TripPick Thailand Thailand

Chiang Rai & the Far North 7-Day

Temples, Golden Triangle, tea country, Mae Salong, Singha Park — plus a Chiang Mai overnight and a Laos border option

Chiang Rai 7-Day Itinerary — Quick Answer

As of 2026
Trip length
7 days
Est. cost / person (mid, ex-flights)
$670
Budget–luxury
$305–$1,800

As of 2026, the recommended Chiang Rai 7-day route runs Day1 White Temple + Blue Temple + Black House + Night Bazaar · Day2 Golden Triangle — Mekong, Hall of Opium & Chiang Saen · Day3 Tea & mountain country — Choui Fong + Doi Tung · Day4 Mae Salong — Yunnanese tea town in the hills · Day5 Singha Park, Guan Yin & a slow finish · Day6 Chiang Mai overnight — Old City temples & night market · Day7 Return north or onward to Laos + departure, grouping the must-see sights with minimal backtracking. Estimated cost per person (excluding flights) is around $670 on a mid-range budget. Seven days does the far north properly. Days 1-5 cover Chiang Rai in full — the three temples, the Golden Triangle, Choui Fong and Doi Tung, Mae Salong, and Singha Park. Day 6 is a Chiang Mai overnight (about 3 hours by road), stopping at the White Temple en route and taking in Chiang Mai's Old City temples and night markets. Day 7 returns north or, alternatively, swaps to the Chiang Khong border for the Laos slow boat to Luang Prabang. A hired car with driver makes the spread-out region manageable, and the cool season (Nov-Feb) is best throughout.

7-Day Total Budget at a Glance

Budget

$305

Per person, flights excl.

Recommended

Mid-Range

$670

Per person, flights excl.

Luxury

$1,800

Per person, flights excl.

Book Hotels & Flights for This Itinerary

Search Chiang Rai hotels and flights in one place. Trip.com offers competitive comparison rates.

Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule

DAY 1

White Temple + Blue Temple + Black House + Night Bazaar

Wat Rong Khun (White Temple) - Wat Rong Suea Ten (Blue Temple) - Black House (Baan Dam) - Clock Tower - Night Bazaar

Activities

  1. 08:30 Wat Rong Khun — the White Temple 1h30

    Start early at Chiang Rai's icon — a surreal, all-white contemporary Buddhist temple begun in 1997 by local artist Chalermchai Kositpipat, covered in mirror-glass mosaics. The entrance bridge crosses a sea of reaching hands symbolizing desire and suffering. THB 100 for foreigners.

    Cost: THB 100 (~$3) TIP: Arrive at opening (around 8:00) to beat the Chiang Mai tour buses that pour in mid-morning. It's 13 km south of the center, so it's also easy to see on the way in from Chiang Mai. Dress modestly (shoulders and knees covered); large bags may not be allowed inside the main hall (free storage provided).
  2. 10:30 Wat Rong Suea Ten — the Blue Temple 45min

    A vivid sapphire-and-gold temple completed in 2016, with a serene white Buddha inside and intricate blue-and-gold murals throughout. Built by a student of the White Temple's artist, it's smaller, quieter, and free to enter.

    Cost: Free TIP: On the north edge of the city, an easy pairing with the morning. Far fewer crowds than the White Temple. The blue-and-gold detail photographs beautifully in late-morning light. A nearby café strip makes a good coffee stop.
  3. 12:00 Lunch — local khao soi or Northern Thai 1h

    Break for Northern Thai food. Khao Soi Phor Jai (egg noodles in coconut curry) on Jetyod Road for a quick, local bowl, or Phu Lae in the center for the fuller Lanna spread — sai ua sausage, gaeng hang lay, and nam prik dips.

    Cost: THB 50-300 ($1.50-9) TIP: Khao Soi Phor Jai closes mid-afternoon and is cash-only — go before it sells out. If you want air-con and an English menu, Phu Lae is the easier choice. Ask for 'mai phet' if you want it mild.
  4. 13:30 Black House (Baan Dam Museum) 1h30

    The dark counterpoint to the White Temple — the late artist Thawan Duchanee's compound of around 40 black wooden buildings filled with animal bones, hides, skulls, and primal art. Strange, atmospheric, and unlike any conventional museum. THB 80.

