🔄 Last checked 24 Jun 2026 · details and hours can change — check the venue before you go
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If you had to pick one Bangkok neighborhood you could eat in forever without getting bored, plenty of serious eaters would name Sukhumvit — because it's not just one style. The Phrom Phong–EmQuartier stretch mixes old-school food shops with luxury malls; head down to Ekkamai and you hit a cluster of beloved long-runners that have been going for decades; and Thonglor is the land of cafés, brunch and late-night rice soup for the after-dark crowd. It's all strung along the BTS Sukhumvit line, just a few minutes' walk from the station into the soi. Start the day with a hot bowl of tom yum noodles, do lunch on plate after plate of crab fried rice, take dinner over fiery southern food or original Trat-style cooking, then close out late with rice soup at the mouth of a Thonglor soi — one day, every mood, one neighborhood.
What makes Sukhumvit special is that many of the places on this list have the goods to back it up, not just hype — Rung Rueang (Tang) Pork Noodles, Sukhumvit 26 has been open since 1965 and has held a Michelin Street Food listing for years running; Here Hai (HERE HAI) and Nhong Rim Klong in Ekkamai are the originators of crab fried rice and creamy crab omelette, both Michelin Bib Gourmand; Sri Trat on Sukhumvit 33 is known for genuinely Trat-style mu chamuang; on the traditional side there's Wattana Panich (the old Ekkamai shop), which has been stewing its beef broth across days for over 50 years; and on the café side you've got Roast at The Commons and Greyhound Cafe, the Thai-fusion legend that's been part of Bangkok since 1997. By the time you finish reading, you'll probably already know which BTS station you're getting off at for your next meal.
Rung Rueang (Tang) Pork Noodles, Sukhumvit 26
When it comes to legendary pork noodles in Bangkok, "Rung Rueang (Tang)" on Sukhumvit 26 is one of the first names that comes up. The shop has been open since 1965 — over 60 years now — going from a vendor pedaling a cart and selling bowls for a few satang to a Bib Gourmand listing in the Michelin Guide and a steady spot on the Michelin street-food list since 2018. It's a great fit if you want to try the real thing around Phrom Phong–EmQuartier — office workers from nearby, plus Korean, Japanese and Chinese travelers following the Michelin trail all come here.
The dish to order is the "tom yum pork noodles" — a rich, spice-fragrant broth, sour up front and spicy behind, but never burying the natural sweetness of the pork. Reviewers agree the minced pork comes heaped on, and the house-made fish balls are wonderfully bouncy. Some prefer the clear-soup version to taste the broth on its own, after the bones have been simmered for hours. If you eat offal, the liver and intestine are worth a try, and don't skip the crispy fried fish skin on the side — dip it in the sauce and it's hard to stop. Add extra wontons or noodles as you like.
On price it's reasonable for a shop of this caliber — a medium bowl is around 60 baht, a large around 70, and you'll eat your fill for under a hundred. The setting is a traditional street shop with tables packed close, lots of people and a fast-moving queue. It's about 150 meters' walk from BTS Phrom Phong into the soi — easy to find — and open daily roughly 08:00–17:00 (Saturday–Sunday it opens a little later, at 08:30).
Important to know: there are several "Rung Rueang" units in this soi that all branched off from the same family. This is the corner unit ("Tang"), the one that holds the Bib Gourmand — so if you're following Michelin, aim for the corner shop. Lunchtime gets very crowded and some items run out fast; if you'd rather not wait long, come around 2–3pm and it's more relaxed. And order everything at once, since the shop moves fast and the queue keeps coming.
Wattana Panich (the old Ekkamai shop)
When it comes to legendary stewed beef noodles in Bangkok, "Wattana Panich," the old Ekkamai shop, has to be one of the first names mentioned. This little shophouse on Sukhumvit 63, near Ekkamai Soi 18, has been selling for over 50–60 years, passed down within the family from one generation to the next. What makes people from all over the city (and foreign travelers chasing the viral clips) willing to queue is the giant pot of broth bubbling out front that has simmered without ever going cold for decades — topped up with water and ingredients every day, perpetual-stew style, until the aroma and flavor build to a depth a single fresh day's pot simply can't copy. It's perfect if you want to try the real deal of stewed beef — when you're in Ekkamai, you have to stop by.
