🔄 Updated 7 Jul 2026
The short version: Songkran marks the traditional Thai New Year. The core dates are 13–15 April everywhere, though a few cities stretch it to five or seven days. Water is the whole idea — a symbol of cleansing and a fresh start — which is why the celebration is famous for street-wide water fights. Head to Chiang Mai for the biggest party around the old-town moat, Bangkok for Silom and Khao San Road, or Phuket for Patong beach. Just remember it's also a meaningful family and temple festival, so read the etiquette and safety notes below.
The two sides of Songkran
It's easy to see the photos of soaked crowds and think Songkran is just a party — but the water fight grew out of something quieter and older. Traditionally, families gather to pour scented water gently over the hands of parents and elders (rod nam dam hua) as a mark of respect and to ask for blessings. People visit temples, bathe Buddha images with water, build small sand stupas, and clean their homes to start the year fresh. The playful street splashing is the same idea turned outward — washing away the old year and welcoming the new. Both sides are real, and the best trips make room for both.
When is Songkran 2026?
The official public holiday is 13–15 April and those dates are the same across the whole country every year — no need to check a lunar calendar. April is the hottest month in Thailand, which is part of why a water festival lands then. Some places celebrate longer: Chiang Mai's festivities often run several extra days, and a few tourist spots stretch the water fights across a week. See where it fits in the year on our Thailand festival calendar and best time to visit guides.
| City | The scene | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Chiang Mai | The biggest of all — the old-town moat becomes one giant water fight, plus temple processions | The full experience, tradition + chaos |
| Bangkok | Silom Road (a long soaking street party) and Khao San Road (backpacker central) | Big-city energy, easy to reach |
| Phuket | Patong and the beach roads turn into a wet, loud party | Combining the festival with a beach trip |
Want a Songkran trip built around your dates, city and pace? Try our free AI trip planner
Plan my Songkran trip →Chiang Mai: the biggest Songkran
If you go for one Songkran, make it Chiang Mai. The old town's square moat becomes the front line: people scoop water straight from it, pickup trucks loaded with barrels cruise the streets, and the splashing barely stops from morning to evening. Around it there's still the traditional side — Buddha image processions, temple visits and quieter family moments. Base yourself in or near the old town so you can walk everywhere. See what else to do between water fights on the Chiang Mai attractions page and the Chiang Mai city hub.
Where to stay in Chiang Mai for Songkran
Staying inside or right by the old-town moat puts you in the middle of it — and Songkran sells out early, so book well ahead.
See Chiang Mai hotels →Bangkok: Silom & Khao San Road
In Bangkok the action concentrates in a few spots. Silom Road closes to traffic and becomes a long corridor of water and music — one of the biggest single street parties in the country. Khao San Road is the backpacker heart of it: dense, loud and very wet. Both are easy to reach on the BTS/MRT, which is a real advantage since traffic and closures make driving painful. More on getting around in our Thailand transport guide and the Bangkok city hub.
Where to stay in Bangkok for Songkran
Stay near a BTS or MRT station so you can skip the traffic and get to Silom or Khao San easily.
See Bangkok hotels →Phuket: Patong & the beach
On the islands, Phuket brings the party to the beach. Patong is the epicentre — the beach road and Bangla area fill with water throwers, foam and music, and you can dry off in the sea between rounds. It's the pick if you want to fold Songkran into a beach holiday. See the Phuket attractions page and the Phuket city hub for the rest of the trip.
Where to stay in Phuket for Songkran
Patong puts you closest to the action; quieter beaches are a short ride away when you've had enough water.
See Phuket hotels →How the days work
Once you're there, the rhythm is simple. Water fights usually ramp up mid-morning and run until early evening; things quieten after dark (a good time to eat and rest). Anyone in the street is fair game — expect to get soaked the moment you step out, so dress and pack accordingly. Buy a cheap water gun from any street stall, keep your valuables sealed away, and just lean into it. The traditional temple ceremonies tend to happen in the mornings if you want to catch that side too.
What to bring
- A waterproof phone pouch — a lanyard case you can wear around your neck. This is the one thing you don't want to skip
- A dry bag for cash, cards and anything electronic; leave your passport locked in the hotel
- A water gun — buy one cheaply on the street once you arrive rather than packing it
- Eye protection — swim goggles or sunglasses; water gets thrown hard and from all directions
- Quick-dry clothes and sandals you don't mind soaking; a spare set for the evening
- Sunscreen and a hat — it's the hottest month, and you're outside for hours
Assume everything on you will get wet
Assume everything on you will get wet. Carry only what you'd be okay dropping in a bucket of water, and seal the rest. See our full checklist on the Thailand packing list page.
Etiquette & respect
Songkran is friendly, but it has unwritten rules. Getting them right is the difference between being a welcome guest and a nuisance. When in doubt, follow what locals around you are doing.
- Don't splash monks, and be respectful around anyone in robes
- Leave out the elderly, babies and small children, and anyone clearly not playing — a market vendor, someone in work clothes, a person carrying shopping
- Be gentle inside temples. If you visit for the ceremonies, this is a place for quiet respect, not water fights
- Aim for the body, not the face, and never throw water at someone on a motorbike — it's dangerous
- Brace for iced water. Some people fill their buckets with ice; a cold shock is part of the game, taken in good humour
- Ask before you soak someone new if you're unsure — a smile and a nod usually settles it
For the bigger picture on temples, dress and behaviour, read our Thailand etiquette & culture guide.
Safety: the part people skip
This matters more than anything else here. The Songkran period consistently has Thailand's worst road-accident days of the year — a mix of holiday travel, alcohol and wet, slippery roads. The single best thing you can do is avoid driving, especially at night and especially on a motorbike, during the festival. Plan around it rather than through it.
- Don't ride a motorbike during Songkran if you can avoid it — wet roads, drunk drivers and thrown water make it far riskier than usual
- Avoid overnight road travel between cities on the holiday dates; fly or travel by day and stay put where you can
- Watch your belongings — crowds, water and distraction are perfect conditions for lost or stolen phones and wallets
- Keep water out of your face when driving or riding, and slow down; roads are slick and visibility drops
- Pace the drinking — the party runs all day in strong heat
Our Thailand safety & scams guide covers the rest, from transport to petty theft.
🗓️ Thailand festival calendar
Every major festival, month by month
🌦️ Best time to visit
Seasons, weather and April heat
🙏 Etiquette & culture
Temples, dress and manners
🎒 Thailand packing list
What to bring, dry bag included
Is it worth planning a trip around?
Yes — Songkran is one of those rare festivals worth timing a whole trip for. It's genuinely joyful, deeply Thai, and unlike anything else. But go in with clear eyes: April is peak heat, it's high season, and prices for flights and hotels rise around the dates, so book well ahead. If a country-wide water fight isn't your idea of fun, note that the streets stay wet for days — you can't really opt out in the big cities. Pair this with a fuller route using our 10-day itinerary or 7-day itinerary.
Add these to a Songkran trip
The experiences most travellers pair with the festival — compare options and reviews:
💡 Know before you go
Songkran is 13–15 April every year, with some cities running longer. Book flights and hotels months ahead — it's one of the busiest travel windows in Thailand.
A waterproof neck pouch is the single most useful thing to bring. Assume anything not sealed will get wet.
These are Thailand's deadliest road days. Skip motorbikes and night driving; travel by day or fly between cities.
Not everyone is playing. Leave monks, elders, babies and workers dry, and keep temples calm.
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