🔄 Last checked 27 Jun 2026 · details and hours can change — check the venue before you go
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Ask cafe lovers in eastern Bangkok which district has shops in every style within driving distance of each other, and plenty will answer "Bang Na" — a district that stretches from the early stretch of Bang Na-Trat Road, weaves into the Udom Suk and far-Sukhumvit sois, and runs on to Bearing-Lasalle and Srinakarin. Its charm is the variety you can find in a single area — from specialty roasteries where the baristas select their own beans, to shady garden cafes you can sit in all afternoon, all the way to minimal photo-pretty cafes near Mega Bangna. Office workers around Bang Na-Trat, students, and suburban families take turns coming here to work, read and meet friends. Many shops have their own parking, an edge most city-center cafes can't offer — whether you drive yourself or take the BTS and call a Grab, both are easy.
This list has shops backed by genuine reputation — NANA Coffee Roasters Bangna, a branch of the famous specialty roastery designed as a white building set in a garden, known for its Dirty and its WAKE UP that blends yuzu with the house blend. For the Thai-bean crowd there's Roots Coffee, a roastery that sources beans straight from Thai farmers, with a branch in Bhiraj Tower at BITEC next to Mega Bangna. On the garden-cafe side there's Bougain Cafe & Crafts, a Japanese-style cafe near Bearing that raises ducks, chickens and peacocks to watch over a pomelo tart and a Yuzu Cold Brew, and Shelterhood Brew & Chill, a hidden cafe in a thicket near BTS Bang Na with a quiet reading corner. For the photo crowd there's Coffee Station, themed as a Tokyo subway station in Studio Ghibli style in Udom Suk Soi 25; La Mesa Coffee Co., a pink Mexican-style cafe with a Mayan Mocha scented with orange and chili; Gooseberry Coffee, a minimal black-and-white tone near Bearing-Lasalle; and Bangnanian, a Korean-style cafe near Mega that Bang Na locals visit regularly. Rounding it out are Early Bird Coffee & Dessert Bar, a dessert bar in Bang Na-Trat Soi 23, and Dear December, a white-toned cafe in the Srinakarin-Nong Bon area with its own Cocoa Thai Tea recipe. Scroll down to see them one by one, then pick where to start your first cup.
NANA Coffee Roasters Bangna
If you're talking about a serious coffee cafe in Bang Na, NANA Coffee Roasters Bangna is a name coffee people have to know. This branch is a roastery and cafe in a clean white tone, designed surrounded by a garden and big trees, sitting along the Bang Na-Trat frontage road near Mega Bangna and BITEC. It suits anyone serious about specialty coffee, coming to work quietly, on a relaxed date, or bringing someone close for a good cup in an atmosphere cut off from the chaos of the city. The shop's barista team holds several national championships, in both Brewers Cup and Barista, so you can trust the skill behind the brew.
The drink people order and talk about most is the DIRTY (around 150 baht), a bold espresso shot poured over ice-cold milk, the coffee aroma clear against the sweet richness of the milk, alongside the Nitro Cold Brew, smooth with a fine foam like beer, refreshing to drink. Another signature is the WAKE UP (around 180 baht), blending yuzu, soda and the House Blend into something tart, fizzy and orange-fragrant. The non-coffee crowd has koji, kombucha and tea to choose from. For dessert the must-try is the Lemon Tart and the Caramel Tart (around 180 baht), fresh-baked with a buttery, fragrant crust, not too sweet, pairing well with black coffee.
Most real reviews praise the coffee quality, the medium-roast beans giving nutty and chocolate notes, staff who recommend the menu well and pay attention to detail, the space airy with both an air-conditioned zone and an outdoor garden zone where you can sit with pets, and easy parking behind the shop. The common note many agree on is that the price runs a touch premium, some seating corners aren't very comfortable, and outlets aren't everywhere — if you plan to settle in for a long working session, keep that in mind.
The shop opens Monday-Friday 07:00-17:30 and Saturday-Sunday 08:00-17:30. The Google score sits at 4.6 from several hundred reviews, making it a coffee landmark that cafe lovers in Bang Na and eastern Bangkok shouldn't miss. We'd suggest a weekday late morning if you want a quiet atmosphere, since weekends get fairly busy.
