🔄 Last checked 3 Jul 2026 · details and hours can change — check the venue before you go
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Ploenchit – Wireless Rd is an area that blends the luxury of big malls with the calm of an embassy street just right. On one side you have Central Embassy and Central Chidlom, which gather famous café brands on their upper floors; on the other, Wireless Rd and Ruamrudee lane, full of office towers, luxury condos and embassies. That mix means the cafés around here draw office workers, specialty-coffee lovers and tourists stopping to rest their feet alike. Walk from BTS Ploenchit or BTS Chidlom and you reach several spots; for the deeper lanes like Ruamrudee, a short Grab ride is easy too. The overall vibe is a good-looking urban café scene — comfortable seating and a photo corner at nearly every spot.
This list has the real deal, guaranteed by names like École Ducasse, which runs a café inside Nai Lert Park serving strawberry tarts and French pastries baked fresh every morning; Café Claire in the Oriental Residence hotel, known for its beautiful rotating-theme Afternoon Tea sets; Ksana matcha, which uses ceremonial-grade matcha imported from Japan; Tempered, which roasts Phatthalung cocoa in-house for its single-origin chocolate menu; all the way to Ninetails on Radio behind the Rolex Center, a café by day that becomes a rooftop bar at night with a glasshouse feel. All of them are spots the locals keep coming back to. Read through them one by one and pick the one you like best.
École Ducasse – Nai Lert Bangkok Café
If you want to escape the bustle of Ploenchit – Wireless Rd and sit with a coffee and French pastries in a green garden, this is the spot many people talk about. École Ducasse – Nai Lert Bangkok Café is the ground-floor café of chef Alain Ducasse’s cooking studio, tucked inside Nai Lert Park on Soi Somkid. You can walk here from BTS Ploenchit or Chidlom. It suits café-goers who take their desserts seriously, want a calm atmosphere with a garden view, and anyone looking for a chill spot in the middle of the city that isn’t like an ordinary café.
The menu items reviews mention most often are the Tarte aux Fraises, a strawberry tart (around 220 baht) with a freshly baked crisp base and a filling that isn’t too sweet, and the Tarte Pistache (around 240 baht). On the savory side, the Croque Monsieur/Madame and the Truffle version are the highlights. If you love croissants or Pain au Chocolat, they’re baked fresh here every morning; coffee lovers can try the Dirty coffee, or pair the pastries with premium tea, which goes well too. Most reviews praise the texture of the dough and the refinement of the pastries, saying they live up to the École Ducasse name.
The atmosphere is another selling point. The indoor zone is nicely air-conditioned, with big glass windows looking out over the green lawn of Nai Lert Park, while the outdoor zone is surrounded by shady trees — and you can bring your dog. Prices sit in the premium-café range, roughly 251–500 baht per person. Many say it’s a bit high, but you pay for the quality and the rare in-garden setting in the middle of the city.
Good to know: the café opens daily around 07:00–18:00 (some sources say 10:00–18:00, so check before you go). Weekends get crowded and some popular pastries sell out fast, so come a little early to get the full selection. There’s parking within the park grounds, and it’s an easy walk from BTS. It’s great both for an afternoon break and for buying pastries to take home.
Ninetails on Radio
Ninetails on Radio is a daytime café and nighttime rooftop bar tucked inside a shophouse block on Wireless Rd, behind the Rolex Center next to All Seasons Place — just a short walk from BTS Ploenchit. It’s an offshoot of the Ninetails bar in Lat Phrao that people have loved for years. It suits café-hoppers who want a beautiful photo corner in the middle of the city, and the after-work crowd who want to sit and sip long into the night. The real draw is the 4th floor, a glasshouse glass zone with an attic feel — by day, light filters through the glass beautifully, like a painting, making it a favorite spot everyone goes up to for photos.
The menu items people mention most are the bold, sour-and-spicy Thai-style yum salads, eaten alongside cold drinks. For cocktail lovers, reviews root for the Margarita as the standout. By day there’s coffee, soda, desserts and food to order, all fully available. Prices are very friendly — drinks start around 50 baht, which is where the phrase reviews love, “million-baht view, hundred-baht bill,” comes from. At night, the 4th-floor bar zone has soft-rock live music, a relaxed vibe that isn’t noisy, good for both groups of friends and couples.
