🔄 Last checked 3 Jul 2026 · details and hours can change — check the venue before you go
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The charm of Ha Yaek Lat Phrao is that it’s a transport hub and a food destination rolled into one. Step out of BTS Ha Yaek Lat Phrao or MRT Phahonyothin and Central Ladprao and Union Mall face each other across the road. All around are office towers, condos and old shophouses that have been serving food for decades. Head up along the upper stretch of Phahonyothin toward Bang Khen and you’ll find authentic Vietnamese food; turn into Sutthisan and you hit a cluster of standout spots — fish balls, red-pork rice, roast duck and late-night steak. A few minutes on foot or by motorbike taxi and you’ve switched cuisines entirely. That’s exactly why the food lovers who roam this area never get bored.
This list mixes old favorites and newer names that locals here rate as the real deal. Jok Mallika at the mouth of Lat Phrao Soi 1 is the place people line up for before the sky even brightens, and once the congee runs out it switches to thick-broth kuay jab. Jae Daeng Chicken-Bitter-Gourd Noodles in front of Central is a legendary joint where the bitter gourd is braised until it practically melts. Tee’s Peking Duck opposite Central Ladprao has been serving roast duck and red pork to this neighborhood for decades. Saeng Thong in Sutthisan is a long-standing old-school roast-duck and red-pork spot that’s been part of the neighborhood for ages. Buffet fans have In The Middle by Kaizen in Ladprao Hills; anyone wanting to sit and chill has RATT Cafe, a green-and-white wooden house down Lat Phrao Soi 8. Pick to suit your mood. Once you’ve finished reading, come hungry and start tasting.
Jok Mallika (Lat Phrao Soi 1)
If you wake up around Ha Yaek Lat Phrao wanting something hot to line your stomach before the day starts, Jok Mallika is one of the first names locals think of. The shop has been running for over 30 years, sitting right at the mouth of Lat Phrao Soi 1 along Lat Phrao Road in front of Union Mall — just about 50 meters from MRT Phahonyothin Exit 5. It’s ideal for office workers around Central Ladprao, anyone who has to rush to work, or people passing by who want to try an old congee spot that people queue for from early morning.
The signature is pork congee with an onsen egg, with crispy youtiao dough sticks to dip in. What people love is how loaded and customizable it is — minced pork, pork offal, ribs, shrimp, fish, crispy pork, all the way to ginkgo nuts. You can go fully loaded or plain minced pork. Once the congee sells out toward mid-morning, the shop switches to thick-broth kuay jab, just as packed with offal, so latecomers still have something to eat.
Most genuine reviews praise the congee texture as just right — not runny, not gluey — fragrant with rice, big flavorful pork pieces, and clean offal with no off smell. The youtiao are freshly fried and crispy, and the per-head cost stays under a hundred baht; congee starts around 70 baht and fully loaded runs 85–90 baht, fair for the portion. One thing many people agree on is that around 8 a.m. it gets very crowded, so you may have to wait in line and find it hard to grab a seat. If you’d rather not wait, come earlier or order takeaway. The menu is mostly in Thai, but pointing at photos to order isn’t hard.
Jae Daeng Chicken-Bitter-Gourd Noodles, Central Ladprao
If you walk out of Central Ladprao hungry, this is a spot locals have pinned for years. “Jae Daeng Chicken-Bitter-Gourd Noodles” is a legendary old-school shop sitting beside the mall along Phahonyothin Road in Chatuchak District — just a hundred meters from MRT Phahonyothin. It suits anyone wanting a quick, satisfying, good-value meal before shopping or after work. The signature is braised chicken and bitter-gourd noodles, where you can pick your chicken part — drumstick, joint, chicken feet or blood.
What reviews mention most is the bitter gourd, braised until it’s soft and practically melts in the mouth, and not bitter the way many people fear. The braised-chicken broth is fragrant and rich, the chicken tender, the chicken feet meltingly soft. If you don’t eat chicken, there are boat noodles with pork, tom-yum egg noodles with crispy pork, and thin noodles nam tok to try. Another standout is the self-serve, all-you-can-eat fresh vegetables — bitter gourd, bean sprouts, holy basil, shredded lettuce — with fragrant roasted chili that many say makes it much tastier, though you have to go easy because it’s genuinely spicy.
Prices are friendly — the chicken-bitter-gourd noodles run around 60–75 baht a bowl, under a hundred a head. The setting is an open-air roadside shop with two sides, one at the mall entrance and one in the middle. There’s plenty of seating, but it’s packed at lunch and dinner, so allow some time to wait. Open daily 11:00–21:30, cash only, no transfers.
