Central Place Hotel — A Quiet Pool Hotel in the Middle of Mahachai
If you're working near the Samut Sakhon industrial estate, or stopping a night before a seafood run in Mahachai, and you want somewhere clean and cheap to sleep — Central Place Hotel is the name locals reach for first. It's an older city hotel, a white building with a hipped tile roof, and it hides a small outdoor pool and a children's pool in its garden. What guests bring up again and again isn't the design — it's how genuinely warm the staff are, and a rate that actually stays affordable, from about ฿1,250/night.
Central Place Hotel is a city hotel on Ekkachai Road in Mahachai — a white, hipped-roof building in a contemporary Thai style with a wide car park out front. There are 42 rooms in total, ranging from Superior up to a One-Bedroom Suite. Interiors lean on teak and rattan furniture in the style of an older Thai hotel; some of it genuinely shows its age, but it's clean and well looked after. Most rooms are larger than you'd expect at this price, and a solo traveller here for work will find the space more than enough.
The thing that sets this place apart from same-priced hotels near the industrial estate is the outdoor pool and children's pool — a small curved pool tucked into the side garden, 1.2 metres deep, with a blue-tiled wall fountain. To be straight with you, it's not big enough for serious laps. But for a family with kids, or anyone who wants to cool off after a long drive, it's a genuine extra that's hard to find at this level. There are also two restaurants, a bar, and meeting rooms for groups or small conferences.
One guest summed it up as "a plain, slightly dated room for the money — but the staff were lovely, rushing over to help the moment they saw us with our bags," and said that alone would bring them back. That sentiment turns up again and again across the reviews on Trip.com and Agoda for Central Place Hotel. Picture it: you've driven up from Bangkok or across from one of the nearby industrial zones, traffic has eaten an hour of your evening, you arrive in Mahachai with a full car and full bags, and before you've had a chance to drag anything out of the boot a member of staff has already come through the lobby doors, is reaching for your luggage, and is asking whether the drive was long. It sounds like a small thing. After a long day it is the difference between a hotel you remember and one you don't. The rooms themselves — the Superior and Deluxe categories, which make up the bulk of the inventory — earn fairly consistent remarks for being larger than the price suggests. The furniture is teak and rattan in an older Thai hotel register, and some of it does genuinely show its age: paint along the headboard that has started to peel at the edges, a mirror with a faint clouding in one corner. But it is clean. The linens are changed daily and smell fresh. There is no mustiness. The One-Bedroom Suite draws specific praise from families and business travellers who need a proper separation between the sleeping area and a working desk. The sitting room is genuinely separate, the sofa bed accommodates a third person, and the desk is wide enough for a laptop with room to spare. Power sockets are placed logically rather than tucked behind furniture. The outdoor pool surprises people. Several reviewers admit they hadn't expected a pool at a hotel at this price, and the small curved pool tucked into the side garden — with its blue-tiled wall fountain that the children invariably head straight for — ends up being the detail that tips families toward booking. The separate children's pool is only knee-deep on a small child and shallow enough for parents to sit on the edge and watch comfortably. It won't satisfy a serious swimmer, but late-afternoon shade falls across the garden at a good angle and the setting is genuinely calm. Breakfast, whether included in a package or added for around ฿240 per person, is a small Thai buffet that draws better comments than the format might suggest. The rice soup is hot and freshly made, the eggs are cooked to order if you ask, and the simple stir-fries and condiments taste like home cooking rather than mass catering. For a morning before heading out to the industrial estate it is entirely sufficient. The honest summary from people who have actually stayed: Central Place Hotel is not the right choice if you want something new or grand. It is the right choice if you want to feel that the money you paid was matched by genuine care — especially from a team of staff who seem to understand that friendliness costs nothing and is remembered long after the room itself is forgotten.
Breakfast is a small buffet served 7:00–10:00 for around ฿240 per person, focused on Thai staples like rice soup, eggs and simple stir-fries. It isn't the spread of a big hotel, but several guests say the cooking tastes better than they expected. In the evenings the in-house restaurant sometimes has live music, which cuts both ways — pleasant if you want to sit and unwind, but it can carry late into the night if your room is close by. Ask for a room away from the restaurant zone if you're a light sleeper.
Be clear on the location before you book. The hotel sits inside town, but it's quiet and a fair way from shops and restaurants — even the nearest 7-Eleven is a bit of a walk. The upside is that CentralPlaza Mahachai, with its mall, restaurants and cinema, is only about a 6-minute drive away. The provincial central stadium is under half a kilometre off, and Maha Chai train station is around 2.5 km. Arriving by car is easy thanks to free, generous parking — but without your own wheels, plan on calling a Grab.
The overall score sits at 7.3/10 from 22 Trip.com reviews, with cleanliness and service rated highest (both 7.6) and amenities at 7.1. The recurring complaints are honest ones: an aging building and furniture, hot water that's slow or lukewarm in some rooms, and a gym with only a few machines, some of them out of order. A few reviewers mention catching a whiff of the fish market or port on certain days — Mahachai is a fishing town, so it's worth knowing in advance.
The bottom line: Central Place Hotel works best for people working near the Samut Sakhon industrial estate, drivers passing through who want a clean, cheap overnight, or families who want the kids to use a pool. Don't come expecting new or upscale — this is an older hotel kept in decent shape at a sensible price. The real draw is staff who look after you beyond what the rate suggests, plus a pool and free parking built in. If you want something newer and don't mind paying more, look at other in-town options closer to the mall.
Summary from Booking & Agoda
- ✓ Warm, attentive staff who genuinely look after guests
- ✓ Very affordable for the room you get
- ✓ On-site outdoor pool and children's pool
- ✓ Generous free parking, 6-minute drive to CentralPlaza
- ! Building and furniture show their age
- ! Hot water is slow or lukewarm in some rooms
- ! Quiet location, away from restaurants and convenience stores
- ✓ Rooms larger than expected for the price
- ✓ Tasty home-style Thai breakfast
- ✓ Handy for those working near the industrial estate
- ✓ Meeting rooms and a bar on site
- ! Gym has few machines, some out of order
- ! Evening live music can run late on some nights
- ! Occasional fish-market or port odor on certain days
- 💡If you're a light sleeper — ask for a room away from the restaurant zone when booking → some nights have live music that can carry late
- 💡If hot water matters to you — run the hot tap for a moment before showering and tell staff right away if it's not heating → some rooms have a slow hot-water system
- 💡If you're not driving yourself — have the Grab app ready → the hotel is in a quiet pocket, too far to walk comfortably to restaurants or convenience stores