Reviewers praise the atmosphere a lot — decorated with boldly colorful vintage furniture in a mix-and-match style, with pop art scattered across every floor. Many say it feels like teleporting to a café in Copenhagen or a rooftop in Korea. You can even smoke up on the rooftop. One thing to note: the venue is on the 3rd–4th floor of a shophouse and you have to walk up the stairs, and it gets fairly crowded on evenings and Saturdays. If you want the pretty glass corner, come during the day when the sun is out.
Rough opening hours: café zone 11.00–18.00, followed by the bar 18.00–01.00 (some periods it opens daily, but many sources say it’s closed Sunday — check the page before you go to be sure). There’s parking at All Seasons Place. Its Google review score is 4.6 from a few hundred reviews, making it a café-bar that’s well worth its spot in the heart of Ploenchit.
Café Claire (Oriental Residence Bangkok)
If you want afternoon tea in a quiet French-bistro atmosphere that isn’t as crowded as a big hotel, Café Claire in the ground-floor lobby of Oriental Residence Bangkok on Wireless Rd is a spot many people talk about. It feels like a bright white sitting room, minimal and clean, and many reviews agree it’s a photo corner that really looks lovely on Instagram. It suits anyone who wants to sip afternoon tea in a refined setting — meeting the girls, taking your mum out, or celebrating a small special occasion.
The star of the show is the Afternoon Tea set, whose special theme rotates with the season. There have been a Ferris Wheel theme and, most recently, an Alice in Wonderland theme done in collaboration with the perfume brand Journal, served on a beautiful stand with desserts named after the story’s characters. What every set shares is freshly baked scones served with fruit jam and clotted cream, small sandwiches, macarons and a patisserie dessert set, paired with a choice of TWG teas in many flavors. Served 14:30–17:30 daily.
Most real reviews praise how finely made the desserts are, that the scones are delicious, the ingredients good, and the service five-star-hotel level. Many say the price is a bit higher than an ordinary café — a set for 2 people starts around 1,100 baht and goes up to around 1,599++ baht for a special-theme set — but they feel it’s worth the quality and atmosphere. Some sets even come with a souvenir to take home.
Good to know: special themes are usually limited-time (a month or so), so before you go, check the current seasonal menu and book ahead, because weekend afternoons get fairly busy. It’s near BTS Ploenchit, walking on into the Wireless Rd embassy area, near Central Embassy, with convenient in-building parking. It’s a quiet spot to pause for tea in the middle of the business district.
Ksana matcha
If you’re a true matcha lover and haven’t stopped by Ksana Matcha yet, you’re missing one of the good ones in Ploenchit. This is a matcha specialty spot deeply serious about its tea leaves — it features ceremonial-grade matcha imported straight from Japan, and offers a line of several different characters to choose from, not just the usual sweet matcha. It suits people who want to drink matcha and really understand its taste, or who want to find a quiet corner to escape the city bustle for a while. The shop is on the 2nd floor of One City Centre (OCC), just 2–3 minutes’ walk from BTS Ploenchit — very easy to reach.
The menu items people mention often are the Coastal Breeze Latte, a ceremonial-grade matcha with hints of vanilla and a soft sea scent, easy to drink and mellow; and the Smokey Peaks Latte, a ceremonial-grade hojicha with a roasted aroma, brown sugar and almond, deeper than ordinary hojicha. If you want pure matcha with no milk, try the Usucha or Koicha. For something to pair, we recommend the chewy Yokan matcha and the Nerikiri, beautifully hand-shaped wagashi that match the tea perfectly. Most real reviews praise the matcha as “smooth, earthy and well balanced,” with clear umami and not too astringent.
Prices are around 140–200 baht per cup, fair for premium imported matcha, with Japanese sweets around 140 baht. The shop’s design has curved, concave walls resembling Antelope Canyon, in a soft white-cream tone, calm and quiet and photogenic, so people love coming to shoot photos and chill. The Google score is 4.4 from several hundred reviews, which says it’s a spot people genuinely get hooked on.
A small heads-up: the shop is fairly small with limited seating, and several reviews say a big group will feel cramped — it suits going solo or as a pair better. Weekends get crowded, so allow a little waiting time. It opens from 8am to evening (Mon–Fri until 17:30 · Sat–Sun until 18:30), perfect to stop by before or after shopping at Central Embassy or around Wireless Rd.