Roots Coffee (Mega Bangna)
Roots is a Thai specialty roastery and coffee cafe that's been in the scene since 2013, a name nearly every coffee person knows, because it takes Thai beans and roasting every lot in-house seriously. For Bang Na locals, the most accessible stop right now is the Bitec Bangna branch, on the G floor of the Bhiraj Tower at BITEC building (unit G101), an easy walk from BTS Bang Na along the skywalk. This shop suits true coffee people who want a quality cup mid-day, workers around BITEC looking for a quiet spot to sip, and anyone wanting to try the taste of freshly roasted Thai beans, hard to find at ordinary cafes.
The drinks to order are the coffees from Roots's own roastery beans — Espresso and Latte with beans you can choose by the day, smooth and round without leading on sweetness, letting the coffee come through fully; the Cold Brew, chilled and easy to drink; and the hero fans wait for, the Barista's Choice, a special monthly rotation the baristas create themselves, which has included both a Pandan Sesame Cold Brew and a Little Garden Cold Brew with flavors novel enough that many talk about them. The non-coffee crowd has Iced Matcha Latte and Hojicha Latte to choose from, rounded out with croissants and bakery to pair.
Real reviews lean fairly unanimous, with many saying the latte is "smooth and just right," the baristas skilled and friendly, the atmosphere decorated in a clean cream tone, with around 5-6 tables, Wi-Fi and charging outlets all there. Mornings get a bit busy but after ten it starts to clear, comfortable for a relaxed sit or a work chat. The note reviews agree on is that the price is a touch higher than ordinary cafes, the latte around 130-150 baht, but most conclude the quality is worth what you pay.
The location sits in the office-building zone of BITEC, open around 07:30-17:30, more a daytime cafe than a spot for a long evening sit — if you plan on evening, we'd suggest checking the time first. Roots is popular because the brand has long positioned itself as a Thai specialty-coffee pioneer, keeping bean quality and the brew consistent across every branch, which is why it's become a stop Bang Na coffee lovers keep coming to.
Gooseberry Coffee Bearing-Lasalle
If you're roaming around Bearing-Lasalle and you love a cafe with full-on design, this Gooseberry Coffee branch is a must-stop. It's the brand's third branch, founded by an architect (Nattapong Pianchaleongek, the owner of Gooseberry Design), so it's no surprise the whole shop holds a deliberate minimal black-and-white tone, playing with lines, shapes and light hidden in the corners. The concept takes Eastern yin-yang philosophy and blends it with Western coffee culture — every corner you step into photographs well, from the front wall to the coffee counter. It suits couples, groups of friends wanting a relaxed sit, or cafe-hoppers chasing stylish design shops. And what pleases pet owners is that the shop is pet-friendly, so you can bring the dog.
The drink to order is the signature that shares the shop's name, Gooseberry Coffee, using medium-roast coffee blended with berries from several countries, topped up with mango syrup and soda, coming out fizzy, sweet-tart and refreshing like a mocktail. For the Dirty crowd, don't miss the Special Dirty and the Es-Bomb, espresso with milk, smooth, creamy and well-rounded, good for those who like coffee that isn't too bold. The non-coffee crowd should try the Japan Wonder, an orange base with soda topped with matcha, lemon and a floral note, sweet-tart, fragrant and refreshing. The filter crowd has single-origin beans to choose from, such as Columbia Road Valley with notes of rose, peach and lychee, capped off with an almond croissant, buttery, crisp outside and soft inside.
Most reviews praise the coffee as quality, with a bright, layered taste, the atmosphere quiet and calm, soft music playing, and several seating corners to choose from. Per person runs around 101-250 baht, most of the menu around 100-200 baht, reasonable for a specialty cafe that invests this much in design. The shop is at no. 555/5 Lasalle-Bearing Road (the new Lasalle-Bearing cut), Bang Na Tai, Bang Na district, open daily 07:00-19:00, with parking. The thing to know is that the shop focuses mainly on coffee and bakery, not heavy mains — if you plan to work or have a late-morning work chat, the atmosphere is just right, but if you want a pretty photo corner without a crowd, we'd suggest coming right after opening for an easier time.
Bangnanian
If you're around Bang Na and want a cafe for a relaxed sit, Bangnanian is a shop locals here talk about a lot. It's a two-storey white building in a minimal Korean style, set in Soi Rat Winit, Bang Kaeo, just a short hop from Mega Bangna. The highlight is a big tree giving shade out front, with seating zones including air-conditioned rooms downstairs and upstairs and an outdoor garden zone at the back, the clean white tone cut with natural wood. It suits people who love photos, anyone wanting a quiet corner to work, or a group of friends settling in for a long chat. Plenty of parking is an edge for shops in this area.
