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2-Week Itinerary

Two weeks is where Thailand really opens up. You keep the classic first-timer trio — Bangkok, the north, the islands — but you stop rushing: a day trip to the Ayutthaya ruins, a detour up to Pai, a dive or cooking day, and a second beach so the coast isn't a single blur. This is the complete route, day by day, with travel times, rough costs and where to stay.

🏙️ Bangkok · 3 days + Ayutthaya🏔️ Chiang Mai + Pai · 5 days🏝️ Two coasts · 6 days
Thailand 2-Week Itinerary

🔄 Updated 7 Jul 2026

The short version: fly into Bangkok for 3 days plus a day trip to the Ayutthaya ruins. Fly north to Chiang Mai for 3 days, then wind up to Pai for 2 slow ones. Fly south to Krabi for 3 days of limestone and island-hopping, then hop to a second beach — Koh Samui or Phangan on the Gulf, or a quiet Andaman island — for the final 3. Two or three short flights carry the load; book them early. Want to cut it to ten days, or trade a leg? See the alternative routes below.

The 2-week route at a glance

Bangkok → Chiang Mai & Pai → Krabi → a second beach · the complete loop
DaysBaseHighlightsGet there
1–3BangkokGrand Palace & Wat Pho, Chinatown, markets, rooftop bars, an Ayutthaya day tripFly into BKK/DMK
4–6Chiang MaiOld-town temples, ethical elephant sanctuary, cooking class, night bazaar1-hr flight from Bangkok
7–8PaiMountain road, hot springs, canyon sunset, rice-field cafés, slow mornings3-hr minivan from Chiang Mai
9–11KrabiRailay, Ao Nang, island-hopping (Phi Phi, Hong Islands), a dive dayFly Chiang Mai → Krabi (via BKK)
12–14Koh Samui / PhanganA second, calmer coast — beaches, waterfalls, a slow finishFerry + flight, or ferry from Krabi side

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Days 1–3: Bangkok (+ Ayutthaya)

Start where almost everyone lands. With two weeks you can give Bangkok three unhurried days and still fit the Ayutthaya ruins without feeling squeezed. Base near the BTS/MRT (Sukhumvit or Silom) so the traffic never owns your day, and hit the big temples early before the heat.

  • Day 1: ease in — a riverside temple or two, then Chinatown (Yaowarat) for street food after dark. See the Grand Palace & temples guide
  • Day 2: the big hitters — Grand Palace, Wat Pho's reclining Buddha, Wat Arun across the river; a rooftop bar at sunset. Skip-the-line and combo tickets on the Bangkok attractions & tickets page
  • Day 3: a day trip to Ayutthaya — cycle between brick temples and stone Buddhas at the old capital, then back for a market evening. See Bangkok to Ayutthaya for train vs tour

Two weeks buys you the slow version

Two weeks means you can afford the slow version of Ayutthaya: take the cheap train up in the morning, rent a bicycle, and don't try to see every ruin. Three or four of the big ones with time to sit in the shade beats a checklist rush.

Where to stay in Bangkok

Stay near a BTS or MRT station to skip the traffic. Our ranked pick of the best-value hotels, verified from real guest reviews:

See Bangkok hotels →

Days 4–6: Chiang Mai

A one-hour flight lands you in a completely different Thailand: cooler air, a moated old town, hundreds of temples and mountains on the doorstep. Chiang Mai is where the trip changes gear. See how to get from Bangkok to Chiang Mai (flight vs sleeper train).

  • Day 4: wander the old-town temples on foot (Wat Chedi Luang, Wat Phra Singh); sunset at Doi Suthep above the city. Tickets and tours on the Chiang Mai attractions page
  • Day 5: a morning at an ethical elephant sanctuary (choose no-riding, observation-first camps), then a Thai cooking class in the afternoon
  • Day 6: the Sunday Walking Street or Saturday market, cafés (Chiang Mai is Thailand's coffee capital), or a day up Doi Inthanon — then pack light for Pai

Where to stay in Chiang Mai

The old town puts you walking distance from the temples, markets and cafés.

See Chiang Mai hotels →

Days 7–8: Pai

This is the leg ten days doesn't have room for. Pai is a laid-back mountain town three hours northwest of Chiang Mai, reached by a famously winding road — 762 curves — through pine hills. It's hot springs, a small canyon at sunset, rice-field cafés and evenings on a walking street. Go slow; that's the whole point. See Chiang Mai to Pai for the minivan (and the curve warning).

  • Day 7: the minivan up in the morning (motion-sickness tablet if you're prone), settle in, then Pai Canyon for sunset over the ridgelines
  • Day 8: a lazy loop — hot springs, a waterfall, the Land Split fruit-wine stop and rice-field cafés, then the night walking street for food

The Pai road is genuinely twisty

The Pai road is genuinely twisty. Sit up front, take a tablet 30 minutes before, and it's fine. Renting a scooter in Pai is popular but only if you already ride confidently — the mountain roads and gravel are not the place to learn.

Where to stay in Pai

Riverside bungalows and rice-field guesthouses just outside the walking street are the classic Pai stay.

