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📍 Saphan Taksin · Eat like a Bang Rak–Saphan Taksin local · Updated 2026

10 Popular Restaurants
Around Saphan Taksin

Step off the BTS at Saphan Taksin or hop off the boat at Sathorn Pier, then walk into Bang Rak–Charoen Krung, and you land in one of Bangkok's oldest eating neighborhoods — from Bang Rak Market in the morning, to old-school chicken rice tucked in a soi, to Indian–Muslim shops that fill the whole lane with the smell of spices, all the way to a legendary shark fin restaurant. We've gathered the 10 spots people talk about most in this area onto one page, with signature dishes, rough prices and locations. You can eat your way across the whole neighborhood from morning to late night.

🍛 Al-Rahaman biryani worth the trip🍗 Cheer Chicken Rice Bang Rak, an old favorite🚆 Next to BTS Saphan Taksin & Sathorn Pier💵 Markets and street food — bring cash
Explore all 10 Illustration: street food · Charles Haynes / Wikimedia (CC BY-SA 2.0)

🔄 Last checked 2 Jul 2026 · details and hours can change — check the venue before you go

📍 All restaurants on the map

Tap a pin for the spot + nearby stays

Type
Area
Price

Saphan Taksin–Bang Rak is one of the easiest neighborhoods in Bangkok to eat in, because getting there is so simple. Step off the BTS at Saphan Taksin and you can transfer straight to the express boat at Sathorn (Central Pier). All around are Robinson Bang Rak, old shophouses along Charoen Krung Road, and little sois hiding plenty of great spots. The charm of this area is the sheer variety packed within walking distance. On the Thai side there's chicken rice, rat na and khao kha moo in Bang Rak Market; on the Chinese side there are old shark fin and dim sum restaurants; while lower Charoen Krung is still a hub of Indian–Muslim food that people travel from all over the city for, the smell of curry and clay-oven roti drifting out from the mouth of the soi.

Many of the spots on this list are neighborhood legends. Bang Rak Market (Ma! Bang Rak) is a combined street-food hub where office workers around Sathorn drop by every day. Al-Rahaman on Charoen Krung Soi 45 is the destination for anyone chasing chicken biryani and full-on Indian spice curries. Cheer Chicken Rice Bang Rak, an old-timer on Charoen Krung Soi 44, serves fragrant chicken rice with a killer fermented-soybean dipping sauce right by the BTS station. And Tai Tong shark fin is a classic old-style Chinese restaurant that has been part of Bang Rak for ages, known for its shark fin soup with big lumps of crab meat. Whenever you're hungry in this area, just pick what you're in the mood for — there's everything from under-a-hundred-baht plates to special meals in the thousands.

1
Thai food/street food

Bang Rak Market / Ma! Bang Rak (Ma! Bang Rak Bazaar)

📍 Bang Rak, Charoen Krung, Bangkok 🧭 Saphan Taksin/Bang Rak ⭐ 4.3 · 954 reviews (Google)
🖼️ แตะรูปเพื่อซูมในหน้า · แผนที่ / โซเชียลฝังจากต้นทาง (ถูกลิขสิทธิ์)
👍 Best forA quick meal near BTS Saphan Taksin, many dishes in one place
Street foodNear BTSBudget-friendly
🕐11:00–21:00 daily 💵≈ $2–3 🌶️Adjustable by stall 🥗Veg options 📋English menu
🥢Signature — Combined street-food stalls: chicken rice, roast duck rice, khao kha moo, roast-duck congee, crispy pork and market snacks

If you step off the BTS at Saphan Taksin, Exit 3, and you're hungry, "Ma! Bang Rak" market (Ma! Bang Rak — formerly Bang Rak Bazaar) is the first place you should walk into, because it's just a few minutes from the station. It sits along Charoen Krung Road next to Central Bang Rak/Robinson — a combined street-food market that was renovated after COVID: bright, clean, with both an outdoor zone out front and an indoor food court in the back building with comfortable seating. It's perfect for people staying around the Sathorn riverside, tourists, or workers nearby who want a quick, tasty, easy-on-the-wallet meal.

The menu people talk about most is the pork-rice and duck-rice stalls — chicken rice, roast duck rice, khao kha moo, roast-duck congee, and juicy crispy pork. For the noodle crowd there's duck noodles that several reviews say come loaded with duck, not greasy, with a well-rounded broth. Keep walking and there are plenty more snacks — roti, ice cream, cold drinks. Prices per plate run around 60–80 baht; two people can start eating well for about 150 baht.

Most real reviews give it credit for being cheap, fast, tasty and full of choice, with a few vegetarian options mixed in. The atmosphere after the renovation looks cleaner and easier to walk. Some regulars grumble that there are fewer stalls and that the old-market vibe has faded, but for convenience on a quick stop it's spot-on. The Google score of 4.3 from nearly a thousand reviews reflects that most people are happy.

