
Bangkok

Chiang Mai

Phuket
Thailand · Multi-city itinerary
Thailand itinerary — March 2027
By Tripsapien Research · Updated May 20, 2026
March 2027 is a good time for the Thailand trip (Bangkok, Chiang Mai & Phuket). Daytime highs run from about 34°C / 93°F to 35°C / 95°F across the stops. Plan around 9–11 days for the full Bangkok, Chiang Mai & Phuket loop. Tripsapien checks every place on your list against your exact dates — hours, closures and booking pressure at each stop.
The route
About 9–11 days · 3 cities
Thailand top to bottom: the temples and street food of Bangkok, the mountain-and-monastery north around Chiang Mai, and the Andaman beaches of Phuket. Cheap domestic flights connect all three in around an hour.
Bangkok
Bangkok in March
Temperature
93°F / 79°F
34°C / 26.2°C
Precipitation
14d
1.7in · 42.3mm
Daylight
11.9h
Hot season beginning — start using mornings (before 11:00) for outdoor sights, afternoons for malls or air-conditioned museums.
Hot season beginning — start using mornings (before 11:00) for outdoor sights, afternoons for malls or air-conditioned museums.
City overview
Bangkok is the densely-packed Thai capital where 14th-century royal temples sit a BTS Skytrain stop away from glass-tower malls. The city sprawls along the Chao Phraya river — the river is still the fastest way across the historic core — and the neighborhoods feel like separate cities pressed together: Rattanakosin's gilded palace district, Sukhumvit's expat-and-skybar belt, Yaowarat's Chinatown food alleys, Khao San's backpacker corridor.
Food & drink
Bangkok's food scene is the city's headline attraction — street stalls outnumber restaurants, and Yaowarat (Chinatown) and Banglamphu both have evening food alleys where most dishes are under 100 baht. The Thai canon (pad thai, tom yum, green curry, som tam, mango sticky rice) is everywhere, but the city is also a destination for regional Thai cooking (Isaan in the north-east, southern Muslim-Thai curries) and Chinese-Thai dishes invented here over a century of immigration. Bangkok currently holds more Michelin stars than any other Thai city.
Top sights
Ranked for March suitability using weather, setting, ratings, and review volume.
- 1Wat Pho (Temple of the Reclining Buddha)
- 2Grand Palace & Wat Phra Kaeo (Temple of the Emerald Buddha)
- 3Wat Arun (Temple of Dawn)
- 4Wat Saket (Golden Mount)
- 5Jim Thompson House
- 6Yaowarat Road (Chinatown food street)
- 7Lumphini Park
- 8Chatuchak Weekend Market
- 9Chao Phraya Express Boat (orange flag line)
- 10Talad Rot Fai Ratchada (Train Night Market)
1Wat Pho (Temple of the Reclining Buddha)
4.8★ · 7,982indoorOpen dailyA 46-metre gilded reclining Buddha plus the country's oldest massage school — both inside the same temple complex, walking distance from the Grand Palace via MRT Sanam Chai.
2Grand Palace & Wat Phra Kaeo (Temple of the Emerald Buddha)
4.7★ · 42,902indoorOpen dailyWalled royal complex built in 1782, still used for official ceremonies. Wat Phra Kaeo inside holds the country's most-revered Buddha image, carved from a single block of jade.
Strict dress code: shoulders, knees, and upper arms must be covered. Sarongs are sold at the entrance.
3Wat Arun (Temple of Dawn)
4.7★ · 44,351indoorOpen dailyThe porcelain-encrusted spire on the Thonburi (west) bank of the Chao Phraya, climbable for a panoramic city view. The cross-river ferry from Tha Tien costs a few baht and runs throughout the day.
Show 7 more sights
- 4Wat Saket (Golden Mount)
- 5Jim Thompson House
- 6Yaowarat Road (Chinatown food street)
- 7Lumphini Park
- 8Chatuchak Weekend Market
- 9Chao Phraya Express Boat (orange flag line)
- 10Talad Rot Fai Ratchada (Train Night Market)
Neighborhoods
1Rattanakosin (Old Bangkok)
The historic royal island between the river and Khlong Banglamphu. Grand Palace, Wat Pho, the National Museum, and most of the city's tourist-postcard sights cluster here. Quiet after dark.