The dish to order is the "special mixed stewed beef in clear soup," which gets you tender stewed beef, tendon, meatballs and offal all in one bowl, or you can have it as stewed beef noodles with noodles added. Another signature that's just as famous is the "herbal stewed goat," simmered tender with Chinese herbs like goji berries. If you prefer rice, the beef over rice with oyster sauce or the chicken over rice are light, easy options. Most reviews agree the broth is rich and sweetly fragrant from long-stewed bones and beef tendon — the Chinese-herb aroma is clear but not harsh, and the meat is so soft it nearly melts and barely needs chewing. Many call it the best beef broth they've ever had. As for the goat, a few say the smell is a bit strong for the uninitiated, so order the beef first if you're not sure.
On price it's good value for the reputation — beef noodles or beef in clear soup run about 80–150 baht, while a large bowl of herbal stewed goat is 200 baht. The setting is a genuinely old, no-frills shop with stainless tables, steel chairs and no air-con, hot and very crowded at lunchtime. If you can embrace the old-Chinese-eatery vibe you'll have fun, but if you're expecting a comfy air-conditioned restaurant you may need to brace yourself. The shop holds a MICHELIN Guide Bangkok "The Plate" award — another stamp of quality — which has only made it more popular with Thais and foreigners alike.
Good to know before you go: there's no parking on site, so you'll have to use the building across the street, which charges around 40–50 baht. If you come by BTS, get off at Ekkamai and take a taxi or motorbike taxi about 2 kilometers into the soi. Aim for before noon or late afternoon to dodge the long queue, and note the shop closes on the last Monday of the month (the day they clean the big stewing pot) — check before you go so you don't miss out.
Here Hai (HERE HAI)
You can't talk about "crab fried rice" in Bangkok without mentioning Here Hai (HERE HAI). This is the original home of the legendary "crazy-crab fried rice" in Ekkamai — a shophouse rice-and-dishes spot in the premium street-food mold where people line up well before it opens. It's a great fit if you want fresh seafood stir-fried plate by plate, piping hot from the wok — no fancy ambience, just generous portions and good value. If you love crab heaped until it spills over the plate, this is the place, and it's backed by a Michelin Bib Gourmand it has held year after year since 2020, right up to the latest edition.
The dish to order is the "crazy-crab fried rice," the star of the shop — every grain separate, fragrant with that touch of wok char locals call "hom mai," topped with a mountain of blue-crab body meat and claws. The crab is sourced from Surat Thani, picked and ready to eat, and served with a green seafood dipping sauce pounded fresh from garlic, coriander, chili, lime and fish sauce that cuts the richness beautifully. Two other big sellers are the crab omelette — fluffy and packed with crab meat — and the crab stir-fried in curry powder, rich and fragrant with spice. If you're in a group, add the garlic-and-pepper mantis shrimp or the grilled river prawns.
Real reviews lean the same way: "the crab is piled on," the fried rice itself is mild rather than bold so the sweetness of the crab can shine, and many call it good value for the amount of crab you get. The common gripe is that during peak hours the food comes out slowly and the queue is very long — some people wait an hour. A single plate of crazy-crab fried rice runs about 340 baht, while the giant platter for sharing runs into the several hundreds to nearly a thousand, averaging around 250–500 baht per person.
The shop is on Ekkamai Road (Sukhumvit 63) between Ekkamai Soi 10 and 12, in Khlong Tan Nuea, Watthana district — near Don Don Donki, and you can walk through to Thonglor. It's open 10:00–15:00 and 16:00–17:30, closed Mondays. Crucially, the shop is cash only and doesn't take reservations — go before opening or avoid the peak lunch–dinner rush if you don't want a long wait. Here Hai now has a branch in Siam Paragon too, for anyone who'd rather skip the queue at the Ekkamai shop.
Nhong Rim Klong (Nhong Rimklong)
When it comes to made-to-order shops that pile on the crab meat with no restraint, "Nhong Rim Klong" is one of the first names Bangkokians think of. The shop started as a tiny stall genuinely by the canal, then blew up and moved into a two-unit shophouse on Ekkamai 23 (Soi Phasi, near Wat Phasi) — about a hundred-odd meters into the soi. What makes it more than your average rice-and-dishes shop is the Michelin Bib Gourmand it has held for several years running. It's a great fit if you want skilfully cooked seafood at prices that are still within reach — especially crab lovers after chunky crab meat all in one plate.