Good to know: the market opens midday to evening (around 11 a.m. to about 9 p.m.). The outdoor zone is busiest in the evening after 6, while the indoor food court is nice for lunch since it's cool and more orderly. Bringing cash is easiest, and leave a little time to browse because there really are a lot of stalls to choose from.

Must-tryRoast duck riceChicken riceKhao kha moo/crispy porkDuck noodles
2
Thai food/oyster omelette

Thip Volcano Oyster Omelette Bang Rak (the original)

📍 Bang Rak, Bangkok 🧭 Bang Rak ⭐ 3.6 · 184 reviews (Wongnai)
🖼️ แตะรูปเพื่อซูมในหน้า · แผนที่ / โซเชียลฝังจากต้นทาง (ถูกลิขสิทธิ์)
Approx. priceTHB 40–70/plate (under THB 100 per head)
👍 Best forOld-recipe oyster omelette lovers, exploring the Charoen Krung–Bang Rak old town, lunch
40+ year old-timerMichelin Guide 2019Near BTS Saphan Taksin
🕐09:30–19:30 Mon–Sat (closed Sun) 💵≈ $1–2 🌶️Sweet-sour dipping sauce, mildly spicy, adjustable
🥢Signature — Crispy volcano oyster omelette, fried mussels, oyster omelette rice, and the ‘shellfish-on-shellfish’ dish — fried mussels topped with oysters

When it comes to old-school oyster omelette in Bang Rak, "Thip Volcano Oyster Omelette (the original)" is one of the first names locals think of. This tiny shop in Charoen Krung Soi 50, beside Robinson Bang Rak, has been selling for over 40 years and even made it into the Bangkok Michelin Guide in 2019. It's perfect for anyone wanting to try a traditional oyster omelette, the old-town foodie crowd, or anyone who steps off the BTS at Saphan Taksin and wants something tasty nearby — about a 10-minute walk from Exit 3.

The must-order is "shellfish-on-shellfish" — crispy fried mussels topped with big fresh oysters, giving you both crunch and juiciness in one plate. Another crowd favorite is the volcano oyster omelette (fluffy, crispy batter in a big sheet) and the or suan with soft, chewy batter. If you like your oysters fresh, try the oyster omelette rice or the oyster congee. The shop's selling point is oysters ordered fresh day by day, big and full of flavor.

Most reviews praise the batter — crisp outside, soft inside — the big fresh oysters, and the house dipping sauce that's sour up front, sweet after, going well together. Prices are friendly too, with oyster omelette dishes starting around 40–70 baht and under 100 baht per head. One thing to know is that the shop leans fairly heavy on batter; some reviews wish for more oysters, and the overall online score sits mid-range (Wongnai around 3.6) because the taste is quite traditional and not to everyone's liking.

The shop is a small shophouse with about 6–7 tables and limited seating, so at lunchtime it gets crowded and you may have to wait. Open Monday–Saturday, roughly 09:30–19:30, closed Sunday (best to check the hours before you go). Parking is easy at Robinson Bang Rak. If you're exploring the old Charoen Krung–Bang Rak town and want to try a traditional oyster omelette, this spot is a pin not to miss.

Must-tryShellfish-on-shellfish (fried mussels topped with oysters)Volcano oyster omelette (crispy batter)Oyster or suanOyster omelette rice
3
Indian/Bangladeshi (halal)

Al-Rahaman

📍 Charoen Krung Soi 45, Si Phraya Subdistrict, Bang Rak District, Bangkok 🧭 Bang Rak–Charoen Krung ⭐ 4.7 · 1,510 reviews (Google)
🖼️ แตะรูปเพื่อซูมในหน้า · แผนที่ / โซเชียลฝังจากต้นทาง (ถูกลิขสิทธิ์)
👍 Best forA halal-Indian dinner, as a couple or a group
HalalIndian foodBiryani
🕐11:00–21:00 daily (last order ~21:30) 💵≈ $6–11 🌶️Adjustable, fragrant with spices, not too intense 🕌Halal 🥗Veg options 📋English menu
🥢Signature — Chicken biryani, chicken tikka masala, cheese naan and richly spiced Indian curries

When it comes to halal Indian food in the Bang Rak–Charoen Krung area, the name Al-Rahaman almost always comes up near the top. This long-running restaurant is owned by a chef from Dhaka, Bangladesh, who cooks a North Indian style blended with Pakistani–Bangladeshi flavors, then tunes the spices to be easier for Thai palates — fragrant but not searing. It's perfect for anyone who wants to try authentic Indian food without fearing it'll be too fiery, and whether you come as a couple or a group, you can easily order to share.