Tempered
If you’re a true chocolate lover, Tempered (Tempered Cooperatives) is a pin you have to drop. This spot is tucked inside a five-story office building in the middle of Soi Ruamrudee 2 in the Ploenchit area, an easy walk from BTS Ploenchit and Central Embassy. Its selling point is being one of the first Thai cocoa roasters in the country, making bean-to-bar chocolate in-house from selecting cocoa beans from Thai farmers. As you climb the stairs, the scent of roasted cocoa drifts to you before you even reach the shop. It suits people who want a café serious about flavor, not just a photo op — though the photo corners are lovely enough that you have to give them credit too.
The item people mention most is the Single origin chocolate, where you can choose the cocoa by source — like the beans from Phatthalung that reviews call intense and full-bodied, with a nutty, fruity, faintly sour finish, around 150 baht. For coffee-chocolate fans, try the Mocha Dirty at around 160 baht, mellow with a balanced bitter-sweetness. The baked goods are stars in their own right — the almond croissant has crisp, flaky layers with an oozing almond-cream filling, around 140 baht, and sells so well that many people complain it’s gone by the afternoon, so come in the morning if you want one.
The atmosphere is a Korean-style raw-concrete loft; the second floor is a coffee bar with bakery, the third floor has tall glass looking down the length of Soi Ruamrudee, with beautiful natural light, a small pool corner and a city view. A note from reviews: the air-conditioned zone is fairly limited and some wish it were larger, but the semi-outdoor zone still has a nice vibe, and the staff are friendly.
The Google score is around 4.5 from several hundred reviews, so lots of people love it. The shop opens 08:00–18:00 daily; come in the morning to early afternoon for the full range of baked goods and the nicest light. If you like specialty coffee and real chocolate, this place delivers both in one spot.
🛏️ Stays in Ploenchit – Wireless Rd within walking distance of the cafés
If you want to café-hop at an easy pace, staying in the Ploenchit-Wireless Rd-Chidlom area is prime real estate — walk to Central Embassy, Nai Lert Park and Soi Ruamrudee, right by BTS Ploenchit and Chidlom, with Siam, Asok or Sukhumvit just minutes on. We’ve gathered well-located hotels and stays in this area for you to book by budget and style.
🔍 Check stay prices in Ploenchit – Wireless Rd (Agoda)Holey Artisan Bakery (Ruamrudee branch)
Holey Artisan Bakery, Ruamrudee branch, is a handmade bakery well known to anyone in Bangkok hunting for serious bread. It’s on the ground floor of The Quart Ruamrudee project in Soi Ruamrudee, not far from BTS Ploenchit — one of the more spacious and comfortable branches to sit in. It suits people who want a quiet breakfast-brunch, sitting to work for a long stretch (there’s Wi-Fi), or just stopping by to buy fermented bread to take home. The brand’s hallmark is its deliberately slow-fermented dough, taking several days per loaf, and butter imported from France.
The item people mention often is the Sourdough loaf, soft inside with a crisp crust and a mild sour aroma of real fermented bread. For croissant lovers, there’s a choice of plain butter, chocolate and almond, all large with plenty of flaky layers, and the Cinnamon roll is another regular order for many. If you’re truly hungry, try the sandwiches made with the shop’s own homemade bread with generous fillings, or hot dishes like Breakfast Pizza and Pumpkin Soup. Many reviews on Wongnai praise the croissants and pies as delicious, with generous, good-value portions.
Prices sit in the central-city café range — bread and croissants start in the low hundreds, and heavier dishes like pizza go up to around 400 baht. Some say the prices are a touch higher than ordinary shops, but in exchange for the quality of ingredients and bread baked fresh every day, it’s reasonable. The shop is decorated in wood with clear glass, airy and comfortable to sit in.
Good to know: the shop opens early at 7am, Monday–Saturday until 9pm, and closes earlier on Sunday at 7pm. There’s parking in the project but it’s fairly limited, and if you come for weekend brunch it gets crowded and some popular items sell out fast — come a little early for the fuller selection.
Qottontale Cafe
Qottontale Cafe is an orange-brick building café in Soi Ruamrudee, renovated from a 30-plus-year-old old townhome into a two-zone café with a rooftop photo spot. The name plays on “Cottontail” (a rabbit’s tail), with a bunny named Qotton as its mascot and the concept “the rabbit hole in the concrete jungle.” It suits café-goers who want both a good breakfast-brunch and a Korean/overseas-feel photo corner in the Ploenchit area. It’s not far from BTS Ploenchit, Exit 4.