See Pai hotels →

Days 9–11: Krabi & the Andaman

Back down the mountain to Chiang Mai, then fly south (usually a quick Bangkok connection) to the Andaman coast, where limestone cliffs drop straight into turquoise water. Base in Ao Nang or on car-free Railay. This is your beach-and-boat stretch, and with three days you can add a dive. See the Krabi tours & tickets and our island-hopping guide.

  • Day 9: arrive, settle into Ao Nang or take the longtail to Railay for cliffs and calm beaches
  • Day 10: the classic island-hopping day — Phi Phi, the Hong Islands or the 4-Islands tour by speedboat
  • Day 11: a dive or snorkel day (Krabi is a good place for a first try-dive), or a slow day at Emerald Pool and the hot springs inland

Where to stay in Krabi

Ao Nang for restaurants and ferry access; Railay for cliffs and quiet.

See Krabi hotels →

Days 12–14: a second coast (Samui or Phangan)

The two-week payoff: a second, different beach instead of one coast on repeat. Cross to the Gulf for Koh Samui (easy, resort-y, direct flights out) or its quieter neighbour Koh Phangan — greener, slower, famous for its full-moon night but lovely the rest of the month. Not sure which? Read Koh Samui vs Koh Phangan. Prefer to stay Andaman? Swap in a quiet island like Koh Lanta from the island-hopping guide.

  • Day 12: travel over (ferry + flight, or the Krabi-side boats to the Gulf), arrive and do nothing — a swim and an early dinner
  • Day 13: the island's best — a waterfall and viewpoint on Samui, or a longtail to a hidden bay and Thong Nai Pan on Phangan
  • Day 14: a final slow beach morning, then fly home from Samui (or ferry back to the mainland for your flight)

Where to stay on Samui

Chaweng and Bophut for restaurants and easy transfers; the quiet south and west for calm.

See Samui hotels →
🎟️

Book the highlights of this route

The experiences most travellers add to this itinerary — compare options and reviews:

Two weeks vs ten days: what the extra days buy you

The ten-day route hits Bangkok, Chiang Mai and one island and does it well. The extra four days aren't about cramming in more places — they're about breathing room: a Pai detour, a real dive or cooking day, and a second coast so the beach half of the trip has variety. Here's how to reshape it either way.

How to adapt the two-week route to your pace and taste
You have / wantSuggested routeSkip / swap
10 days (less time)Bangkok (3) → Chiang Mai (3) → Krabi (3–4)Drop Pai and the second beach
The full 14, slowerBangkok + Ayutthaya → Chiang Mai + Pai → Krabi → Samui/PhanganAdd a dive or extra beach day
More culture, less beachAdd a Sukhothai overnight between Bangkok and Chiang MaiTrade the second island for the ruins
Beach-only two weeksKrabi + Phi Phi + Koh Lanta, then Samui + Phangan on the GulfSkip the north — see island-hopping guide

💡 Know before you go (for this route)

✈️
Book the domestic flights early

Bangkok–Chiang Mai and the leg south to Krabi are cheap booked weeks ahead and pricey last-minute. Carry-on only speeds up the budget airlines.

🚐
The Pai road takes a morning

Three hours of curves each way, so treat Pai as an overnight, not a day trip. Take the minivan up rested and early, and a motion tablet if you're prone.

🌦️
Andaman vs Gulf in wet season

If you travel May–Oct, the Gulf islands (Samui, Phangan) often stay drier than Krabi. Put the drier coast at the end so you finish on good weather. See best time to visit below.

📶
Grab a tourist eSIM before or at the airport

Data makes Grab, maps and ferry bookings effortless across all five stops. See our eSIM guide.

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FAQ

Is two weeks too long for Thailand?

Not at all — two weeks is close to ideal. It covers the same core as a 10-day trip (Bangkok, the north, the islands) but with room to slow down: a Pai detour, a dive or cooking day, and a second beach. If anything, most people wish they had this long rather than ten days.

What is the best 2-week Thailand route?

Bangkok (3 days, plus an Ayutthaya day trip) → Chiang Mai (3) → Pai (2) → Krabi (3) → Koh Samui or Phangan (3). It gives you city, culture, mountains and two contrasting coasts, with two or three short domestic flights tying it together.

How much does a 2-week Thailand trip cost?

Excluding international flights, budget travellers can do two weeks on roughly US$40–60 a day, mid-range around US$80–150 a day, and comfortably more at the top end. Domestic flights, island tours, a dive course and nicer hotels are the main variables. See our Thailand daily budget guide for a full breakdown.

Should I add Pai, or skip it?

Add it if you have the full two weeks and want a change of pace — Pai is slow, green and mountain-cool, and two nights is the sweet spot. Skip it if you're tight on time or don't enjoy winding roads; the three-hour minivan each way is the main cost.

When is the best time to do this itinerary?

November to March (cool, dry season) is best across all five stops. April is very hot but includes Songkran. In the May–October wet season, favour the Gulf islands (Koh Samui, Koh Phangan) over the Andaman coast, and put that drier coast at the end of the trip.

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