    Cost: THB 80 (~$2.50) TIP: About 10 km north of the center, often paired with the Blue Temple nearby. It's an art compound, not a temple — no dress code, but it's a fair amount of walking between buildings. Allow time to wander; the smaller structures hold some of the oddest pieces.
  5. 17:00 Clock Tower + city center stroll 1h30

    Back in town for the golden Clock Tower (also designed by Chalermchai Kositpipat), which runs a short light-and-sound show after dark. Wander the central streets, cafés, and Wat Phra Kaew, the temple that once held Thailand's Emerald Buddha.

    Cost: Free TIP: The Clock Tower light show runs briefly in the evening (around 19:00, 20:00, 21:00) — worth catching if you're passing. Wat Phra Kaew is a short walk and free. A relaxed way to end the temple day before dinner.
  6. 19:00 Dinner — Night Bazaar food court 1h30

    Eat at the nightly Night Bazaar food court — around 60 stalls of Northern Thai dishes, grilled skewers, and Thai classics around a stage with free live music and dance. Cheap, lively, and central.

    Cost: THB 50-250 ($1.50-8) TIP: It runs every night, unlike the weekend Walking Streets. Graze across stalls; sit near the stage for the music. Hotpot stalls feed 2-3 people for THB 250-400. Bring small cash. The market's craft and clothing stalls are good for a post-dinner browse.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel or café breakfast

City center · THB 50-150

Coffee and a light bite before the early temple start — local Doi Chang coffee if you can.

Lunch

Khao Soi Phor Jai or Phu Lae

Jetyod Rd / city center · THB 50-300

Khao soi for a quick local bowl, or the full Lanna spread at Phu Lae.

Dinner

Night Bazaar food court

Near the bus station · THB 50-250

Stall-hopping Northern Thai food with free live music.

Transit:

The temples are spread around the city's edges (White Temple 13 km south, Blue Temple and Black House to the north), so a hired car with driver (THB 1,500-2,500/day) or a group temple tour is the practical way to do Day 1. The evening center is walkable.

DAY 1 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $35 Mid $80 Luxury $220
DAY 2

Golden Triangle — Mekong, Hall of Opium & Chiang Saen

Golden Triangle viewpoint - Hall of Opium museum - Mekong longtail boat - Chiang Saen old temples - Mae Sai border (optional)

Activities

  1. 08:30 Drive to the Golden Triangle (Sop Ruak) 1h15

    Head about an hour northeast to Sop Ruak, where Thailand, Laos, and Myanmar meet on the Mekong River — the heart of the historic Golden Triangle opium-trade region. The drive passes rice country and the Mekong plain.

    Cost: Included in car/tour TIP: A hired driver or group tour is the easiest way — public transport here is slow and patchy. Leave early to beat the midday heat and tour-bus crowds at the viewpoint. The landscape is clearest in the cool season; March-April haze can dull the river views.
  2. 10:00 Golden Triangle viewpoint + giant Buddha 45min

    The free viewpoint over the confluence where the three countries meet, marked by a large golden Buddha and the iconic 'Golden Triangle' arch. Get oriented to which bank is Laos and which is Myanmar before the boat ride.

    Cost: Free TIP: It's touristy but the three-country river view is genuinely striking. The best photos are from the elevated platform by the Buddha. Vendors sell snacks and souvenirs; agree prices first. Combine with the boat ride right below.
  3. 11:00 Mekong longtail boat ride 1h

    Board a longtail boat onto the Mekong for a close-up of all three countries' banks, usually with a stop at the Lao island of Don Sao (a small duty-free and market island you can visit without a Lao visa for a fee).

    Cost: THB 400-600 per boat TIP: Agree the route and price before boarding. Don Sao is a low-key market stop, not a major sight — manage expectations. Bring your passport for the informal Laos landing. A hat and water help on the open boat.
  4. 12:30 Lunch + Hall of Opium museum 2h30

    Lunch riverside near Sop Ruak, then visit the Hall of Opium — a well-presented museum on the history of opium and the drug trade that shaped this region, run by the Mae Fah Luang Foundation. Around THB 200.