2Sukhumvit
A long east-west axis along the Sukhumvit Line BTS — international restaurants, rooftop bars, condo towers, and most of the city's nightlife. Each soi has its own character: Thonglor for craft cocktails, Asok for shopping, Nana/Soi Cowboy for the controversial side.
3Silom & Sathorn
The financial district by day, Patpong night market and Silom Soi 4 after dark. Embassies, towers, the start of the Silom Line BTS at Sala Daeng. Closer to the river than Sukhumvit.
4
Siam Square
The commercial centre — Siam Paragon, MBK, CentralWorld, Siam Discovery all within a 500m radius. The BTS Siam interchange is the closest thing Bangkok has to a single geographic centre.
5Yaowarat (Chinatown) & Phahurat
Multi-storey gold shops, neon signage, and the city's densest concentration of Chinese restaurants and street-food vendors. Phahurat, the adjacent block, is Bangkok's Little India — Sikh temple, sari shops, samosa stalls.
6Banglamphu / Khao San Road
Backpacker district north of Rattanakosin — cheap guesthouses, tuk-tuk touts, 7-Elevens, and the famous Khao San Road party strip. Quieter Soi Rambuttri parallel has bars and street food.
Getting around
The BTS Skytrain (Sukhumvit + Silom + Gold lines) and MRT metro (Blue + Purple + Yellow + Pink lines) cover most of the modern city — both run roughly 06:00–24:00. Buy a Rabbit card for BTS at any station (200 baht: 100 stored + 100 issuance). For the historic core stick to the Chao Phraya Express Boat (orange flag, 14 baht) — Bangkok's road traffic is genuinely notorious and the river is faster than a taxi for any palace-and-temple itinerary.
Chiang Mai
Chiang Mai in March
Temperature
96°F / 67°F
35.4°C / 19.6°C
Precipitation
2d
0.8in · 20mm
Daylight
11.9h
March is hot and smoky, making Old City temples at dawn and indoor cafes smarter than midday hikes.
March is hot and smoky, making Old City temples at dawn and indoor cafes smarter than midday hikes.
City overview
Chiang Mai began in 1296 as the walled Lanna capital in northern Thailand, with the Ping River, moat, Doi Suthep, and old gates still defining how visitors move through the city. The Old City and Tha Phae Gate hold temples and walking streets, Nimmanhaemin points toward Chiang Mai University and Doi Suthep, and the Riverside-Night Bazaar corridor follows the eastward expansion toward the Ping.
Food & drink
Chiang Mai food is northern Thai and market-led: khao soi serves curry noodles with coconut broth and crisp noodles on top, hang lay is a tamarind-ginger pork curry, sai ua is herb-heavy northern sausage, and nam prik ong or nam prik noom turns chile dips into meals with vegetables and sticky rice. Anusarn Market, Kalare Food Centre, Chiang Mai Gate food stalls, Warorot Market, Suthep Road carts, and Huen Muan Jai add khantoke meals and coffee from northern hills.
Top sights
Ranked for March suitability using weather, setting, ratings, and review volume.
- 1Tha Phae Gate
- 2Warorot Market
- 3Wiang Kum Kam
- 4Night Bazaar and Anusarn Market
- 5Wat Phrathat Doi Suthep
- 6Wat Chedi Luang
- 7Wat Phra Singh
- 8Wat Chiang Man
- 9Wat Si Suphan
- 10Chiang Mai Historical Centre
1Tha Phae Gate
4.4★ · 28,886outdoorOpen dailyTha Phae Gate marks the east side of the Old City moat and was rebuilt in the 1980s. Sunday Walking Street begins here, and the Night Bazaar is about a 15-minute walk east.
Wikipedia
2Warorot Market
4.4★ · 6,839outdoorOpen dailyWarorot Market, also called Kad Luang, is the practical food and goods market near the Ping River. It is useful for northern snacks, dried fruit, textiles, flowers, and local daily shopping.