The dish people talk about most is the chicken biryani — beautiful, fragrant basmati rice, which reviews agree is well-balanced, with tender meat and no off smell. If you like lamb there's mutton biryani to try. Another can't-miss is chicken tikka masala, its thick sauce slightly tangy with just-right spice, and cheese naan that many compare to pizza — thick, soft dough with cheese that stretches just right. Richly spiced curries like butter chicken come out smooth and creamy, perfect with hot naan.

Prices are good value, with most mains in the low-to-mid hundreds, naan around fifty to nearly a hundred baht a piece, averaging about 200–400 baht per head. The atmosphere after the renovation is comfortable, air-conditioned, with divided seating zones. It's in the Charoen Krung–Surawong area on the Bang Rak side, walkable from around Saphan Taksin/Sathorn. Open daily from about 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. (sometimes later, last order around 9:30 p.m.).

Good to know: on weekends or at dinner it gets busy and the queue can get long, so if you don't want to wait, come before the peak or call to book. It's halal, with vegetarian options like palak paneer and veggie dishes, and an English menu that makes ordering easy for foreigners. If you love bold spice, just tell the staff to turn it up.

Must-tryChicken biryaniChicken tikka masalaCheese naanButter chicken
4
Thai food (chicken rice)

Cheer Chicken Rice Bang Rak (the original)

📍 Charoen Krung Soi 44 (Bang Rak), near BTS Saphan Taksin 🧭 Bang Rak ⭐ 4.1 · 15 reviews (Wongnai)
🖼️ แตะรูปเพื่อซูมในหน้า · แผนที่ / โซเชียลฝังจากต้นทาง (ถูกลิขสิทธิ์)
👍 Best forA value lunch near BTS Saphan Taksin
Budget-friendlyOld-timer shopNear BTS
🕐About 10:00–18:00 daily (may close early if sold out) 💵≈ $1–2 🌶️Medium-spicy dipping sauce, adjustable
🥢Signature — Poached and fried chicken rice, fragrant rice that isn't too oily, pork-bone soup with winter melon, fresh fermented-soybean–ginger–garlic dipping sauce

If you walk out of BTS Saphan Taksin and want a one-plate chicken rice that fills you up without overthinking, "Cheer Chicken Rice Bang Rak (the original)" on Charoen Krung Soi 44, near Robinson Bang Rak, is the spot locals point you to. It's an old chicken-rice shop that's been in the area for a long time — office workers around Sathorn-Bang Rak, students, and people getting off the boat at Sathorn Pier regularly stop in for lunch. The atmosphere is a plain shophouse in classic old-timer style: nothing fancy, but with real sincerity on the plate.

The must-order is the poached chicken rice — tender meat, bouncy skin — with rice that many reviews agree is "loose and grainy, fragrant with garlic, oily just right without being greasy." If you like it crispy there's fried chicken to choose, or order a mix of both poached and fried. Another star is the fermented-soybean sauce with fresh ginger and garlic, bold with sour-sweet-spicy notes cutting against each other; drizzle it on and an ordinary plate gets a lot tastier. It comes with hot pork-bone soup with winter melon that's well-rounded and goes down easy.

Prices are very light for a spot right by the BTS — chicken rice starts at 30 baht a plate, and a special with more rice and chicken runs about 40–50 baht. Besides chicken rice there's clear-broth fish-ball noodles, stewed pork, and fried spring rolls to add on. Most reviews lean positive, praising the value, generous portions, tender chicken and great dipping sauce. A few note that it's a traditional old shop with limited, cramped seating that gets crowded and a bit hot at lunch, so if you don't want to wait, skip the lunch peak.

The shop opens midday to evening (roughly 10:00 to afternoon-evening, and may close early if they sell out), just about 300 meters from BTS Saphan Taksin, easy to reach on foot from Sathorn Pier or Robinson Bang Rak. It's perfect as the first meal of the area or a light lunch before hopping on a Chao Phraya boat. If you're visiting Bang Rak and want a value plate of chicken rice that locals eat, this spot won't disappoint.

Must-tryPoached chicken riceFried chicken riceMixed chicken rice (poached + fried)Pork-bone soup with winter melon
5
Chinese-Thai food (noodles)

Heng Yod Pak Rat Na Bang Rak

📍 Bang Rak, Bangkok 🧭 Bang Rak ⭐ 3.9 · 71 reviews (Wongnai)
🖼️ แตะรูปเพื่อซูมในหน้า · แผนที่ / โซเชียลฝังจากต้นทาง (ถูกลิขสิทธิ์)
👍 Best forA quick lunch in Bang Rak, budget-friendly
Rat naBudget-friendlyNear BTS
🕐08:30–19:30 daily 💵≈ $1–2 🌶️Not spicy (season it yourself)
🥢Signature — Pork rat na with thick gravy, wok-fragrant pad see ew with wide noodles, crisp kale, add an egg for extra richness

If you walk out of BTS Saphan Taksin toward Robinson Bang Rak and crave a hot plate of wide-noodle rat na, "Heng Yod Pak Rat Na" is the name locals have been talking about for ages. This is Hong Kong–style rat na that's been made and sold for decades since the previous generation, moving from the Yaowarat side to settle across from Robinson Bang Rak on Charoen Krung Soi 50 — becoming a regular for office workers around Silom-Sathorn and tourists who drop by to try it. It's perfect for anyone wanting a filling, quick, affordable lunch in an area where most food runs fairly pricey.