The dish every table orders is the "creamy crab omelette," which customers have nicknamed the "crazy-crab" creamy omelette — the egg cooked to just the right doneness, smooth and lava-like, then topped with so much fresh crab meat you can barely see the egg underneath. Another dish reviews mention often is the crab omelette, thick and fluffy with a full mouthful of crab in every bite. For the spice crowd there's crab stir-fried with bird's-eye chili, and the big garlic-fried prawns are another favorite. Most real reviews lean the same way: "genuinely loads of crab, genuinely fresh, great value." Many say it's hard to find this much real crab for this price anywhere else.
The setting is an air-conditioned shophouse with simple tables and chairs and a semi-open kitchen — not fancy, but clean and fast. The average runs about 251–500 baht per person, while signature crab dishes like the creamy crab omelette or the crab omelette land in the high hundreds to nearly a thousand, because they pile on the real crab. Come with a group and share and it works out better value and more filling. It's open Monday–Saturday from late morning (08:30) into the afternoon (around 16:00), closed Sunday — so it suits a late-morning to lunch meal more than dinner.
Good to know before you go: parking out front is limited, and many reviews suggest parking at Wat Phasi and walking in. At peak times it's crowded and some dishes take a while. If you're expecting a pretty canal-side shop as the name suggests, you may need to adjust — it's now inside the soi. But if you're here for the flavor and the amount of crab, this is still a destination that Thais and foreign travelers (Korean, Taiwanese, Western) keep coming to try.
Khua Kling Pak Sod (Thonglor branch)
If you want to know what uncompromisingly fiery southern Thai food tastes like, Khua Kling Pak Sod's Thonglor branch is one of the shops Bangkokians bring up most. It's a family restaurant that takes grandma's recipes from Tha Sae district in Chumphon and does them for real, set in a mustard-yellow building about 100 meters down Thonglor Soi 5 — take the first right, opposite the Kenyan embassy — and it's backed by a Michelin Bib Gourmand it has held for several years running. It's a great fit if you can handle heat and want to try genuine southern flavors in an upscale neighborhood.
The dish to order is the "minced-pork khua kling," the star of the shop — stir-fried dry and fragrant with spice, fiery from bird's-eye chili and white pepper to the point where many say their tongue goes numb. Eaten with the big plate of fresh-vegetable sides, which helps tame the heat. Another you can't miss is "mu hong" — pork belly braised until it's meltingly tender, balanced sweet and salty — followed by crab-and-cha-phlu-leaf curry, sour-spicy yellow curry with sea bass that's fragrant with spice, stir-fried liang leaves with egg, and, if you're in a group, the big plate of khanom jeen with crab gravy. Most reviews agree it's "boldly seasoned and fully spiced," not cloyingly sweet, with good ingredients and no MSG.
On price, it's straight up on the high side for made-to-order food — mains run about 180–580 baht, and a meal comes to around 300–500 baht per person — but most people say it's worth it for the quality and the bold flavors you don't find easily. The shop is open daily from early morning (around 07:00) into the evening, with an outdoor zone and a private room, in a simple air-conditioned setting with royal portraits on the walls.
Good to know before you go: parking is the weak point reviewers complain about most — the soi is narrow and space is limited, so if you drive you may need the valet, or come by public transport for an easier time. The lunch–dinner rush gets busy, so call ahead to book a table for peace of mind. If you're not great with heat, tell the staff to dial it down — but brace yourself, because the standard here is genuinely fiery in true southern style.
🛏️ Stay in Sukhumvit and you can walk to good food all day
The beauty of staying in Sukhumvit is that nearly all the great shops on this list sit along the same BTS line. Pick a hotel around Asok, Phrom Phong, Thonglor or Ekkamai and you can hop on the BTS and make it in time to queue for Michelin noodles in the morning — and after a late-night rice-soup run you're back at your room fast. There's everything from BTS-side hostels for a few hundred baht to 5-star hotels with a skywalk straight to the mall. Compare prices across a few sites and book ahead in high season to land a good room at a better rate.