Wikipedia
3Wiang Kum Kam
4.3★ · 1,697outdoorOpen dailyWiang Kum Kam is a 13th-century Lanna settlement south of Chiang Mai that flooded after the Ping River changed course. Brick ruins and temple remains show the pre-Chiang Mai capital site.
Wikipedia
Show 7 more sights
- 4Night Bazaar and Anusarn Market
- 5Wat Phrathat Doi Suthep
- 6Wat Chedi Luang
- 7Wat Phra Singh
- 8Wat Chiang Man
- 9Wat Si Suphan
- 10Chiang Mai Historical Centre
Neighborhoods
1Old City
The Old City sits inside the moat with Wat Chedi Luang, Wat Phra Singh, Wat Chiang Man, Tha Phae Gate, guesthouses, massage schools, and Sunday Walking Street.
2Tha Phae and Night Bazaar
Tha Phae and the Night Bazaar run east from the moat to Changklan Road, with Anusarn Market, Kalare Food Centre, Loi Kroh Road, tour desks, and hotels.
3Nimmanhaemin and Chiang Mai University
Nimmanhaemin and Chiang Mai University are west of the moat, with Maya mall, coffee shops, student streets, galleries, and the road toward Doi Suthep.
4Riverside and Wat Ket
Riverside and Wat Ket follow the Ping River with old trading houses, Warorot Market, restaurants, boutique hotels, bridges, and Mae Ping cruise piers.
5Wualai and Chiang Mai Gate
Wualai and Chiang Mai Gate mix the Saturday Walking Street, silver workshops, Wat Si Suphan, evening food stalls, and south-moat market life.
6Mae Rim and Doi Suthep foothills
Mae Rim and the Doi Suthep foothills add mountain roads, the zoo area, Wat Pha Lat, Bhubing Palace, Mae Sa valley trips, and cooler viewpoints.
Getting around
Red songthaews are the default Chiang Mai transport inside and around the moat, with red trucks roaming central streets and colored route songthaews leaving for nearby towns. RTC buses, Grab, Bolt, tuk-tuks, walking inside the Old City, and arranged songthaews for Doi Suthep are the practical mix; agree songthaew and tuk-tuk prices before riding.
Phuket
Phuket in March
Temperature
84°F / 80°F
28.8°C / 26.6°C
Precipitation
19d
3in · 76.8mm
Daylight
12h
Sea
87.1°F
30.6°C
March is hotter with a few more showers, so start Big Buddha and Wat Chalong before the heat builds.
March is hotter with a few more showers, so start Big Buddha and Wat Chalong before the heat builds.
City overview
Phuket is Thailand's largest island, 48km long and 21km wide, with the Andaman Sea shaping the west-coast beach chain from Patong through Karon and Kata. Phuket Town, Chalong Bay, Rawai, and the airport sit away from the resort strip, so the island works better when you choose a base for either beaches, boats, or Old Town shophouses.
Food & drink
Phuket food leans seafood-heavy on the beaches and noodle-heavy in town: mee pad, mee nam, Hokkien-style pork noodles, grilled prawns, and roti all show up within a short ride. Phuket Town names worth anchoring around include Mi Ton Pho, Mi Sapam, Mi Ao Ke, and Mi Hun Pa Chang; Patong charges resort prices, while Ranong Street and Naka Market stay closer to Thai street-food pricing.
Top sights
Ranked for March suitability using weather, setting, ratings, and review volume.
- 1Big Buddha
- 2Wat Chalong
- 3Patong Beach & Bangla Road
- 4Phuket Old Town
- 5Chalong Bay
- 6Promthep Cape
- 7Karon Beach
- 8Naka Weekend Market
- 9Kata Beach & Ko Pu reef
- 10Rawai Sea Gypsy Village
1Big Buddha
4.6★ · 38,262indoorThe hilltop Buddha above Chalong is reached from Chao Fah Tawan Tok Road about 4km north of Chalong Circle. On clear days the viewpoint takes in Phuket Town, Chalong Bay, nearby islands, and sometimes Phi Phi about 60km away.