The must-order is pork rat na with wide noodles, the gravy thick just right, the marinated pork tender and cut in thick, satisfying pieces — add an egg for extra richness. If you like wok-fragrant noodles, order the wide-noodle pad see ew, stir-fried over high heat until you get that clear "breath of the wok" aroma. Another popular dish is crispy wonton rat na, crunchy minced-pork filling under thick gravy. What reviews consistently praise is the kale — tender shoots, crisp, flash-fried over high heat then shocked to keep it vividly green, not tough or old, working perfectly with the gravy.

Real reviews say the portions are generous — one bowl fills you up — the gravy well-rounded and not gloopy with starch, and there's chili vinegar and sugar to season yourself. Some say it's tasty enough even if they have a favorite spot they like more. Overall it's good value: pork rat na around 50 baht, pad see ew and with an egg about 60 baht, averaging under 100 baht per person. There's air-conditioned seating inside, more comfortable than the usual roadside stall.

The location is very convenient, on Charoen Krung Road across from Robinson Bang Rak, easy to reach on foot from BTS Saphan Taksin or Sathorn Pier. Open daily around 08:30–19:30, good for lunch or an early dinner. Good to know: it gets crowded at lunch and closes fairly early, so if you want a relaxed seat avoid the peak, and check the hours before going for dinner.

Must-tryPork rat na with wide noodles and eggWide-noodle pad see ewCrispy wonton rat na

🛏️ Finding a stay around Saphan Taksin–Bang Rak

If you plan to spend several days eating your way around Saphan Taksin–Bang Rak, choosing a stay near BTS Saphan Taksin or Sathorn Pier (Central Pier) saves a lot of time and travel cost, because you can easily walk into Charoen Krung–Bang Rak and hop straight onto an express boat along the Chao Phraya. · This area has a wide range of stays, from riverside hotels with Chao Phraya views to boutique hotels in old Charoen Krung shophouses just a few minutes' walk from the food. · On a budget there are plenty of affordable hotels around the station too. Always compare hotel prices across several sites before booking; in high season the river-view rooms fill up fast.

🔍 Check hotel prices around Saphan Taksin–Bang Rak (Agoda)
6
Thai-Chinese street food (Cantonese-style fish cakes)

Tod Man Kwangtung See Nuan Bang Rak

📍 Bang Rak (Charoen Krung Road, across from Robinson Bang Rak), Bangkok 🧭 Bang Rak ⭐ 3.3 (Wongnai)
🖼️ แตะรูปเพื่อซูมในหน้า · แผนที่ / โซเชียลฝังจากต้นทาง (ถูกลิขสิทธิ์)
Approx. priceTHB 10/piece (fish cake) · THB 35/piece (fried bun)
👍 Best forA grab-and-go snack while walking around Bang Rak, takeaway
Mackerel fish cakeTakeawayBang Rak street food
🕐Mon–Fri 11:00–18:00 · Sat 10:00–17:00 · closed Sunday 💵≈ $0.3–1 🌶️Both non-spicy (white recipe) and mildly spicy (red recipe/chili paste)
🥢Signature — Cantonese-style mackerel fish cakes (with/without curry paste), firm and bouncy, and fried steamed buns with minced-pork, barbecue-pork and cream fillings

Tod Man Kwangtung See Nuan is an old fish-cake shop that's been part of Bang Rak for decades, set up along Charoen Krung Road on the side across from Robinson Bang Rak. It's a tiny takeaway shop with no seating — perfect for anyone walking through the area or getting off the BTS at Saphan Taksin who wants a snack to grab and go. The selling point is the "Cantonese-style" fish cakes made from pure mackerel, shaped into big pieces and fried fresh right at the shopfront.

The must-order is the mackerel fish cake, offered in two recipes: the white version (original, no curry paste) and the red version (mixed with chili paste, mildly spicy). Many who can't decide order a mix of both to compare. Another not-to-miss is the fried steamed buns — crisp outside, soft inside — with minced-pork, barbecue-pork and cream fillings. Real reviews love that the fish cake is dense and springy, with lots of fish and almost no fishy smell, seasoned enough that it's tasty even plain, no dipping sauce needed.

