Sunset
Sunrise
Wat Arun — Chao Phraya riverside
Thonburi · West bank of the river
The Temple of Dawn facing east across the Chao Phraya is Bangkok's most photographed subject. At sunrise the temple spires catch the first light from behind you as you shoot from the east bank. At sunset, face west from the temple's terrace for the river and city skyline turning amber. A Bangkok sunset tonight with clear dry season skies and the Chao Phraya reflecting the color below is genuinely one of Southeast Asia's great photography compositions.
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Sunset
Mahanakhon Observation Deck
Silom · 314m above ground
The highest observation deck in Bangkok at 314m, with a glass floor section over the void. The elevated position gives a 360° view over the city and the Chao Phraya snaking through the skyline. Golden hour from here lets you watch the light change across the entire Bangkok basin simultaneously. The western horizon over the river is the prime direction. Book in advance for golden hour slots as it fills up.
Check golden hour timing →
Sunrise
Wat Pho & Grand Palace area
Rattanakosin · Historic island
The old royal island district is best photographed in the first hour of daylight before the coach tours arrive. Sunrise puts warm light on the white walls and gold spires of the Grand Palace complex, and the surrounding streets are empty enough for clean architectural compositions. The Chao Phraya ferry from the Tha Tian pier at dawn gives a river vantage point most tourists never see. Worth the early start.
Check sunrise forecast →
Sunset
Asiatique Riverfront
Charoenkrung · South riverfront
An open-air riverside market with a large Ferris wheel that becomes a strong compositional element at golden hour and blue hour. The position on the west bank looks back across the river toward the city, and the wheel and the cranes of the old warehouse district frame the skyline well. Less architectural than the temple area but gives a different, more layered Bangkok perspective. Best from 45 minutes before sunset through blue hour.
Check sky score →
Cool Season · Nov–Feb
The best window. Clear skies, comfortable temperatures.
- November through February is dry season: humidity drops, haze clears, and Bangkok gets its clearest skies of the year
- Early morning temperatures are comfortable enough to start shooting before 6 AM without the heat being a factor
- Goldcast scores tend to run higher in the dry season: clearer air means the sun's color translates fully at golden hour
- December and January are peak tourist months: Wat Arun and the Grand Palace area need early starts to avoid crowds
Hot Season · Mar–May
Intense heat. Haze builds. Shoot at the edges.
- March through May temperatures regularly hit 38–40°C by midday: all serious photography shifts to the first two hours after sunrise
- Heat haze reduces visibility and Goldcast transparency scores drop through the day — mornings are the window
- Pre-monsoon storms start building in April and May, creating dramatic cumulus clouds that can produce exceptional light when they break at sunset
- Songkran (Thai New Year, mid-April) brings chaotic street scenes and water fights: challenging to shoot but genuinely one-of-a-kind imagery
Monsoon · Jun–Oct
Unpredictable but dramatic. Rain clears the air.
- Monsoon season brings daily afternoon storms: heavy rain typically arrives between 2 and 5 PM and clears by early evening
- Post-storm skies in Bangkok can be extraordinary: cleared air, dramatic cloud structure, and vivid color at golden hour
- The Chao Phraya rises significantly in September and October, adding drama to riverside compositions
- Carry weather protection for your gear and watch Goldcast daily — conditions change fast and the windows that appear are worth chasing
Year-Round Tips
What stays constant in Bangkok.
- Golden hour windows are short at this latitude: 30–45 minutes maximum, so position and settings need to be ready before the light arrives
- The Chao Phraya ferry is one of the most useful photography tools in the city: moving between east and west bank while shooting the river as you go
- Heat and humidity affect gear: condensation can form on lenses when moving between air-conditioned spaces and the hot outdoors — allow acclimatization time
- Traffic in Bangkok is extreme: build buffer time into any location plan and consider the river ferry over road transport for riverside spots