    Cost: Museum ~THB 200 + lunch THB 150-300 TIP: The Hall of Opium is far more substantial and thoughtful than the small 'House of Opium' nearby — go to the big one (it usually closes Mondays, so check). Allow about 90 minutes inside. It gives real context to the Golden Triangle name.
  5. 15:30 Chiang Saen — ancient riverside town 1h

    Stop in Chiang Saen, a small Mekong town with the brick ruins of a 13th-century Lanna-era city — Wat Chedi Luang, Wat Pa Sak, and old ramparts along the river. A quieter, more historic counterpoint to the viewpoint.

    Cost: Free / small fees TIP: Chiang Saen feels far older and more local than Sop Ruak. The riverside chedis are atmospheric in late-afternoon light. If you have energy and time, the Mae Sai border town (Thailand's northernmost point, facing Myanmar) is a further option, conditions permitting.
  6. 18:30 Return to Chiang Rai + dinner 2h

    Drive back to the city (about an hour) and unwind with a riverside dinner — Chivit Thamma Da's garden by the Kok River, or Lu Lam's riverside-raft Northern Thai spread.

    Cost: THB 200-600 ($6-18) TIP: Reserve ahead for Chivit Thamma Da's terrace. After a long day out, a relaxed riverside meal is the right note. If it's a Saturday, the Thanalai Walking Street is on instead.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel breakfast

City center · THB 50-150

Eat well before the early Golden Triangle drive.

Lunch

Riverside lunch at Sop Ruak

Golden Triangle · THB 150-300

A Mekong-side Thai lunch between the boat ride and the Hall of Opium.

Dinner

Chivit Thamma Da or Lu Lam

Kok riverside · THB 200-600

A relaxed riverside dinner — garden bistro or Northern Thai raft.

Transit:

The Golden Triangle is about an hour northeast; a hired car with driver (THB 1,500-2,500) or a joining day tour (THB 600-1,200 per person) is the practical option, as public transport is limited and the sights are spread along the Mekong.

DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $45 Mid $95 Luxury $250
DAY 3

Tea & mountain country — Choui Fong + Doi Tung

Choui Fong tea plantation - Doi Tung (Mae Fah Luang Garden & Royal Villa) - hill-tribe crafts - return

Activities

  1. 08:30 Choui Fong tea plantation + café 1h30

    Drive about 45 minutes north into the Mae Chan hills to the Choui Fong tea estate — terraced green tea fields with an award-winning café perched above them. Walk the rows, then stop for the estate's green tea cake, matcha, and brewed teas.

    Cost: Free entry (café extra) TIP: Go on a clear morning before haze or afternoon cloud — the view over the terraces is the whole point. The café opens at 8:30. The green tea cake is the signature order. Buy tea here as a souvenir. March-April burning season can grey out the hills, so manage expectations.
  2. 11:00 Drive to Doi Tung 1h

    Continue into the mountains toward Doi Tung (about 60 km north), a hill area transformed by a royal development project that replaced opium farming with sustainable coffee, tea, and macadamia — and that supports local hill-tribe livelihoods.

    Cost: Included in car/tour TIP: The winding mountain road is scenic but slow — a confident driver helps. The cooler air at altitude is a relief in the hot months. This is the ethical, community-supporting way to engage with hill-tribe culture, versus exploitative 'long-neck' village tours.
  3. 12:30 Mae Fah Luang Garden + Royal Villa 2h

    Doi Tung's centerpiece — the manicured Mae Fah Luang alpine-style garden bursting with cool-climate flowers, and the Royal Villa, the former mountain residence of the King's mother, built in Lanna-Swiss chalet style. Hill-tribe craft and coffee shops sit nearby.

    Cost: ~THB 90-150 each (garden / villa) TIP: The garden is at its best in the cool season. The Doi Tung coffee and macadamia from the development project make good, ethical souvenirs that directly support local communities. Allow time for both the garden and the villa; they're a short walk apart.
  4. 15:00 Lunch + hill-tribe crafts 1h30

    Lunch at the Doi Tung project's café or restaurant, and browse the fair-trade craft shops selling hill-tribe textiles and handiwork — bought on terms that benefit the makers rather than as a photo-op.