Prices are gentle: fish cakes are counted per piece at about 10 baht each, fried buns around 35 baht each — a snack for one runs just a few tens of baht. The location is very convenient, only about 200 meters from BTS Saphan Taksin, reachable on foot from Sathorn Pier/Central Pier. Open Monday–Friday around 11:00–18:00, Saturday around 10:00–17:00, and usually closed Sunday (some delivery channels list different hours, so it's best to check before you go).

This shop is also talked about because it's an old-fashioned Cantonese-style fish cake that's hard to find in Bangkok, bigger than the usual and good value. Good to know: it's takeaway only with no tables, gets busy in the early afternoon so you may have to wait, and on some days they sell out before closing. If you want both recipes and the buns, come earlier in the day.

Must-tryWhite-recipe mackerel fish cake (original)Red-recipe fish cake (with chili paste)Mix of both fish-cake recipesFried buns with cream/minced-pork filling
7
Indian-Pakistani (halal)

Sallim Restaurant

📍 Bang Rak / Charoen Krung 🧭 Bang Rak ⭐ 3.7 · 48 reviews (Wongnai)
🖼️ แตะรูปเพื่อซูมในหน้า · แผนที่ / โซเชียลฝังจากต้นทาง (ถูกลิขสิทธิ์)
👍 Best forA first meal trying affordable Indian-Pakistani food, coming as a group to share
HalalBudget-friendlyIndian-Pakistani
🕐09:00–21:00 daily 💵≈ $3–7 🌶️Adjustable, mostly medium, not too intense 🕌Halal 📋English menu
🥢Signature — Clay-oven roti with soft, chewy dough, Indian-Pakistani curries, lassi and freshly brewed Indian tea

If you want to try Indian-Pakistani food without paying a lot, Sallim Restaurant is the pin Bang Rak locals have talked about for ages. The shop hides in Charoen Krung Soi 32, beside the Bang Rak General Post Office — a homely-looking shophouse with no air-con, where you sit and eat in a relaxed way. It's been open since 1987, a Muslim halal spot serving Indian and Pakistani food with a little Thai food mixed in. It's perfect for anyone new to Indian food, since the flavors aren't scarily intense, and great if you come with a group and order to share.

The must-order is clay-oven roti/naan, especially garlic naan made fresh at the shopfront — soft, chewy dough fragrant with garlic, going well dipped in butter chicken curry or chicken korma. If you like rice there's chicken and goat biryani to choose. Finish with a fresh-blended lassi, which many reviews say comes rich and tangy-sweet and refreshing, plus a hot-brewed Indian tea; drink prices start at just tens of baht.

Real reviews lean toward praise, saying the meat in the curries is fall-apart tender and the spices well-rounded, with prices per head mostly around 100–250 baht — two can eat their fill for a couple hundred. Some say the taste is just okay, nothing flashy, which is normal for a homely-style shop that focuses on the real thing over decor. What keeps this place going is its value and authentic halal Indian food in a central-city location.

The location is easy, not far from BTS Saphan Taksin, Sathorn Pier (Central Pier) and Robinson Bang Rak — just a short walk from the main road into the soi. Open daily 09:00–21:00. Good to know: parking in the soi is limited, so if you drive it's best to park at the Bang Rak Post Office lot next door, or public transit is more convenient. And since there's no air-con, midday can be hot; coming in the evening is more comfortable.

Must-tryClay-oven roti/garlic naan (Garlic Naan)Butter chicken curry (Butter Chicken / Chicken Korma)LassiChicken/goat biryani (Biryani)
8
Chinese herbal drinks (Cantonese)

Wa Tho Yan Wo Yun

📍 Charoen Krung-Bang Rak 🧭 Charoen Krung-Bang Rak ⭐ 3.8 · 48 reviews (Wongnai)
🖼️ แตะรูปเพื่อซูมในหน้า · แผนที่ / โซเชียลฝังจากต้นทาง (ถูกลิขสิทธิ์)
👍 Best forA cooling sip for the health-conscious
Chinese herbal drinksOld-timer shopHealth-focused
🕐08:00–20:00 Monday-Saturday (closed Sunday) 💵≈ $0.20–1 🥗Veg options
🥢Signature — Jap liang herbal drink, medicinal Chinese herbal tonics, and refreshing cold Chinese drinks

If you're walking around Bang Rak across from Robinson Charoen Krung and the heat has you craving something cold and refreshing that isn't cloyingly sweet, "Wa Tho Yan Wo Yun" is the answer locals have known for nearly a hundred years. This is an old Cantonese-style Chinese herbal-drink shop selling jap liang, body-nourishing medicinal Chinese herbal teas, and cold Chinese drinks brewed fresh every day. It's perfect for the health-conscious, anyone wanting to try something traditional, or whoever is wandering Charoen Krung-Sathorn and wants a sip to cool off.