Sri Trat Restaurant & Bar
If you want "Eastern" Thai food of the kind that's hard to find in Bangkok, Sri Trat is a place worth trying at least once. It's a Michelin Bib Gourmand restaurant run by P'Ek and his wife, who bring his mother's home cooking from Trat province to the middle of Sukhumvit 33. The restaurant is an old villa with exposed-brick walls, a bar zone and a dining zone that feels like eating at a relative's house. The spot everyone photographs is the big painting of a beautiful woman on the wall — the owner's mother in her beauty-queen days. It suits a family meal, a special occasion, or bringing foreign friends to try genuine Thai flavors that aren't the same old pad thai and tom yum.
The dish you can't miss is "mu chamuang" — a pork curry with chamuang leaves, Trat-style, fragrant with the leaves, gently sour, with pork stewed soft. Most reviews crown it the star of the shop. Another that nearly every table orders is "minced pork with Trat salted fish," salty-rich in just the right way — squeeze on lime and eat it with plain rice and it's wonderful. For noodle dishes, don't skip the "stir-fried glass noodles with cha-om and minced pork," fragrant and well balanced, alongside seafood like the crab vermicelli or the crab-and-egg lon, both packed with crab meat. If you like the unusual, try the chicken-and-durian massaman or the crispy turmeric-fried termite-mushroom fish.
Reviews lean the same way — delicious food, fragrant with spice, beautifully plated, good service, lovely staff — but note that the flavors run "sweet-forward" in true Trat style. Some who like it boldly seasoned may feel it's not as fiery-satisfying as an Isan place, and it's a different style from southern food. Prices are mid-to-upper: dishes start around 190–290 baht, while seafood and the crab lon climb into the five hundreds, averaging around 400–800 baht per person depending on what you order.
It's located in Sukhumvit Soi 33, walkable from BTS Phrom Phong, with valet parking, open daily 11:00–23:00 (kitchen takes last orders around 21:30). Good to know: the shop is very popular with limited seating, so evenings and weekends fill up fast — book ahead via Line @SriTrat or call first. The kitchen sticks fairly closely to its closing time, so don't arrive too late or you'll miss the signature dishes.
55 Pochana (Ha-Sip-Ha Pochana)
If you're a night owl around Thonglor–Ekkamai, you've probably heard of "55 Pochana." It's an old all-night rice-soup shop that's been open since 1983 — over thirty years now — right on Sukhumvit Road at the mouth of Sukhumvit Soi 55, just a few steps from BTS Thonglor Exit 3. It's a row of several adjoining shophouse units with both an air-conditioned zone and a roadside terrace, perfect for anyone who's just clocked off late, come out of the bars nearby and is hungry, or wants something warm before heading home. The menu is Chinese-Thai made-to-order rice-soup-shop fare — order anything from a single plate to a full table of dishes.
The dish reviews mention most is "dok khajon stir-fried with egg" — a signature here, stir-fried over high heat until you get that touch of wok char, the egg clinging to the cowslip-creeper flowers just right; some versions add glass noodles, shrimp and squid. Another that nearly every table orders is "crispy duck stir-fried with holy basil," the duck so tender one Western reviewer said it melts in the mouth, scattered with crisp-fried holy basil. Popular snacks include oyster omelette, squid stir-fried with salted egg, omelette with snakehead fish, and crispy-pork salad. If you like heat, order anything with holy basil or tom yum — boldly seasoned in true rice-soup-shop style.
On flavor most reviews are positive — tasty, high-heat, wok-fragrant — but some note honestly that several dishes are quite oily, since the high-heat stir-frying uses plenty of oil, and a few seafood dishes draw complaints of being chewy. The cost is about 250–500 baht per person depending on what you order — not super cheap but reasonable for prime Thonglor. The Google score sits around 3.9, which reflects a place people come back to because it's open late and the flavors are familiar, more than a fancy restaurant.
Good to know before you go: the shop opens in the evening and runs late — roughly 18:30 to 3:30am (Friday–Saturday it can stretch to 4am) — so it's closed during the day. It suits a dinner, a late-night meal, or the final stop on a night out in the area. After midnight it gets busy and you may wait a little for a table, but service is fast for hungry people, and there are vegetarian options too. If you're staying around Thonglor–Ekkamai and wake up hungry in the small hours, this is the seasoned old hand of the neighborhood.