The dish reviews mention most is the Cha-Thai, a bold Thai tea, rich and strong, with many saying ordering it less sweet works out better. Another not to miss is the Nutella Banana Cake, soft cake with a clear banana aroma, drizzled with Nutella and crumble on top, just right alongside a drink. On the savory side there's the Cream Cheese Garlic Bread that people order a lot, and the non-coffee crowd has iced cocoa, matcha and a signature like the "Bangna" (yuzu mixed with lemonade) to try. The bakery, made in-house, draws praise for being fairly consistently fresh and soft.
On price it's friendly, with most drinks and pastries around ฿75–115, averaging about ฿100–250 per person. The honest note worth mentioning is that reviews on the coffee are fairly split — some like it, some say the latte isn't quite there — so on a first visit we'd suggest starting with the Thai tea, cocoa or the yuzu drinks that people speak of more positively. The atmosphere earns praise in nearly every review, especially the late-afternoon light around three to five, when the tree shadows fall beautifully on the white walls.
The shop opens around 08:30–17:30, closed Mondays (hours may shift at times, so check the shop's page first to be sure). The location is in a soi just past the Mega Bangna exit, easiest by private car since there's a parking lot. Weekdays aren't as packed as Saturday-Sunday, so if you want a pretty photo corner without jostling, try a weekday afternoon for both the quiet and the lovely light at once.
Coffee Station (TRAIN Coffee Station)
If you love a cafe that, the moment you walk in, feels like standing on a train platform in the middle of Tokyo, this is a shop you have to try. TRAIN Coffee Station (formerly IRL Coffee Bar Station) sits at the mouth of Udom Suk Soi 25, right next to a 7-11. It's a Japanese-train-themed cafe with seriously committed detail — the storefront is a train carriage with automatic sliding doors on both sides, the interior decorated in green-and-metallic-silver, with handrails, hanging loops, and Osaka-Tokyo subway maps, plus Japanese station announcements playing softly. The seats face sideways like sitting in a real train car. It suits cafe-hoppers who love photos, anyone into Studio Ghibli (a corner decorated in Spirited Away style), and Bang Na-Udom Suk locals wanting a relaxed corner near the BTS.
The drinks are named after Japanese train stations — Shinjuku, Harajuku, Shibuya, Sapporo. The one reviews mention most is the Dirty Espresso, with a clear coffee aroma, bold but not harsh, alongside the iced Hojicha, fragrant with roasted Japanese tea, smooth. On the food side, we'd recommend the Blueberry Cheese Tart, the tart crisp with a dense cheese filling cut by sweet-tart blueberry; the Croissant Almond, buttery with an almond filling; and the Croissant Garlic Cream Cheese. The savory crowd has options too. If you like it sweet and cold, try the Yokohama (Nutella Shake) or the baby castella dipped in whipped cream/Nutella, also a winner.
Drink prices start around 90 baht, with special dressed-up menus climbing to 120-130 baht, averaging about 100-250 baht per person, reasonable for the atmosphere and what you get. It opens daily in the late morning, around 10:30-17:30 (a daytime cafe, not open late). It's an easy trip from BTS Udom Suk exit 1, then a motorbike taxi/car, and if you drive yourself there's parking behind the shop.
The shop is famous because the theme is genuinely full-on and photographs well from every angle. It's a compact shop, busy on weekends and afternoons. The thing to know is that the shop asks for at least one drink per person, and the photo zone gets fairly crowded at peak times — if you want a clear corner, we'd suggest coming right after opening. There's an art-toy/Popmart blind-box cabinet and seasonal decor rotating through, fun to browse too.
🛏️ Stay over in Bang Na and cafe-hop all day, no rush
If you want to sit at all 10 cafes without hurrying, staying over in Bang Na for a night is well worth it — many stays sit near Mega Bangna, BITEC and the BTS Sukhumvit line, an easy trip to the famous cafes on this list. Wake up early and start your first cup at the roastery set in a garden, then work your way through the Udom Suk-Bearing side in the afternoon, and come evening you can shop Mega Bangna or grab a meal right after. There's everything from budget-friendly hotels in the low hundreds near BITEC to well-located hotels right by the mall. We compare prices across Agoda, Booking and Trip.com so you can pick the one you like and the best value in one place.
