3 Best Restaurants in Chiang Mai, Thailand

Background Illustration for Restaurants

All the city's top hotels serve reasonably good food, but for the best Thai cuisine go to the restaurants in town. The greatest variety—from traditional Thai to Italian—are to be found within the Old City, and Nimmanhemin Road, about 2 km (1 mile) northwest of downtown, is a star-studded restaurant row. The best fish restaurants, many of them Chinese-run, are found at the Anusan Market, near the Night Bazaar. Chiang Mai also has northern Thailand's best European-cuisine restaurants.

Greensmoked

$$

The focus at this stylish modern restaurant in an old ice factory is the wood-fired oven in the open kitchen, visible throughout the dining room. The menu tours the globe, with popular dishes including smoked pork ribs with barbecue sauce and arguably the most authentic tacos in town.

12/8 Wualai, Soi 3, Chiang Mai, 50100, Thailand
062--319--5566
Known For
  • Homemade tortillas
  • A favorite of trendy locals
  • Mouthwatering beef brisket
Restaurant Details
Closed Wed.

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Overstand

$ | Old City

Owned by a Thai-Aussie couple, this cool little café in the Thapae Gate area serves excellent coffee sourced from local roasters, along with hearty breakfasts and healthy Aussie-style sandwiches and salads made with organic ingredients. The breakfast pizza paired with an iced coconut espresso is a treat for those up early with jet lag. There are always several vegetarian and gluten-free options. The café closes at 3:30 pm but occasionally reopens in the evenings for special events such as craft-beer, cocktail, or wine tastings.

There's also a branch on Nimmanhaemin Rd.

19/3 Ratchamankha, Soi 2, Chiang Mai, 50200, Thailand
094-626--8311
Known For
  • <PRO>speedy Wi-Fi</PRO>
  • <PRO>Australian iced coffee espresso-ice cream concoction</PRO>
  • <PRO>good vegetarian options</PRO>
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. No dinner

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Rustic and Blue

$
Part tearoom, part casual eatery, this rustic place, whose furnishings include tables made of recycled wood, focuses on food crafted from fresh organic ingredients sourced from local farmers and artisanal producers. The all-day breakfasts are hugely popular—try the brioche French toast brûlée with fresh fruit—but the tacos and salads, among them a fine one with quinoa and pumpkin, have many fans, too, especially among trendy locals. The house-made ice cream in flavors like blueberry basil (sherbet) and peanut butter stout with chocolate is just the ticket after a long day temple-hopping.

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