Roast Coffee & Eatery
If you're after a brunch spot that has been part of Thonglor for ages and is still packed nearly every weekend morning, Roast Coffee & Eatery is one of the first names Bangkokians think of. The place has been open over ten years, starting on a Thonglor soi before moving to the top floor of The Commons, Thonglor 17. Its draw is being an all-day American-brunch / comfort-food spot that bakes its own bread and roasts its own coffee in-house. It's a great fit for brunch people who want to settle in for a long, relaxed meal, office workers with an early meeting, or a group of café-loving friends who want both serious food and good coffee in one place.
The dish nearly every table orders is the Eggs Benedict (around 320 baht), poached eggs with runny yolks under hollandaise, alongside the Blueberry Ricotta pancakes, soft and fragrant with cheese. Real reviews praise the eggs Benedict as well executed and the most talked-about dish. For something sweet there are strawberry waffles, crisp outside and soft inside, and French toast. Coffee lovers should try the Iced Espresso Latte (around 120 baht), made with their own single-origin roast — some reviews find the coffee a touch sour in true specialty style, so chat with the barista about the beans — and the shop serves free baguette with butter while you wait for your food.
The setting is a semi-open space with bright wooden tables, high ceilings, and natural light and breeze, giving it a slow-life Western-café feel. The Google score is 4.5 from over 2,700 reviews, which is genuinely strong for a place that's been open this long. Most voices praise the boldly flavored food, fresh ingredients and quality coffee.
Good to know: prices land in the 251–500 baht per person range, with mains around 320–340 baht. Some say it's worth the quality, but a few reviews feel the portions are on the small side for the price, and the late-morning to midday weekend rush gets crowded with long queues — come before 11am for the easiest time. The shop is on the 3rd floor of The Commons, all the way up top, with parking under the building, open daily.
Baan Somtum (Sukhumvit branch)
If you like Isan som tam eaten somewhere clean and roomy, Baan Somtum's Sukhumvit branch is a pin worth dropping. The shop is in Soi Suksawat (Sukhumvit 40) on the back side of Gateway Ekkamai, about 400 meters' walk from BTS Ekkamai — a two-story house with green trees and easy parking, good for a family meal, meeting friends, or treating the team after work. Baan Somtum is a long-famous brand and one of the first to turn Luang Prabang som tam into a signature dish.
The dish nearly every table orders is the Luang Prabang som tam — thinly julienned papaya mixed with shrimp paste, crunchier in texture than regular som tam, fragrant with the paste, boldly seasoned in a way many reviews say "lives up to the hype" and genuinely feels different from ordinary som tam. Another not to miss is the salted-crab-and-pla-ra som tam, deeply savory and bold, alongside the fried laab, fried until fragrant, and the deep-fried sea bass with fish sauce — a big, meaty fish the whole table can share — finished off with cool coconut ice cream that takes the edge off the heat just right.
On flavor, most reviews lean the same way: "reliably good," consistent every visit, clean food, a comfortable setting and good service. The common note is that prices run mid-to-slightly-high for a som tam shop, and some dishes aren't huge in portion — but in exchange for the cleanliness and comfortable seating it's considered worth it. The cost is about 251–500 baht per person.
It's easy to reach, open daily 11:00–22:00 (Wednesday closes at 21:30), with parking, credit cards accepted and delivery available. Weekend evenings get busy, so if you're in a group, allow a little time for a table. If you like it spicy, tell the staff your level — and if you want to try the real standout, the Luang Prabang som tam is the dish you can't miss.
Greyhound Cafe (J Avenue Thonglor branch)
When it comes to Bangkok cafés that have been around so long they've become a Thonglor landmark, Greyhound Cafe's J Avenue branch has to be on the list. This is the café flagship of the Thai fashion brand Greyhound, serving Thai-Italian fusion in the brand's signature minimal, black-toned setting. It was recently renovated into a "Green Hideaway" concept with 360-degree greenery around the room and a Dog Friendly zone where you can bring your pup. It's a great fit for chilling out, meeting friends, couples, or coming as a group on the weekend.
The signature dish people talk about most is the Complicated Noodle — "drunken-style Chanthaburi noodles" served DIY on a wooden tray, with sheets of Chanthaburi rice noodle, fresh iceberg lettuce, holy basil leaves, stir-fried minced pork and a bold seafood dipping sauce, for you to wrap and eat one bite at a time. A Western reviewer on Tripadvisor put it as "it takes a little effort, but every bite is worth it." Another that draws constant praise is the fish-sauce fried chicken wings, crisp-skinned, and the wrapped minced-pork noodles. For noodle dishes there's also spicy corned-beef spaghetti, crab fried rice, French onion soup, and desserts like banana pudding with berry sauce to finish on a high note.
