the sights you shouldn't miss.
The famous "umbrella pulldown" market built right on a working railway line. Several times a day a train rumbles through and vendors calmly fold back their awnings and produce inches from the wheels — then set up again. Unmissable.
Province IconThailand's most atmospheric floating market, alive Friday to Sunday from afternoon into the evening. Boats sell grilled seafood and sweets along the canal while you eat on the wooden steps above the water.
Weekend MarketAfter dark in Amphawa, long-tail boats glide along the Mae Klong River to lamphu trees twinkling with thousands of fireflies. A magical hour-long cruise, best from May to October on a moonless night.
Evening CruiseAn old chapel completely wrapped in the roots and trunks of four huge banyan and bodhi trees, with a revered Buddha image inside. Beside it, a historic camp once defended the kingdom against Burmese invaders.
Tree-Wrapped TempleA vast sandbar at the mouth of the Mae Klong, famous for its razor clams and lined with seafood restaurants. Walk the flats at low tide, then feast on the day's catch with a sea breeze.
Coast & SeafoodA leafy riverside park at Amphawa honouring King Rama II, who was born here. Traditional teak houses, a museum of early-Rattanakosin life and gardens — a calm, cultured stop between markets.
Park & MuseumA weekend is perfect here — day one for the railway market and the riverside temples, day two for Amphawa's floating market and an evening firefly cruise. Time it for a Friday–Sunday so the floating market is open. Easy to tweak to your own pace.
Essential info and getting-around tips to help your Samut Songkhram trip run smoothly from the very first step.
Minivans run from Bangkok's Southern Bus Terminal (Sai Tai Mai) to Mae Klong in about 1–1.5 hrs. For an adventure, take the Mae Klong railway from Wongwian Yai with a ferry change at Mahachai — it ends right at the railway market.
Carry cash for the markets, boat vendors and street food. PromptPay QR is widely accepted, cards work at hotels and bigger restaurants, and ATMs are easy to find in Mae Klong town.
The province is small. Songthaews and motorbike taxis link the towns, Grab is limited, and the nicest way to explore the klongs is by long-tail boat or rented bicycle. A car or scooter helps for Don Hoi Lot and outlying temples.
Pick up a tourist SIM (AIS, TrueMove or dtac) in Bangkok or at the airport, or activate an eSIM before you arrive. 4G/5G coverage is strong throughout the province.
Click any pin for details — plan your route with ease
Samut Songkhram has charming stays in every corner — from Amphawa canal homestays to riverside resorts. Pick your ideal area and start comparing right now.
A good trip doesn't end at one city — 3 central Thailand destinations easily reached from Samut Songkhram.