The must-try is "jap liang," which combines several Chinese herbs simmered together in one cup, well-rounded and just right, followed by the shop's signature bitter drink, which bitter-drink fans say is truly bitter but soothing. Pennywort juice, lotus-root juice and monk-fruit (luo han guo) juice are also top hits. What real reviews consistently praise is that it's "not cloyingly sweet" and doesn't mask the original taste of the herbs, leaving you feeling cooled off. Some say they've been hooked since the days it was 3–4 baht a glass, and still come back to buy.

Prices are very light: paper cups start at just a few baht, while a bottle to carry home runs about 20–33 baht — comfortably under a hundred baht per head. The location is on Charoen Krung Road, No. 1443, across from Robinson Bang Rak, about a 10-minute walk from BTS Saphan Taksin, Exit 3, or convenient from Sathorn Pier/Central Pier. Open Monday–Saturday 08:00–20:00, closed Sunday.

This shop is popular because it's the real, original thing that's been part of the neighborhood forever — locals buy drinks regularly, and tourists who like to try local things often stop by. Good to know: cups are paper cups leaning more toward takeaway than dining in, going in the strong afternoon sun is the most satisfying, and don't forget it's closed Sunday, so plan your day well.

Must-tryJap liangBitter drinkPennywort juiceMonk-fruit (luo han guo) juice
9
Chinese-Thai khao kha moo

Khao Kha Moo Trok Sung Bang Rak (the original)

📍 Silom–Bang Rak, Bangkok 🧭 Bang Rak ⭐ 3.7 · 109 reviews (Wongnai)
🖼️ แตะรูปเพื่อซูมในหน้า · แผนที่ / โซเชียลฝังจากต้นทาง (ถูกลิขสิทธิ์)
👍 Best forAnyone chasing original Teochew khao kha moo in an old Bang Rak shop
Old-timer shopThe originalShell Shuan Shim
🕐Mon–Sat 10:00–19:00 · closed Sunday 💵≈ $2
🥢Signature — Braised pork-leg rice — melt-in-your-mouth pork leg, thick gravy, well-rounded in the original Teochew recipe

Before Robinson stood towering at the mouth of the soi, Khao Kha Moo Trok Sung was already sitting here — less than 100 meters into Soi Charoen Wiang, on the old Charoen Krung Road in Bang Rak. The shop has been open since around 1961, started by a Teochew-Chinese grandmother who began with a pushcart selling rice with curries before turning to master the braised-pork-leg recipe passed down to the third generation. The name "Trok Sung" comes from the alley where the shop sits, so embedded in Bang Rak memories over 60 years that it became the household name no one needs directions for — and it has won the Shell Shuan Shim award since 1985.

The highlight that keeps people coming back is the dark-brown gravy slowly simmered from a huge pot — sweet-salty in the truly Teochew style, not heavy on bold spices — with pork leg braised until fall-apart tender, the skin fragrant with burnt-sugar aroma, ladled over hot steamed rice and served alongside thinly sliced pickled sour vegetables, five-spice braised egg, and a fresh chili–lime–garlic dipping sauce. The current owner says all 50–60 pork legs must be fresh every day, because if even one isn't up to quality, the whole pot loses its flavor. That's the standard that has kept the shop going for over six decades.

Besides the khao kha moo, which is the main dish, worthwhile add-ons include barbecue-pork and crispy-pork rice (both on one plate), khao ka-ki (pork-leg joint, plenty of meat, just-right bone), and bitter-melon soup with minced pork. Prices start at just 75 baht a plate, very cheap compared to the Silom area around it. Reviews on Wongnai talk about "tender pork, not chewy, well-rounded gravy that isn't too salty" and "a meal that fills you up without feeling heavy" — matching what Shell Shuan Shim has guaranteed for forty years.

The atmosphere is an old shophouse, no air-con, with marble tables in old-Chinatown style. It's best to go before noon because the pork leg sells out fast, especially Friday–Saturday when it's busy. Open Monday–Saturday 10:00–19:00, closed Sunday, about a 10-minute walk from BTS Saphan Taksin, or under 2 minutes by motorbike taxi from the mouth of Soi Charoen Wiang. Delivery is available via Grab, LINE MAN, Robinhood and Shopee Food.