This place has stayed the course because the flavor has been consistent year after year — Ladprao locals remember it from back when it was even cheaper. Worth knowing: some reviews say the boat noodles are only so-so; the real star is the chicken and bitter gourd, so order to that strength for the best value, and come with cash ready.
Tee’s Peking Duck
Opposite Central Ladprao, under the footbridge on the Union Mall side, there’s a little shop locals have known well for decades. Tee’s Peking Duck sells two things, just as the name suggests — roast duck and red pork — served in a noodle bowl or over rice, for under a hundred baht, yet the flavor holds its own against the long-queue places. The way they roast the duck here gives it a glossy, crispy skin while the meat inside stays juicy, not dry and not off-smelling. The sauce ladled over is nicely balanced between sweet and salty, mellow enough that you don’t need to add anything, and it’s poured generously over the whole bowl.
The most-ordered dish is the egg-noodle wonton with roast duck at around 84 baht — firm yellow egg noodles that come with thick-filled wontons and thinly sliced duck — alongside roast-duck rice at a similar price, laid over fluffy, fragrant steamed rice under crispy-skinned duck with plenty of sauce. If you don’t eat duck, there’s red pork and wonton soup to choose from. It scores 4.1 on Wongnai from 58 reviews, with many writing the same thing: “still as good as ever” — which is about the best praise a one-plate roadside shop can get.
The shop opens from 6:30 a.m. to catch the office crowd and passersby, but if you want duck you have to arrive before 3 p.m., because once the duck runs out in the afternoon the shop switches to clear-broth pork-and-fishball noodles instead — a schedule the regulars know well. It gets especially packed between 11:00–13:00 on workdays. There’s no parking, but coming by train is very convenient: BTS Ha Yaek Lat Phrao Exit 2 is about 200 meters away, and MRT Phahonyothin isn’t far either.
The per-head cost shouldn’t top a hundred baht, and in an area flanked by two big malls like Central Ladprao and Union Mall, a good one-plate shop at this price is hard to find. It suits a pre-work breakfast, a fast lunch, or anyone who stops by the mall and wants a serious meal on a light budget. Worth knowing: closed Tuesdays, and the duck usually sells out before afternoon — if you’re set on duck, come between morning and midday.
Chiang Hai Noodles & More
If you want khao soi and northern Thai food without driving up to Chiang Rai, “Chiang Hai Noodles & More” at the mouth of Lat Phrao Soi 4, opposite Union Mall, is a spot locals here have talked about for ages. The sign out front reads NOODLE GALLERY & MORE SINCE 2003, hinting it has been open for over twenty years. It’s a two-story shophouse decorated in vintage style — brick walls, photo frames and mirrors filling the walls like a little gallery, white tables, comfortable seating — ideal for anyone wanting serious northern flavors in a setting unlike your average made-to-order shop. And it’s just about 300 meters from MRT Phahonyothin Exit 1.
The must-order is khao soi, available with chicken, beef or pork. What many people like is that you pick your own noodles — egg noodles, thin, wide, or switch to soba. Follow it with khanom jeen nam ngiao, another standout, and northern staples like sai ua, stir-fried minced-pork larb and hang le curry — a full set for the true northern-food lover. Most reviews give the khao soi about 9/10, saying the noodles are good, the toppings generous and the plating pretty, with water served in an old-style bowl with ice as a cute touch.
A common note is that the khao soi broth is “a little short on richness” for those who like bold flavors; if you like it strong, you may want to add condiments yourself, but overall it’s a middle-of-the-road flavor that’s easy to eat and suits people who don’t take much spice. Khao soi starts around 95 baht, with the per-head average in the 101–250 baht range — reasonable for a location in the heart of Ladprao.
Worth knowing before you go: the shop has no parking of its own, so you have to park at Union Mall or a nearby building and walk over, making it better suited to those arriving by MRT/BTS. It’s open from midday into the evening, good for both lunch and dinner. Anyone working around Ha Yaek Lat Phrao or upper Phahonyothin who’s craving northern flavors will find this place delivers within walking distance.
In The Middle by Kaizen (Ladprao Hills)
If you’re a beef lover around Ladprao–Ha Yaek Lat Phrao, a place people mention often is In The Middle by Kaizen, Ladprao Hills branch — a Japanese-style yakiniku grill buffet whose selling point is quality-selected beef, dry-aged to draw out flavor and tenderness. It suits serious beef eaters, groups, or couples looking for an all-you-can-eat celebration meal. What many people like is that it has both grilling and sushi/sashimi at the same price, so you get both grilled and raw in one meal.