Shelterhood Brew & Chill
A hidden cafe Bang Na locals like to whisper about — Shelterhood Brew & Chill tucks itself away in Soi Wat Bang Na Nai, a short walk from BTS Bang Na. The shop is small and warm, like visiting a friend's house, with a leafy green garden zone and an air-conditioned room to choose from. Many say it feels like camping in a forest even though it's in the middle of the city. Every corner photographs well, and a cat comes by to say hello now and then. It suits cafe-goers wanting a quiet corner to read or open the laptop and work, with outlets and free Wi-Fi, and a book corner to browse at leisure.
The drink people mention most is the Shelterhood Signature Coffee, the shop's signature, fragrant and full-bodied. If you like it sweet and rich, try the Peanut Butter Latte, and the non-coffee crowd has Earl Grey Milk Tea and a matcha that reviews praise as nicely bold. For something more substantial there's Smashed Avocado Poached Egg Toast, and a popular dessert like the Banoffee Pie to finish. The shop's muffins also get a soft, fluffy, buttery shout-out.
On taste, real reviews lean fairly unanimous — quality coffee at an accessible price, well-rounded, not too tart, with many praising the owner who looks after every cup personally. Most prices sit around 50–100 baht a cup, easy on the wallet for a cafe with an atmosphere this good. The Google Maps score climbs as high as 4.9 stars.
Worth knowing before you go: the shop opens 07:00–16:00 daily, seating inside is limited, better suited to coming as a couple or a small group of 2–3 than a big party. There's parking but not much; weekends get packed, so taking the BTS is more convenient. If you like the cat, don't forget to say hello politely, since they're the highlight that makes this place warmer than the average cafe.
La Mesa Coffee Co.
La Mesa Coffee Co. is a specialty coffee cafe in the heart of Udom Suk, opened by Gary and Michelle, an American couple from New Mexico who spent years tasting and selecting Thai coffee beans from farms before settling down to open this shop. What people talk about most is the dusty-rose pink wall set against black steel-frame furniture and polished concrete floors, carrying a New Mexican Adobe desert feel that's rare in Bangkok. Anyone who loves serious specialty coffee, a pretty photo corner, or a quiet spot to work all day will find this shop in their lane.
The drink to order is the Mayan Mocha (around 140 baht), an iced chocolate with a hint of orange and Thai pepper that gives the tip of the tongue a little kick, unlike an ordinary mocha. For the black-coffee crowd, ask for the Lobo Blend (Brazil+Thai, notes of dark chocolate, orange, brown sugar) or the Barrio Blend (Thai+Ethiopia, notes of dark chocolate, hazelnut). The cakes and cookies are baked fresh in-house by Michelle; the standouts are the Flourless Chocolate Cake, dense and chewy, and the Caramel Banana Bread drizzled with homemade caramel.
Real reviews lean fairly unanimous that the owners genuinely care about the coffee, the barista does well, the shop is spacious and comfortable to sit in, with lots of natural light, and the staff are lovely. Many are hooked on the Pumpkin Spice Latte, saying it's done well. The notes that come up often are that the price runs high for this area, the entrance is a narrow soi, parking is scarce and you have to park roadside, some reviews say a few cups come out tarter than expected, and the pink wall looks made more for photos than to blend with the industrial tone, while the air-con runs fairly cold, so bring a layer for comfort.
It opens around 07:30–16:00 (closed Sundays), set a few dozen meters into Sukhumvit Soi 68, an easy walk from BTS Udom Suk. Upstairs there's a co-working zone at 100 baht a day, good for long sitters. People keep coming because it's a good-bean cafe you don't find often on the Bang Na side.
Early Bird Coffee & Dessert Bar
A dessert cafe tucked away in Bang Na-Trat Soi 23, a short hop from Central Bangna, an easy trip with plenty of parking. Early Bird is a nicely sized shop in a warm brown tone with soft orange lighting, with an air-conditioned zone and an outdoor zone you can relax in. It suits people who love a long working session, a date, or a casual day dropping in for cake and photos. The cake case sits out front so you can choose the moment you walk in. The real highlight is the homemade desserts, made fresh and rotating with the seasons.