2Wat Chalong
4.6★ · 17,129indoorOpen dailyPhuket's best-known Buddhist temple stands about 8km outside town and is tied to Luang Pho Cham, who helped calm the 1876 Angyee, or Chinese Coolie, Rebellion. It pairs naturally with Big Buddha on a Chalong morning.
Wikipedia
3Patong Beach & Bangla Road
4.4★ · 1,554mixedPatong is the island's largest resort strip, built around a 3km beach about 15km from Phuket Town. Beach Road, Rat-U-Thit 200 Pi Road, and Bangla Road form the practical grid for sand, shopping, and nightlife.
Show 7 more sights
- 4Phuket Old Town
- 5Chalong Bay
- 6Promthep Cape
- 7Karon Beach
- 8Naka Weekend Market
- 9Kata Beach & Ko Pu reef
- 10Rawai Sea Gypsy Village
Neighborhoods
1Phuket Town
Phuket Town is the island's administrative and budget-travel centre, with Old Town shophouses, Thalang Road cafes, Ranong Street songthaews, and night markets instead of beach resorts.
2Patong
Patong is loud, dense, and easy: beach loungers by day, Bangla Road neon after dark, plus the widest choice of hotels and tour desks. It is convenient for nightlife and tiring for quiet beach trips.
3Karon
Karon spreads hotels along a 3km public beach with more air between buildings than Patong. The southern end puts reef snorkeling and Kata restaurants within a short ride.
4Kata & Kata Noi
Kata feels more family-and-surf oriented, with Ko Pu in view, smaller streets, and a real beach rhythm. Kata Noi is the quieter southern pocket for a slower base.
5Chalong Bay
Chalong is practical rather than pretty: yacht piers, dive shops, muay Thai gyms, Big Buddha access, and roads radiating from Chalong Circle. Stay here when boats or training camps drive the trip.
6Rawai & Nai Harn
Rawai and Nai Harn sit on the southern edge, with seafood, longtail boats, Promthep Cape sunsets, and a calmer expat-residential feel. Rawai beach is tidal, so swim at Nai Harn instead.
Getting around
The Phuket Smart Bus links the airport with Rawai and the west-coast beaches for about 100 baht, while the airport bus to Phuket Town takes 1-1.5h and local songthaews leave Ranong Street for beaches until around 18:00. Taxis and hired drivers fill the gaps after dark; ferries for Phi Phi and Krabi use Rassada Port, while many dive and Racha boats start from Chalong.
Best time to do the Thailand trip
In March, the Thailand trip runs daytime highs from 34°C / 93°F to 35°C / 95°F, with nights down to about 20°C / 68°F at the coolest stop. Expect only a few wet days — up to 6 at the rainiest stop. Weighed across all 3 stops, March is a good time to travel.
The most comfortable months across Bangkok, Chiang Mai & Phuket are December, January and February, based on average daytime temperatures and rainfall at every stop. March 2027 is a good time to go.
Check this route against your dates
Tripsapien starts with the sights on this page or places you paste, then checks hours, closures, booking pressure and neighborhoods for your exact March dates — across every city on the Thailand trip.
Plan this Thailand tripCommon questions about the Thailand trip
- When is the best time to do the Thailand trip?
- The most comfortable months across Bangkok, Chiang Mai, Phuket are December, January and February, based on average daytime temperatures and rainfall at each stop. March is a good time — see the per-stop weather below for the exact picture in March 2027.
- How many days do you need for the Thailand trip?
- A comfortable Thailand trip runs about 9–11 days, allowing roughly Bangkok 3, Chiang Mai 3, Phuket 3 nights plus travel between stops. Add a day if you want a slower pace or extra day trips.
- What's the route for the Thailand trip?
- The classic order is Bangkok, Chiang Mai & Phuket. Each city below has its own March weather, events and top-sights list.
- Will the sights be open during my March Thailand trip?
- Opening days and hours vary by weekday, season and public holiday, and they differ from city to city on a multi-stop trip. Paste your Thailand list into Tripsapien and it checks every place in Bangkok, Chiang Mai, Phuket against your exact dates, flagging closures and what needs booking ahead before you go.