Must-tryKhao kha moo with meat and skinKhao ka-ki (pork-leg joint)Barbecue-pork and crispy-pork riceBitter-melon soup
10
Chinese food (banquet-style/shark fin)

Tai Tong Shark Fin (Tai Tong)

📍 Bang Rak 🧭 Bang Rak-Charoen Krung ⭐ 4.2 · 44 reviews (Wongnai)
🖼️ แตะรูปเพื่อซูมในหน้า · แผนที่ / โซเชียลฝังจากต้นทาง (ถูกลิขสิทธิ์)
👍 Best forA special meal with family/a group, for traditional-Chinese-food lovers
Shark finOld banquet houseChinese food
🕐12:00–22:00 daily 💵≈ $14–28
🥢Signature — Shark fin soup with big lumps of crab meat, and old-style Chinese banquet dishes

Tai Tong Shark Fin Loet Rot Bang Rak is a "shophouse banquet" old-school Chinese restaurant that has been part of Bang Rak for over 70 years, at the mouth of Charoen Krung Soi 46, right across from Robinson Bang Rak, about a 10-minute walk from BTS Saphan Taksin. It's now run by second-generation Hia Hui (Mr. Paisan Asawathanapong). This spot is perfect for anyone wanting to try shark fin and old-style Chinese banquet food at an approachable price — come as a family or a group of friends and order to share with ease.

The dish people talk about most is the "red-broth shark fin," served in a clay pot of boiling soup with big lumps of crab meat. The highlight many reviews consistently praise is broth simmered from a whole chicken with ham until it reaches a rich umami and a viscous body from collagen. The shop stresses that it uses no MSG and no bleaching agents. If you don't eat shark fin there's red-broth fish maw, crab-meat hoy jor, Hong Kong-style stir-fried noodles, and crab fried rice, which many say reach restaurant level but at a lighter price.

On price, shark fin starts at about 500–600 baht per bowl (just right for one person) and climbs by size. Single-plate dishes like crab fried rice run around 200 baht, and averaging per person, if you order shark fin it lands in the 500–1,000 baht range. The atmosphere is an old shophouse with plain tables and chairs — not fancy but full of the vibe of a traditional Chinese banquet house. Open daily from noon late into the night (closing-time info ranges between 10 p.m. and midnight depending on the source, so it's best to call and check if you're coming late).

This place is popular because it's one of Bang Rak's oldest shark fin spots still making the original recipe, so both veteran regulars and tourists who want to try something traditional drop by. Good to know: shark fin is a menu item with conservation concerns, so if you're not comfortable ordering it you can still eat well with the shop's other Chinese dishes. And this restaurant has no branches — beware of shops with similar names.

Must-tryRed-broth shark fin with crab meatRed-broth fish mawCrab-meat hoy jorCrab fried rice
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🍢 Want to try several spots in one trip? Consider a food tour or cooking class

If you're short on time but want to sample a lot of spots around Bang Rak-Charoen Krung, a guided food tour is an easier option than hunting them down yourself — especially a Charoen Krung-Bang Rak walking food tour where the guide takes you to several old-timer shops and shares the stories behind the food and the neighborhood, so you don't have to gamble on which place is good. · If you'd rather get hands-on, a Thai cooking class is fun too — learn to make pad thai, tom yum or Thai curry with a chef and eat your own handiwork. · Book ahead via Klook or GetYourGuide; there are plenty of options, both half-day and full-day. Compare prices and reviews before booking.

🍢 See all Saphan Taksin food tours & cooking classes

💡 Know before you eat around Saphan Taksin

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Getting there: BTS Saphan Taksin + boat + walking

This area is very easy to reach. Get off the BTS at Saphan Taksin (Silom Line) and walk straight into Charoen Krung-Bang Rak, or transfer to the Chao Phraya express boat at Sathorn (Central Pier) beneath the station. · Most spots are within walking distance of each other, and walking is recommended because traffic around Charoen Krung is often jammed. · If you're tired, grabbing a Grab is convenient and you see the price before you tap.

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Paying: markets and street food, bring cash

Shops in Bang Rak Market, chicken-rice, rat na, fish-cake and herbal-drink stalls mostly take cash only, so carry small bills. · Many shops have PromptPay (QR), but don't count on being able to swipe a card everywhere. · Places with big seating like Tai Tong shark fin or some Indian restaurants are the ones that take cards.

Timing: markets in the morning, Indian in the evening

Bang Rak Market and single-plate shops are busiest from morning to afternoon; go too late and some may have sold out. · Indian restaurants like Al-Rahaman and Sallim shine in the evening-night. · Avoid weekday lunch if you don't want to run into the Sathorn office crowd packing the shops; going outside the peak is more comfortable.

🙂
Tips: not required, but you can

Street-food and single-plate shops in Thailand have no mandatory tipping custom; just pay the listed price. · If you're impressed you can leave the change or a few coins as a gesture of goodwill. · Restaurants like Tai Tong shark fin may already include a service charge in the bill, so check the receipt first.

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Language: some English menus, you can point at photos

Tourist-heavy spots like Al-Rahaman and the Indian restaurants on Charoen Krung usually have English menus or photos to point at. · Market and local shops may only have Thai, so point at the food tray or open a photo on your phone. · The words mai phet (not spicy) and phet nit noi (a little spicy) help a lot if you can't handle heat, especially with Indian curries.