The must-try is the wagyu beef set, sliced with beautiful fat marbling that turns meltingly tender on the grill. The wagyu sushi and salmon sashimi are also much praised in reviews. Seafood fans have river prawns, squid and cheese-grilled clams, finished with desserts like melon and ice cream. Most genuine reviews say the ingredients are better than the price, the dipping sauces are tasty, and the staff are friendly and service-minded. Some note that during busy periods you may have to wait in line or wait for refills, but overall the score is solid (around 4.5 on Google).
Prices come in 3 tiers by beef grade — 589++ / 849++ / 1,159++ per person — differing in the premium level of the beef and seafood, with an optional beer buffet for drinkers. It sits in The Quarter building (Ladprao Hills), Lat Phrao Soi 4, opposite Union Mall, right by MRT Phahonyothin Exit 1, easy to walk to, with parking in the building and validation available. Open daily 11:00–23:00.
Worth knowing: evenings and weekends get crowded, so book ahead or come before peak. The buffet has a time limit per round as standard for grill places; order in right-sized portions so you can enjoy everything without waste. Anyone in this area wanting a good-value beef meal will find this a spot locals keep recommending to each other.
🛏️ Stays in the Ladprao–Phahonyothin area
Want to eat your way through Ha Yaek Lat Phrao without having to rush home? Pick a hotel or serviced apartment around Ladprao–Phahonyothin within easy walking distance of Central Ladprao, Union Mall and MRT Phahonyothin. Come down for congee at the mouth of the lane in the morning, and get back to your room in minutes when you return late from Sutthisan. Compare prices and reviews from Agoda, Booking and Trip.com all in one place.
🔍 Check Ha Yaek Lat Phrao stay prices (Agoda)Laem Luk Chin Pla Sutthisan
If you’re around Sutthisan on the Phahonyothin side and craving a bowl of real fish-ball noodles, “Laem Luk Chin Pla Sutthisan” is a name locals here have talked about for ages. The shop sits on Sutthisan Winitchai Road near Soi Inthamara — an old-school spot known for hand-shaped fish balls made fresh daily. It suits anyone after an easy, satisfying, no-dress-code meal, whether for breakfast, lunch or after work.
The star of the shop is the fish balls, which most reviews agree are firm, bouncy and genuinely fish-fragrant with barely any off smell, because the shop makes them from pure fish with little flour. The most-ordered dish is clear-broth fish-ball noodles, the broth leaning sweet and mellow from long simmering, and for the sour-spicy crowd the yentafo tom yum is a must-try. If you want fish balls in full, order the kao lao (soup without noodles) or a plate of blanched fish balls on the side to chew on at your leisure.
Prices are wallet-friendly, starting around 45 baht a bowl, with special dishes like dry tom yum or yentafo tom yum around 79–89 baht, averaging under a hundred a head. The setting is an unpretentious neighborhood noodle shop with simple tables and chairs, fairly crowded at lunch since it’s a regular haunt for locals.
It sits on Sutthisan Winitchai Road, Din Daeng District, about 800 meters’ walk from MRT Sutthisan. Open daily through the day from around 8 a.m. to evening. Worth knowing: the shop is closed on the 2nd and 4th Wednesday of the month, so if you’re coming from afar, check the day first, and if you want the freshest fish balls, come early in the day for the fullest selection.
Saeng Thong Red Pork & Roast Duck, Sutthisan
If you step out of MRT Sutthisan wanting a genuinely old-school roast-duck and red-pork meal, “Saeng Thong” at the mouth of Inthamara Soi 33 (on the Sutthisan Winitchai Road side) is a name locals have talked about for ages. The shop has been open for over 60 years — an old shophouse serving roast-duck rice, red pork, crispy pork, egg-noodle wonton and traditional Cantonese braised dishes. It suits anyone wanting familiar, comforting food, quick and cheap. You don’t come for the decor; you come for the taste of an old generation’s hand, cooked so long that locals here order it by the tiffin.
The must-order is the roast-duck rice, along with red-pork-and-crispy-pork rice with sweet sauce. Many reviews agree the duck is tender with thin, crispy skin, while the crispy pork has crackling skin and meat that isn’t dry, and the red pork is thinly sliced and soft. The real star is the “mellow sweet sauce” ladled over the fluffy rice, which goes together beautifully. If you like a hot bowl of soup, there’s duck egg noodles, wontons, and braised duck with pickled lime to try. The flavor leans mild and not spicy, so kids and adults alike can enjoy it.