The dish people mention most is the Mango Parfait, the dessert for mango season, generous with mango flesh, coming with mango sorbet, sweet-tart and cooling, cut by coconut custard, granola, and chewy job's tears and sago. The seasonal cakes are not to miss either, like the Mandarin cake (butter cake with orange sauce, candied orange that isn't too sweet, cut with fresh blueberry) and the Lemon Meringue Tart, soft base, lemon filling tart just right, meringue not cloyingly sweet. On the drinks side many praise the iced Thai tea latte as fragrant, sweet and rich without burying the tea, while the Hot Latte uses the shop's own beans, bold just right and not too bitter, and the Berry Tea is a fragrant fruit tea, easy to drink.
Most prices sit around 101–250 baht per person, drinks starting around 70–110 baht, cake 95–150 baht a slice, fair for a Bangkok cafe in this area. The Google review score is 4.3 from several hundred reviewers, most praising the homemade desserts as tasty and the atmosphere good for a long sit.
Worth knowing before you go: the shop opens Tuesday-Sunday, around 08.00–17.30, closed Mondays. The standout cakes often sell out fast, some days running low by midday, so if you have your eye on a slice, come a little early. The outdoor zone allows smoking. Inside is a touch dim to some eyes, but the atmosphere is warm and just right for a long sit over coffee.
Bougain Cafe & Crafts
If you're tired of air-conditioned mall cafes and want to escape to a relaxed sit with trees and a duck wandering past, Bougain Cafe & Crafts is the answer Bearing-Bang Na locals know well. It's a white Japanese-minimal house hidden in Soi Santikham 13 (or Soi Bearing 14), with a lotus pond, a lawn, and a little farm raising ducks and silkie chickens that actually wander about. Anyone who loves a secluded suburban atmosphere, coming to work for a long stretch or bringing the family for weekend photos, will find this place a great fit, with seating across the two-storey shop and an outdoor zone by the pond.
The drink people order often is the Yuzu Cold Brew (~120 baht), cold brew blended with yuzu, fragrant with orange against bold coffee, refreshing to drink. For the hot-coffee crowd, try the Caffe Latte or Flat White, with beans they select and roast themselves. The bakery is almost all homemade — the pomelo tart/lemon tart sweet-tart just right, the Custard Cake and Banoffee soft, and an almond croissant that many reviews call fragrant with fresh-baked butter. Pastries run around 60-150 baht, drinks around 90-145 baht, worth it for the atmosphere.
The Google score sits at around 4.4 from several hundred reviews, most praising the shady atmosphere, pretty photo corners, kind staff, and the ducks and chickens that are the highlight drawing a buzz. The notes you'll find here and there are that some feel the coffee runs fairly thin and a touch bitter, so if you like it bold you may need to tell the barista, and the canelé sometimes comes out cold in the center. Seating inside isn't huge, and weekends can get packed.
The location is around 900 meters from BTS Bearing; driving yourself is easier since there's parking for 4-5 cars out front. It opens Monday-Friday 08:00-18:00 and Saturday-Sunday 08:00-19:00, with free Wi-Fi and plenty of outlets, takes cards, and is pet-friendly so you can bring the dog. Anyone around Bang Na-Samrong wanting a cafe that isn't the mall kind won't be disappointed dropping by once.
Dear December Cafe
Dear December Cafe is a minimal white-and-wood Japanese-style cafe in Srinakarin Soi 58 (the edge of the Bang Na-Srinakarin area), made so every day feels as warm as December all year round. It suits cafe-goers who love a clean photo corner, anyone wanting a quiet sit to read, pet lovers (the shop is pet-friendly, dogs and cats welcome), and couples after a spot to hang out not far from the city. The shop is an arched white wall that looks like a photo studio, with woodwork and a little Japanese-style garden outside.
The drink to order is the Cocoa Thai Tea, blending cocoa and Thai tea into something well-rounded and rich, and the Ujicha Latte (uji matcha imported from Japan), which real reviews say is nicely bold and bitter with pretty latte art. If you like coffee, try the Biscoff Caramel Macchiato, fragrant, sweet and rich with crunchy cookie crumbs. For dessert there are soft homemade cakes and fresh-baked croissants. Reviews praise the coffee using a House Blend roasted medium-dark, bold and fragrant, the blueberry cheese pie sweet just right, and the staff friendly and easygoing. The note some mention is that a few cups of coffee may carry a slight burnt aroma.
Most prices sit around 100-150 baht a cup (special drinks around 135-150 baht), reasonable for the atmosphere and quality. The location is very easy to reach — get off at BTS Si Udom on the Yellow Line, exit 3, and it's a few dozen meters to the mouth of the soi, or drive yourself and there's private parking (it fills fast on weekends, so come a little early). It opens Tuesday-Friday 09.00-18.00 and Saturday-Sunday 09.00-18.30, closed Mondays.