The menu is complete with savory, sweet and drinks. On the savory side there’s breakfast/brunch/lunch like tomato-sauce spaghetti, Caesar salad and the Sunshine on Pan set. On the sweet side, the items reviews mention often are the croffle (Croffle Cream Oreo), a yogurt bowl with granola, banoffee and carrot cake. For standout drinks people order the Sunrise (coffee with fresh orange), matcha latte and the signature non-coffee Yuzu Aquamarine. Real reviews say the coffee is done well, the baristas skilled, the drinks mellow, and the food quality decent.
The atmosphere is the selling point — the lower zone is a warm wood-toned café that also sells small clothing brands, and the upper Rooftop zone has lots of photo corners, a city view, and beautiful light both morning and evening. Many reviews praise the rooftop as very photogenic with a warm Korea feel. Prices are mostly in the 101–250 baht per person range, coffee around 120 baht, sweets from the tens up into the low hundreds.
The shop opens daily, Monday–Friday 08:00–18:00, Saturday–Sunday 09:00–18:00. Good to know: parking out front is limited — we recommend parking at Ruamrudee Village and walking in. On weekends or during good-light hours there are quite a few people shooting photos, so come in the morning for an easier corner.
Coffee Beans by Dao (Ruamrudee branch)
Coffee Beans by Dao, Ruamrudee branch, is a legendary Bangkok cake shop well known to office workers in the Ploenchit–Wireless Rd area. It sits in Ruamrudee Village on Soi Ruamrudee, only a short walk from BTS Ploenchit and Central Embassy. It suits anyone who wants a comfortable place to sit and seriously eat cake — celebrating a birthday, meeting friends, or bringing the family for lunch. It’s a two-story shop, comfortable to sit in, nicely air-conditioned, with a much quieter vibe than a mall.
The star is the cakes people have talked about for ages — especially the Coconut Pandan Cake, which many reviews rank at the very top: light and soft, with a fragrant pandan aroma and no sharp sweetness. For durian fans, you have to try the durian cake (around 190 baht) and the pies with several toppings to choose from. Chocolate lovers often root for the Brownie Pudding. Besides desserts there are also Thai and Western main dishes to order first — like black-pepper prawns, ginger-fish fried rice, or fresh-prawn som tam — before finishing with cake.
Real reviews agree the cakes are consistently good, deliciously unchanging, smooth and soft, with cream that isn’t cloying, and staff who are smiling and quick to serve. One note: weekend lunch gets fairly busy, there’s parking but it can fill up, so allow a bit of time. The per-person price is roughly in the hundreds up to a bit over five hundred baht, which is fair for the cake quality and central-city location.
Open daily 10:00–21:00. If you’re out around the embassy area, Wireless Rd–Ruamrudee, or stopping by Nai Lert Park and want a cake shop that’s been part of Bangkok for a long time, this is a pin worth dropping.
NICK Coffee-Food-Mood-Drinks
If you want freshly made Western brunch in the Ploenchit – Wireless Rd area without having to walk into a luxury hotel, NICK Coffee-Food-Mood-Drinks in Soi Ruamrudee is a spot the locals talk about a lot. It’s tucked inside the Woodberry Common building, a Western-style all-day-dining café. The owner, Nick, set out to bring good coffee, a beautiful atmosphere, and seriously fresh-made food together in one place. It suits office workers around the embassy area, people out shopping at Central Embassy, or anyone who wants to sit over a long, relaxed breakfast.
The items reviews mention often are the Fish & Chips — battered fried fish, crisp outside and soft inside, easy for kids and adults alike — and the Mushroom & Truffle Soup, with a soft truffle aroma, served with garlic sourdough. For sandwiches there’s the Tuna Melt and Four Cheese on sourdough, which many say is fragrant and rich. Healthy eaters have the mixed-fruit Acai Bowl, and if you come early there are Norwegian and French breakfast sets — many reviews single out the scrambled eggs here as done especially well. Finish with a choice of coffees, from Yuzu Espresso and Affogato to a simple hot cappuccino.
Prices sit in the premium-café range — mains around 300-450 baht, coffee 120-200 baht, averaging about 400-600 baht per person. The atmosphere is warm white-toned woodwork; the space isn’t very large but is comfortable to sit in, good for both meeting friends and talking work. The Google score is 4.7 from several hundred reviews, so plenty of people are hooked, even though it opened back in early 2023 without any flashy promotion.