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Halal food: plenty in lower Charoen Krung

Lower Charoen Krung-Bang Rak is an old hub of Indian-Muslim food. Shops like Al-Rahaman and Sallim serve halal-style food, great for Muslim travelers. · It's recommended to ask clearly at the shop before ordering if you want to confirm the ingredients.

💡 Planning a value day of eating around Saphan Taksin-Bang Rak

The nice thing about this area is that almost all the spots are within walking distance of each other, so grouping them by mealtime pays off. · Breakfast-lunch start at Bang Rak Market (Ma! Bang Rak) for combined street food including chicken rice, khao kha moo and roast duck rice, then continue to Cheer Chicken Rice Bang Rak on Charoen Krung Soi 44, or Heng Yod Pak Rat Na if you want wok-fragrant fried noodles. · Snacks while walking stop at Tod Man Kwangtung See Nuan across from Robinson Bang Rak, THB 10 a piece plus fried buns, then cool off with a cold glass of jap liang from Wa Tho Yan Wo Yun. · Dinner-late night Indian fans head to Al-Rahaman (Charoen Krung Soi 45) or Sallim for clay-oven roti with curry, while anyone wanting something upscale can book Tai Tong shark fin for a special meal. · Thip Volcano Oyster Omelette is good to drop by for an evening snack — leave a little extra time because it gets busy.

To make several days of eating around Saphan Taksin-Bang Rak comfortable, choose a well-located stay near BTS Saphan Taksin and Sathorn Pier — you can walk to eat across the whole area and hop on a boat along the Chao Phraya with ease.

See stays around Saphan Taksin-Bang Rak →

FAQ

Which restaurant around Saphan Taksin-Bang Rak is the most famous?

By review voice, Al-Rahaman on Charoen Krung Soi 45 comes near the top, as an old Indian restaurant people travel across the city for to eat chicken biryani and full-on spice curries, with a review score around 4.7. · On the Thai side the most talked-about are Cheer Chicken Rice Bang Rak on Charoen Krung Soi 44 and Bang Rak Market (Ma! Bang Rak), a combined street-food hub where Sathorn workers stop by regularly. · And for the legendary restaurant side there's Tai Tong shark fin, which has been part of Bang Rak for ages.

What are the signature foods around Saphan Taksin-Bang Rak?

This area stands out for its variety. · On the Thai side there's chicken rice (Cheer Bang Rak), rat na-wide-noodle pad see ew with wok fragrance (Heng Yod Pak), and market foods in Bang Rak Market like khao kha moo and roast duck rice. · On the Chinese-snack side there's volcano oyster omelette (Thip Bang Rak), Cantonese-style mackerel fish cakes (See Nuan), and Chinese herbal jap liang (Wa Tho Yan Wo Yun). · Lower Charoen Krung is known for Indian-Muslim food, biryani, curry and clay-oven roti at Al-Rahaman and Sallim. · Cap off an upscale meal with shark fin soup at Tai Tong.

About how much does eating around Saphan Taksin-Bang Rak cost?

The price range is very wide by type of shop. · Street food and single-plate shops are cheapest — e.g. Cheer Chicken Rice around THB 30–50/plate, Bang Rak Market around THB 60–80/plate, Heng Yod Pak rat na around THB 50–60, See Nuan fish cakes THB 10 a piece, and Wa Tho Yan herbal drinks THB 7–33 a glass. · Indian restaurants like Al-Rahaman run about THB 200–400/person, Sallim about THB 100–250/person. · And Tai Tong shark fin is a premium restaurant, around THB 500–1,000/person for a meal, best kept for a special occasion.

Do you need to book ahead at popular spots around Saphan Taksin-Bang Rak?

Most street-food and single-plate shops don't take reservations — just walk up and sit or queue at the shopfront, e.g. Bang Rak Market, Cheer Chicken Rice, Heng Yod Pak Rat Na, See Nuan fish cakes. · Indian restaurants like Al-Rahaman and Sallim get busy at dinner-weekends and you may have to wait for a table, so coming before the peak is more comfortable. · As for Tai Tong shark fin, which is a restaurant that often gets groups and banquet tables, it's recommended to call and book ahead, especially if you're going as a group or during a festival.

Which spots around Saphan Taksin-Bang Rak are open in the evening-late night?

There are options for the evening-late night crowd. · Indian restaurants like Al-Rahaman and Sallim stay open into the evening-night, great for dinner after strolling along the Chao Phraya. · Thip Volcano Oyster Omelette and the snack shops in the area are usually busy in the evening. · Bang Rak Market and the chicken-rice-rat na shops lean more toward breakfast to afternoon-early evening, so if you want to eat there, go midday-evening. · Tai Tong shark fin operates as a restaurant, so check the hours with them before going for dinner.

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