Prices are easy — the menu starts in the forty-baht range, most one-plate rice dishes run around 60 baht, and under 100 baht a head fills you up. The shop opens early, from around 7 a.m. through to the evening, good for breakfast, lunch and dinner before it closes. It sits at the mouth of the lane, accessible from both the Sutthisan and Vibhavadi sides, an easy walk from MRT Sutthisan.
Worth knowing: it’s an old shop with no-frills seating, busy at weekday lunch with some items selling out fast. If you’re set on roast duck, come not too late. And note this name has several similar-sounding branches (Sutthisan 33/35, Sanam Bin Nam) — the original spot people talk about is this one at the mouth of Inthamara in the Sutthisan area.
Eat Am Are Sutthisan
If you grew up with Bangkok’s budget steaks, the name “Eat Am Are” probably rings a bell. The Sutthisan branch is one of the most-talked-about because it stays open until nearly dawn, sitting along Sutthisan Winitchai Road near Inthamara 33 on the Phahonyothin side, walkable from MRT Sutthisan. This place suits anyone craving a big, satisfying steak on a two-hundred-baht budget — good for a solo late-night meal or a long sit-down with your crew after work.
The dish people order non-stop is the grilled spicy chicken steak, which genuine reviews describe as a big chicken piece, tender meat, juicy skin and boldly seasoned just right — plus the black-pepper pork steak, with pork that’s tender and not tough. What has become the shop’s legend is the cheese bread — some reviews go so far as to say it rivals fancy restaurants, a must-order. There’s also salmon steak, grilled fish steak, and drunken seafood spaghetti that people praise as better than the price. Another highlight is the generous sides — pick from french fries, mashed potato, salad, garlic fried rice, even som tam.
Prices are very light, mostly around 129–189 baht a plate, with a two-item combo set still under 200 baht, so students and workers pack the place. At peak times or month-end it gets busy enough to hand out queue tickets. The setting is a compact roadside shop focused on easy, no-dress-code eating — fast service, clean — though some reviews note the newer staff can occasionally miscommunicate.
Worth knowing before you come: this branch has almost no parking, and there are often delivery riders waiting out front for orders. If you drive, you may have to park at the nearby Lotus’s, or public transport is more convenient. What keeps people coming back is that it opens late, fills you up for good value, and delivers the consistent flavor of an old-school steak shop that never disappoints.
Hom Pla Pao Sutthisan
When it comes to grilled-fish spots that Sutthisan–Ladprao locals remember well, “Hom Pla Pao” is one of them. This place first made its name in Soi Ratchada 18 on the Sutthisan side, then later moved to settle at Lat Phrao Soi 87 (opposite Yaek 14), still in the Ladprao zone. Anyone taking the MRT to Sutthisan or Ladprao can hop on a motorbike taxi over easily. The selling point is big salt-crusted grilled red tilapia, grilled over charcoal until the skin is taut and fragrant — peel off the meat, dip it in zesty seafood sauce, or wrap it into a fish miang with fresh vegetables, khanom jeen noodles, ginger and peanuts, then drizzle two kinds of dipping sauce. It suits bold-flavor Isan fans who want fresh fish in a group or family setting.
The must-order is the “fish miang,” the star that most reviews praise as fresh, firm and not mushy or off-smelling — wrapped with vegetables for a full round of flavor. Follow it with som tam that many say is pounded to a bold, full flavor, soft-shell crab stir-fried with black pepper in a hot pan, hot tom saap with pla khang that goes down easy, and fried items like fish-sauce chicken wings and herb-fried fish that many reviews call crispy and fragrant, living up to the shop’s name. The Isan menu runs a book long — larb, nam tok, koi, spicy cockle salad — so one table can order the whole spread.
Prices are approachable, around 101–250 baht a head, with som tam starting in the hundred range and a big grilled fish to share around the table. A minority of reviews note some dishes cost a touch more than a typical Isan shop, but most see it as worth it for the fresh fish and portions. The setting is split into an outdoor zone near the parking and an air-conditioned loft-style zone, decorated with old Isan pieces, comfortable and clean, with parking, Wi-Fi and credit cards accepted.
Open daily — Monday–Friday from the afternoon, Saturday–Sunday from late morning to late night. We suggest calling to book a table on holiday evenings since it gets crowded. Worth knowing: the old Sutthisan/Ratchada 18 branch has moved to Lat Phrao 87, so check the current location before you go. The shop still keeps its bold Isan flavors and fragrant grilled fish just as before, which is why locals here still think of it when they want grilled fish with bold-flavored som tam.