People love coming to check in because the shop is pretty and photographs well from every angle, the drinks are made with care, the atmosphere calm and cool, and the "month of happiness" concept makes you feel relaxed the moment you step in. Worth knowing: seating isn't huge (around 11-40 seats), weekends get busy, and the shop closes every Monday, so check the time before you go to be sure.
🍜 Want to taste deeper? Book a Bangkok food tour or a Thai cooking class
If you want to understand the charm of Bangkok's food more deeply than walking it yourself, try booking a food tour with a guide who walks you shop by shop through a famous district, taking in both legendary street food and hidden cafes hard to find on your own · a local guide will tell you the district's history and lead you through the spots most visitors miss · or if you'd rather get hands-on, there are Thai cooking and dessert classes in Bangkok to choose from, with both a fresh-market walk and cooking it yourself · we've gathered food-tour and cooking-class options through Klook and GetYourGuide that are easy to book, pay online, and well reviewed.
💡 Know before you cafe-hop in Bang Na, Bangkok
Bang Na is wide and the shops are spread across several roads. If you're not driving, take the BTS Sukhumvit line to Bang Na or Udom Suk station, while for the Srinakarin side use the BTS Yellow Line, then call a Grab, which is easier than flagging a taxi. The upside of this area is that many cafes have their own parking, so driving yourself is comfortable too.
Most cafes in Bang Na take QR PromptPay and some take cards, but small shops and a few dessert bars prefer cash, so keeping some small bills on you helps. If you use PromptPay you'll need a Thai banking app or a Thai friend to help scan.
Popular shops like NANA Coffee Roasters, Coffee Station and La Mesa get packed on weekend afternoons with parking full, so going right after opening in the morning or on a weekday is easier. Some shops close on certain days (La Mesa closes Mondays, and some garden cafes close mid-week), so check the day before you go.
Many garden cafes like Bougain raise ducks, chickens and peacocks, or have dogs and cats wandering about. The atmosphere is lovely and good for kids, but if you're allergic to animal fur or wary of animals, keep that in mind, and let's all avoid feeding the animals freely so the shop can look after them easily.
Newer cafes like NANA Coffee Roasters, Roots, La Mesa and Coffee Station usually have an English menu or photos, and staff can manage to communicate. A few small shops have a Thai menu, so use a translation app or point at photos to help order. The owners are friendly to visitors.
Many shops photograph well enough to be check-in spots, and shooting the atmosphere is fine, but if you're going to get other customers in frame or shoot a private corner, asking first is more polite. Some shops have a quiet zone for people working or reading, so keeping the volume down a little is considerate.
Plan a worthwhile Bang Na cafe-hopping day in one go
The trick is to group shops by zone, since Bang Na is wide and the shops are spread across several roads. Start the morning on the Bang Na-Trat side, since Shelterhood Brew & Chill opens around 07:00, perfect for sipping coffee and reading quietly before the crowd, then move on to NANA Coffee Roasters Bangna, the roastery set in a garden on Bang Na-Trat Road — order a Dirty or a WAKE UP as the standout cup of the day. If you start on the mall side, you can easily drop by Roots Coffee at BITEC next to Mega Bangna and Bangnanian, a Korean-style cafe near Mega.
In the afternoon, move over to the Udom Suk-Sukhumvit and Bearing side — Coffee Station, the Japanese-train theme in Udom Suk Soi 25, and La Mesa Coffee Co., the pink cafe in Sukhumvit 68, aren't far apart. The garden-cafe crowd can continue at Gooseberry Coffee and Bougain Cafe & Crafts near Bearing-Lasalle, where you can sit in the cool breeze for a long stretch (La Mesa closes Mondays, so check the day before you go). Finish with a cold cup at Dear December in the Srinakarin-Nong Bon area. Many shops have their own parking, so driving zone by zone is more convenient, but in the evening Bang Na-Trat Road and Srinakarin get congested, so allow extra travel time.
Come cafe-hop through several shops in Bang Na without rushing — booking a stay in the area for a night is much more convenient: near Mega Bangna, BITEC and the BTS Sukhumvit line, so you can wake up early, start your first cup at the roastery set in a garden, and sit your way through the whole day. Compare stay prices across several sites and pick the one you like best.
See Bang Na stays, prices compared across 3 sites