    Cost: THB 150-350 ($5-11) TIP: Buying crafts directly here, and from community-based projects, is the responsible way to support hill-tribe artisans. Always ask before photographing people. The project's coffee shop is a good spot for a final cup of local arabica.
  5. 17:00 Return to Chiang Rai + farewell dinner 2h

    Drive back down to the city (about 1.5 hours) for a final Northern Thai dinner — the Saturday/Sunday Walking Street if your timing lines up, or Cabbages & Condoms' charity-run garden restaurant.

    Cost: THB 100-450 ($3-13) TIP: If it's a Saturday or Sunday evening, the Walking Streets (Thanalai on Sat, Sankhongnoi on Sun) are the most atmospheric send-off. Otherwise the Night Bazaar or a sit-down Northern Thai meal rounds off the trip nicely.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Café or hotel breakfast

City center · THB 50-150

A quick start before the drive into tea country.

Lunch

Doi Tung project café

Doi Tung · THB 150-350

Mountain lunch with local coffee, supporting the development project.

Dinner

Walking Street or Cabbages & Condoms

City center · THB 100-450

A final Northern Thai meal — street market or charity-run garden restaurant.

Transit:

The tea plantations and Doi Tung are 40-70 km north on winding mountain roads with limited public transport — a hired car with driver (THB 1,500-2,500) or a group tour is essential. The drive is scenic but slow; allow a full day.

DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $40 Mid $90 Luxury $240
DAY 4

Mae Salong — Yunnanese tea town in the hills

Drive to Doi Mae Salong - oolong tea estates - Yunnanese village & market - mountain viewpoints - return

Activities

  1. 08:30 Drive to Doi Mae Salong 1h30

    Head about 1.5 hours northwest into the mountains to Doi Mae Salong (Santikhiri), a hill town founded by former Chinese Nationalist (KMT) soldiers who settled here after 1949 — today a Yunnanese-Chinese community known for its oolong tea and cool mountain air.

    Cost: Included in car/tour TIP: The road climbs and winds — a confident driver or guided tour is best. The altitude makes it noticeably cooler than the city, so bring a layer. The drive itself, through tea terraces and hills, is part of the appeal.
  2. 10:30 Oolong tea estates + tastings 1h30

    Mae Salong is tea country — visit a working oolong estate for a tasting and a walk through the terraced fields. The Yunnanese growing tradition here produces some of Thailand's best oolong.

    Cost: Free-THB 200 (tastings) TIP: Tastings are usually free or cheap, with no hard sell. Buy oolong directly from the estates as a souvenir. The terraced fields are most photogenic in clear cool-season light. Pair the tea with the local Yunnanese snacks.
  3. 12:30 Lunch — Yunnanese-Chinese food 1h

    Lunch on Mae Salong's distinctive Yunnanese-Chinese cuisine — steamed pork buns (mantou), braised pork-leg dishes, and Chinese-Muslim noodle soups — a flavor you won't find in the lowland Northern Thai restaurants.

    Cost: THB 100-300 ($3-9) TIP: The Yunnanese food here is genuinely different from Thai cooking — the steamed buns and braised pork are the things to try. Small family restaurants line the main street. Cash only at most.
  4. 14:00 Village walk + mountain viewpoints 2h

    Wander the village market, the morning-market lanes, and up to the viewpoints and the hilltop Wat Santikhiri stupa for sweeping views over the tea hills and, on clear days, into Myanmar.

    Cost: Free TIP: The hilltop stupa is reached by a stairway or short drive — the view is the reward. The market sells dried teas, herbs, and Yunnanese goods. Late afternoon light over the terraces is the best for photos before the drive back.
  5. 17:00 Return to Chiang Rai + dinner 2h

    Drive back down to the city (about 1.5 hours) and enjoy a relaxed Northern Thai dinner — Phu Lae for the Lanna spread, or a riverside meal at Chivit Thamma Da.