Good to know: the shop opens early at 07:00 and closes at 4pm (Sat–Sun stretching to 6pm). Weekend brunch is packed. There’s parking in the building, free for the first hour, then 15 baht per hour after. You can walk from BTS Ploenchit, but Soi Ruamrudee is fairly deep, so allow walking time or check the map before you go.
Audrey Cafe Glamour (Central Embassy)
If you head up to the 5th floor of Central Embassy and catch sight of a shop decorated in gold-and-black vintage French tones, that’s Audrey Cafe Glamour, a shop in the Audrey group that has run this branch since 2014. Its selling point is vintage French-style desserts, a variety of cakes, and Thai-European fusion food in a luxurious setting that’s photogenic from every angle. It suits café-goers who want both tasty food and a beautiful backdrop, coming to chill with friends or family in the middle of the city.
Items reviews mention often include the Thai Tea Crepe Cake, a signature dessert, the Crispy Pork Cube, truffle cream-of-mushroom soup, and dishes like creamy prawn pasta and salmon lasagna. On the sweet side, people praise the beautiful presentation and flavors that aren’t overly sweet, while the savory food is easy-to-eat Thai-European fusion that isn’t too spicy. At some points the shop offers a buffet package letting you choose from nearly the whole menu, which many say is worth it if you come as a group.
Prices are around 251-500 baht per person for a normal meal, considered mid-range for a spot in a luxury mall in the heart of Ploenchit. It’s an easy walk from BTS Ploenchit or Chidlom, connecting straight into the mall via the skywalk. It opens with mall hours, roughly 10:00-22:00 (last order around 21:30). Weekends are crowded, so in the evening allow time or book ahead.
This spot is popular because it combines three things Bangkokians love in one place: photogenic desserts, a luxurious atmosphere, and a central location that’s easy to reach. Its Wongnai score is 4.0 from a few hundred reviews. Good to know: peak hours are packed and some tables have a better view than others, so if you want a nice corner, tell the staff when you arrive.
Food tours and baking-coffee classes in Bangkok
If you want more than just sitting and sipping coffee, try joining a food tour or workshop class in Bangkok through Klook and GetYourGuide — from guided multi-shop food tastings to baking and latte-art classes, all the way to matcha and Japanese-dessert workshops. Get hands-on and take the recipe home. Great for going solo, as a couple, or with a group of friends.
💡 Know before you go to cafés in the Ploenchit – Wireless Rd area
Get off at BTS Ploenchit or Chidlom and you can walk to several shops and Central Embassy right away; for deeper lanes like Ruamrudee, a short Grab does the trick. Avoid driving yourself, because parking in the lanes is limited and traffic is heavy at rush hour.
Most cafés in this area take credit cards and scan-to-pay, but carry some Thai cash just in case for smaller shops or ones in the lanes, so you don’t get stuck.
Photo cafés and Afternoon Tea are crowded on Saturday-Sunday afternoons; come right when a shop opens or book ahead to get good seats, especially the Afternoon Tea set at Café Claire, which you should book first.
Rotating-theme Afternoon Tea and some signature menus are limited per day; call or message the shop’s page to book ahead to be sure, especially if you’re going as a group.
This is an embassy and international-office area, so staff at many shops can communicate in English and have English menus. Tourists can order comfortably with no worries.
Shops that already have a service charge don’t need an extra tip, but if the service is good, a small tip is fine — it’s not mandatory. Rounding up or leaving some coins is considered nice.
Planning a café hop in the Ploenchit – Wireless Rd area
If you want it all — coffee, desserts and photo corners in one day — you can set it up as a walking route. Start the morning at École Ducasse in Nai Lert Park, when the pastries are fresh out of the oven. Then walk or take a short Grab over to the Ruamrudee side, stopping at Tempered for specialty coffee with single-origin chocolate, or at Holey Artisan Bakery to grab a sourdough and croissants to go.
In the afternoon, if you want to sit for a while, book Afternoon Tea at Café Claire in the Oriental Residence hotel, serving 14:30-17:30 — book ahead, as special-theme sets tend to fill up fast. Finish in the evening at Ninetails on Radio behind the Rolex Center, which gradually shifts from café to rooftop bar, giving you both a view and drinks in one place. Meanwhile Ksana matcha and Audrey Cafe Glamour in Central Embassy are perfect to drop in on between shopping.
Come café-hop the Ploenchit – Wireless Rd area at your own pace — book a well-located stay right by BTS Ploenchit-Chidlom, an easy walk to the cafés and Central Embassy.
See stays in the Ploenchit-Chidlom area