On flavor most people give it a pass — the food is good, plated nicely, the baked bread comes out warm with butter, and the coffee is solid. Dishes run about ฿130–490, averaging 250–500 baht per person, which is reasonable for a Thonglor location. The honest note from real reviews is that some dishes come out salty or spicy for some palates, and service can be slow when it's busy. The Google score is 4.3 and Wongnai 3.9 from 99 reviews, which reflects a place that's "reliably good" more than flashy.
It's on the G floor of the J Avenue complex, Thonglor Soi 15 (Sukhumvit 55), about 1.5 km from BTS Thonglor — easy by motorbike taxi or Grab. Open daily 11:00–21:00 (last order 21:30). Weekend lunch and evenings get fairly busy, so if you're in a group it's best to call ahead and book a table at 02-712-6547 — and don't forget to ask about the All Day Breakfast, a special menu available only at this branch.
Food tours & cooking classes around Sukhumvit
Want to try several shops in one trip with someone to lead the way so you're not guessing? Book a walking food tour through Sukhumvit–Ekkamai–Thonglor, where a guide takes you around the best spots and explains the story behind each dish. Or if you'd rather get hands-on, there are Thai cooking classes in Bangkok that take you to the market to pick ingredients and then cook popular Thai dishes to bring home. Book ahead via Klook or GetYourGuide, choose a time that suits you, pay online and get instant confirmation — handy for travelers who want to dig into the real flavors of this neighborhood.
💡 Know before you eat in Sukhumvit, Bangkok
Most shops are in the Ekkamai–Thonglor–Phrom Phong sois along the BTS Sukhumvit line. Get off at the nearest station and walk into the soi, or grab a Grab/taxi from the soi mouth. Avoid driving yourself in the evening — traffic is heavy and parking is hard to find.
Traditional spots like noodle, rice-soup and made-to-order shops mostly take cash; some have a PromptPay QR but don't take cards. Keep small notes on you to pay easily. Cafés and sit-down restaurants usually take cards and scan-to-pay.
Michelin spots like Here Hai and Nhong Rim Klong get long lunchtime queues, they're open daytime to afternoon, and they often sell out before closing. Go before 11am or late afternoon for a shorter wait. Save the late-night rice soup to cap off the evening.
Most tourist-friendly shops and cafés have English or picture menus, but some old-school street shops are Thai-only. Point at a photo or name the signature dish (e.g. crab fried rice, beef noodle) and the staff will get it. Keeping Google Translate handy helps too.
Southern food like khua kling and Isan / som tam are genuinely fiery. If you're not great with heat, tell the staff "less spicy" or "not spicy" when you order, and add sides or fresh vegetables to cut the heat.
No need to tip at street and made-to-order shops. Some sit-down restaurants already add a service charge to the bill. If the service is good, leaving your small change or a little tip is a kind gesture the shop is happy to receive.
Plan your eating to make the most of a day in Sukhumvit
The simple trick is to eat by zone and walk along the BTS — it saves time and you won't be riding back and forth · Breakfast–late morning: start at Rung Rueang (Tang), Sukhumvit 26 (near Phrom Phong/EmQuartier), or Here Hai and Nhong Rim Klong in Ekkamai, since these shops open during the day, close in the afternoon and often sell out early — go late and you risk missing out · Lunch–dinner: follow with Khua Kling Pak Sod, the southern spot on Thonglor Soi 5, or Sri Trat, Trat-style food around Sukhumvit 33, both comfortable for a long, leisurely meal · Café break: stop by Roast at The Commons, Thonglor 17, or Greyhound Cafe at J Avenue · then close out late with 55 Pochana at the mouth of Thonglor, open until 3–4am · Michelin made-to-order and seafood spots like Here Hai and Nhong Rim Klong get long queues at peak — go before 11am or late afternoon and you won't have to wait long.
To enjoy several meals across Sukhumvit, staying nearby is the easiest move — pick a hotel around Asok, Phrom Phong, Thonglor or Ekkamai with easy BTS access. Get up early and you can make the queue for Michelin noodles in time, and after a late-night rice-soup run you're back at your room fast. Compare Sukhumvit stay prices and book ahead.
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