    Cost: THB 150-600 ($5-18) TIP: It's a long but rewarding mountain day. A sit-down dinner back in town is the right way to wind down. If you're keen on more coffee, the town's specialty cafés are open into the evening.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel breakfast

City center · THB 50-150

Fuel up before the mountain drive to Mae Salong.

Lunch

Yunnanese restaurant, Mae Salong

Doi Mae Salong · THB 100-300

Steamed pork buns and braised pork — Yunnanese-Chinese cooking.

Dinner

Phu Lae or Chivit Thamma Da

City center / riverside · THB 150-600

Northern Thai spread or a relaxed riverside dinner.

Transit:

Doi Mae Salong is about 1.5 hours northwest on winding mountain roads with very limited public transport — a hired car with driver or a guided day tour is essential. Allow a full day for the round trip.

DAY 4 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $45 Mid $95 Luxury $250
DAY 5

Singha Park, Guan Yin & a slow finish

Singha Park (tea fields, cycling) - Wat Huay Pla Kang (giant Guan Yin) - cafés - farewell dinner

Activities

  1. 09:00 Singha Park — tea fields & farm estate 2h

    A large agritourism estate just southwest of the city, with tea and barley fields, flower gardens, a small zoo and zip-line, and cycling and tram tours. A relaxed, scenic morning after the intense mountain days.

    Cost: Free entry; activities extra TIP: Entry is free; you pay for the tram tour, cycling, zip-line, or activities. The rolling tea fields and the big Singha lion sculpture are the photo spots. Good for families and an easy pace. Morning light is best before the midday heat.
  2. 11:30 Wat Huay Pla Kang — the giant Guan Yin 1h

    Visit the enormous white statue of Guan Yin (the Goddess of Mercy) towering over the city's western hills, with an ornate nine-tier pagoda and a lift up inside the statue for panoramic views.

    Cost: Free (lift ~THB 40) TIP: The lift inside the statue (about THB 40) takes you up for city views from the eyes. The intricate white pagoda below is worth a look too. It's less famous than the big three temples but visually striking and far quieter.
  3. 13:00 Lunch + café time 2h

    Lunch and a slow café stop — Doi Chaang for local single-origin coffee, or Melt In Your Mouth's riverside cakes near Ko Loi park. A relaxed midday after the morning sights.

    Cost: THB 100-450 ($3-13) TIP: Chiang Rai's café scene is a highlight in its own right thanks to the local coffee. Melt In Your Mouth is photogenic and riverside; Doi Chaang is the place to taste the region's famous arabica. A good spot to plan any last shopping.
  4. 15:30 Last temples or shopping 1h30

    Catch anything missed — Wat Phra Kaew (which once held the Emerald Buddha), the Oub Kham Museum of Lanna artifacts, or souvenir shopping for tea, coffee, and hill-tribe crafts in the center.

    Cost: Free-THB 300 TIP: Buy tea and coffee directly from shops carrying Choui Fong, Doi Chang, and Doi Tung products — easy, characterful gifts. The Oub Kham Museum is an underrated stop for Lanna history. Keep it light on the final afternoon.
  5. 18:30 Farewell dinner — Walking Street or riverside 2h

    Round off the trip with the Saturday/Sunday Walking Street if timing lines up, or a final Northern Thai dinner at Lu Lam's riverside raft or Cabbages & Condoms' garden.

    Cost: THB 100-600 ($3-18) TIP: If it's a weekend, the Walking Streets are the most atmospheric send-off. Otherwise a relaxed riverside Lanna dinner caps the trip. Confirm any onward transport (CEI flight or Chiang Mai bus) for the morning.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel or café breakfast

City center · THB 50-150

An easy start before Singha Park.

Lunch

Doi Chaang or Melt In Your Mouth

City center / riverside · THB 100-450

Local coffee and cakes — the Chiang Rai café scene.

Dinner

Walking Street or Lu Lam

City center / riverside · THB 100-600

A final Northern Thai meal — street market or riverside raft.

Transit:

Singha Park and Wat Huay Pla Kang are just outside the city (a short drive each); songthaews, Grab, or a half-day car all work. The center is walkable for the afternoon and evening.