RATT Cafe (Lat Phrao Soi 8)
RATT Cafe is a small wooden-house cafe tucked down Lat Phrao Soi 8, Yaek 9, in the Ha Yaek Lat Phrao–Chatuchak area. The building is a warm green-and-white wooden house with an indoor air-conditioned zone, a glass room that catches natural light, and an outdoor corner among green trees. Many reviewers agree it feels more like hanging out at a friend’s house than a cafe. It suits coffee lovers, people who like to sit and work, read, or come to chill and take pretty photos — because it has strong WiFi and plugs at almost every table, plus parking beside the shop and along the lane.
The most-talked-about items are the Americano and Latte, fragrant and mellow, with a choice of roast levels; if you don’t drink coffee, there’s matcha to try. Among the desserts, the standouts are the flaky-layered croissant and freshly baked goods, along with blueberry cheese pie and a Basque Burnt Cheesecake whose cheese isn’t too heavy and eats easily. There are also snacks like Dirty Popcorn and one-plate dishes like bacon carbonara spaghetti to line your stomach.
Prices are mid-range by this area’s cafe standards — coffee starts around 70 baht, croissants around 75 baht, big dessert slices at 120–160 baht, averaging about 100–250 baht a head. Most reviews praise the fragrant coffee, tasty pastries, friendly service, and a photogenic space. Some note that seating is fairly limited on weekends, so you may have to wait for a table.
It sits down Lat Phrao Soi 8, about 1 kilometer from BTS Ha Yaek Lat Phrao, walkable from MRT Phahonyothin Exit 1, or you can drive and park out front. Open daily 09:00–19:00. Anyone strolling Central Ladprao or Union Mall who wants a quiet corner to sit and sip coffee will find this a spot locals drop by regularly.
Food tours and cooking classes in Bangkok
Want to sample several places in one trip with someone to guide you? Try booking a Bangkok food tour through Klook or GetYourGuide — there are walking street-food tours with a local guide who explains the story behind each dish, and Thai cooking classes where you get to make curries and stir-fries yourself, from picking the ingredients at the market. Great for both foodies and anyone who wants to take a skill home.
💡 Know before you eat in Ha Yaek Lat Phrao
BTS Ha Yaek Lat Phrao and MRT Phahonyothin connect straight to Central Ladprao and Union Mall, and many places on this list are within walking distance. For the Sutthisan and Bang Khen spots, grab a Grab or a motorbike taxi for a few more minutes. Traffic here jams easily during rush hour, so allow some extra time.
Many old-school congee, noodle and red-pork shops take mainly cash — even if some have PromptPay QR, carrying small notes and coins makes paying easier. Shops inside the malls and cafes accept cards and scan-to-pay just fine.
People line up at Jok Mallika from before dawn, so arriving before 8 a.m. is more comfortable. The noodle shop in front of Central packs out at lunch and after work, and the grill buffet has long queues on weekend evenings. Avoid peak hours or book ahead to eat most comfortably.
Street stalls and ordinary noodle shops have no tipping custom — just pay the price. Some sit-down places in malls or cafes may already add a service charge; if you’re impressed you can leave some spare change, but it’s not required.
Shops in Central Ladprao, buffets and cafes usually have picture or English menus, but old shophouses may only have Thai. You can point at photos or show the dish name from this page to the vendor — people here are kind and used to tourists.
Most shophouse spots at the mouths of the lanes have no parking, so locals tend to park at Central Ladprao or Union Mall and walk out to eat. If you drive yourself, parking in the mall is more convenient and safer than on the street.
Plan your eating to make the most of Ha Yaek Lat Phrao
Line up your visits by each shop’s opening times so you don’t miss out. Start the morning at Jok Mallika at the mouth of Lat Phrao Soi 1 before the sky brightens; come a little late and the congee runs out, switching to thick-broth kuay jab instead. At midday, cross over to the Union Mall side for khao soi at Chiang Hai at the mouth of Lat Phrao Soi 4, or drop by Jae Daeng Chicken-Bitter-Gourd Noodles in front of Central, which stays open past 10 p.m.
For dinner, if you want a long sit-down, book the In The Middle by Kaizen grill buffet in Ladprao Hills ahead on busy weekends. For a late-night craving after midnight, Eat Am Are Sutthisan stays open until 3 a.m. — order a big steak and cheese bread with ease. Cap off the day with coffee at RATT Cafe, a wooden house down Lat Phrao Soi 8, quiet and perfect for a rest.
Eating your way through Ha Yaek Lat Phrao over several days and want to stay nearby, within walking distance of Central Ladprao and MRT Phahonyothin? We’ve gathered hotels and stays in the Ladprao–Phahonyothin area for you to book all in one place.
See stays in the Ladprao–Phahonyothin area