DAY 5 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $40 Mid $90 Luxury $240
DAY 6

Chiang Mai overnight — Old City temples & night market

Drive to Chiang Mai (White Temple en route) - Old City temples - Doi Suthep - night market - overnight

Activities

  1. 08:30 Chiang Rai → Chiang Mai (about 3 hours) 3h

    Drive south to Chiang Mai, northern Thailand's larger cultural hub, stopping at landmarks along the route. The road winds through hills and small towns; it's an easy, scenic transfer.

    Cost: Bus THB 150-300 / private car varies TIP: A Green Bus from Chiang Rai's terminal (THB 150-300) or a private transfer both work. If you skipped it on arrival, the White Temple sits near the route for a quick stop. Pack an overnight bag and leave heavier luggage at your Chiang Rai hotel if returning.
  2. 13:00 Chiang Mai Old City temples + lunch 3h

    Explore Chiang Mai's walled Old City — Wat Phra Singh, Wat Chedi Luang's massive ruined stupa, and the moat-lined streets — over lunch on Chiang Mai-style khao soi and Northern Thai dishes.

    Cost: Temple fees THB 20-50 + lunch THB 100-300 TIP: The Old City is compact and walkable, with dozens of temples in a small grid. Wat Chedi Luang's 14th-century stupa is the standout. Chiang Mai's khao soi is famous — a good comparison to Chiang Rai's. Modest temple dress applies.
  3. 16:30 Doi Suthep (optional) or café time 2h

    Optionally drive up to Wat Phra That Doi Suthep, Chiang Mai's mountain temple with a golden chedi and city views, or relax in the Nimman café district before the evening market.

    Cost: Doi Suthep ~THB 50 + transport TIP: Doi Suthep is Chiang Mai's most revered temple, about 45 minutes up the mountain — best in late afternoon for the view. If you've had a long week of temples, the Nimman cafés and boutiques are a relaxed alternative.
  4. 19:00 Chiang Mai night market dinner 2h

    Dinner at one of Chiang Mai's big night markets — the nightly Night Bazaar, or the Saturday/Sunday Walking Streets if timing lines up — far larger and busier than Chiang Rai's, with street food, crafts, and live music.

    Cost: THB 100-300 ($3-9) TIP: Chiang Mai's markets are a step up in scale from Chiang Rai's. The Sunday Walking Street on Ratchadamnoen Rd is the biggest if you're there on a Sunday. Graze across stalls and browse the crafts. Overnight in the Old City or Nimman.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Chiang Rai hotel breakfast

Chiang Rai · THB 50-150

Eat before the 3-hour drive south.

Lunch

Chiang Mai Old City khao soi

Chiang Mai Old City · THB 100-300

Chiang Mai-style khao soi among the Old City temples.

Dinner

Chiang Mai night market

Chiang Mai · THB 100-300

Street food and crafts at one of Chiang Mai's large night markets.

Transit:

Chiang Rai → Chiang Mai is about 3 hours by Green Bus (THB 150-300), minivan, or private car. Within Chiang Mai, the Old City is walkable; songthaews (red trucks) and Grab cover longer hops and Doi Suthep.

DAY 6 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $55 Mid $120 Luxury $320
DAY 7

Return north or onward to Laos + departure

Chiang Mai → Chiang Rai (or Chiang Khong for the Laos slow boat) - last sights - departure

Activities

  1. 09:00 Travel back to Chiang Rai (or to the Laos border) 3h

    Either return to Chiang Rai (about 3 hours) to fly home from CEI, or — if continuing to Laos — transfer to Chiang Khong on the Mekong, the crossing point for Huay Xai and the slow boat to Luang Prabang.

    Cost: Bus/transfer varies TIP: Decide your endpoint in advance. To fly home, route back to Chiang Rai (CEI) — an open-jaw ticket (into Chiang Mai or CEI, out of the other) avoids backtracking. For Laos, the Chiang Khong crossing and slow boat need a passport and a checked Lao visa-on-arrival status.
  2. 13:00 Final sights or border formalities 2h

    If back in Chiang Rai, catch any last café, market, or temple; if at Chiang Khong, handle the Friendship Bridge crossing into Huay Xai, Laos, ready for the slow boat the next morning.

    Cost: Varies TIP: Chiang Khong/Huay Xai is a small border town — the slow boat to Luang Prabang departs in the morning, so most travelers overnight there. Back in Chiang Rai, keep the afternoon light for last-minute souvenirs (tea, coffee, crafts).
  3. 15:30 Last Northern Thai meal 1h30

    A final lunch or early dinner of Lanna food — a last bowl of khao soi, a plate of sai ua, or a riverside meal before departure or the onward border crossing.

    Cost: THB 100-450 ($3-13) TIP: End on the food you came for — khao soi and sai ua are the signatures to fix in memory. Keep some baht for the airport or border. A relaxed final meal is the right close to a week in the far north.
  4. 18:00 Departure (CEI) or overnight at the border 1h30

    Head to Chiang Rai International Airport (CEI) for your onward flight, or settle into Huay Xai for the morning slow boat to Luang Prabang.

    Cost: Taxi to CEI THB 200-300 TIP: CEI is about 8 km / 15-20 minutes from the center by taxi or Grab. Arrive 2 hours before a domestic flight. If continuing to Laos, confirm the slow-boat departure time and have your passport and visa sorted before the evening.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Chiang Mai hotel breakfast

Chiang Mai · THB 50-150

An early breakfast before travelling north.

Lunch

Final Northern Thai meal

Chiang Rai / Chiang Khong · THB 100-450

A last bowl of khao soi or plate of sai ua.

Dinner

Airport bite or border-town dinner

CEI / Huay Xai · THB 80-300

A light meal before departure or the slow boat.

Transit:

Chiang Mai → Chiang Rai about 3 hours (bus/car); or onward to Chiang Khong (about 2.5 hours from Chiang Rai) for the Laos crossing. CEI airport is 8 km from central Chiang Rai by taxi/Grab (THB 200-300).

DAY 7 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $45 Mid $100 Luxury $280

Book Chiang Rai Tours & Tickets

Packing Checklist

Chiang Rai 7-Day Itinerary FAQ

Is 7 days too long for the Chiang Rai area?
No — seven days lets you cover Chiang Rai in full (temples, Golden Triangle, tea country, Mae Salong, Singha Park) and add a Chiang Mai overnight or an onward Laos crossing without rushing. It suits travelers treating the far north as the main event, or those continuing into Laos. For the headline sights only, 3 days works; 5 covers the highlands.
Should I base in Chiang Rai or split with Chiang Mai?
For a 7-day trip, base in Chiang Rai for the first five days, then do Chiang Mai as a one-way move or overnight rather than a day trip — 3 hours each way is too far to bounce back and forth. An open-jaw flight (into one city, out of the other) is the most efficient routing and lets you stop at the White Temple on the transfer.
How do I do the Laos slow boat from here?
Travel from Chiang Rai to Chiang Khong (about 2.5 hours), cross the Mekong Friendship Bridge into Huay Xai, Laos, and overnight there. The famous slow boat to Luang Prabang departs in the morning and takes two days with an overnight in Pakbeng. Bring your passport, check the current Lao visa-on-arrival status, and book onward accommodation ahead.
Is the burning-season haze a problem for a week-long trip?
Yes, if you go in March-April. A full week in the haze season means a higher chance of grey skies and poor air quality across the spread-out, view-dependent highlands (tea plantations, Mae Salong, the Golden Triangle). For a 7-day trip especially, aim for November to February, when the cool, clear weather makes the mountain scenery worthwhile.

Looking for Different Trip Lengths?

Why you can trust 7-day itinerary

Jimmy Kong TripPick founder · Travel content creator

Based in Chiang Mai for 8+ years, with 30+ countries visited across Southeast Asia, Japan, and Europe. Every detail in this guide is primary-source verified as of April 2026, with prices auto-refreshed via live exchange rate APIs. This isn't AI-generated boilerplate — it's written from the perspective of someone who has actually been there.

8+ years analyzing travel data 30+ countries visited Live exchange rate verified
📅 Published: