✨ Cultural Highlights
✅ 💦 Songkran – Thailand's New Year Water Festival – World's Biggest Water Fight
✅ 🏮 Loy Krathong – 10,000 Floating Lanterns Released Over Chiang Mai's Moat
✅ 🕯 Yi Peng Sky Lanterns – Thousands of Khom Loi Rising into the Night Sky
✅ 🎭 Traditional Songkran Parade – Royal Elephants, Classical Dancers & Buddha Images
✅ 🌸 Sand Chedi Building – Ancient New Year Ritual at Bangkok's Temples
📖 Did You Know?
💡 💦 Songkran (Thai New Year) falls on April 13–15 annually — over 5 million people take part in Bangkok alone.
💡 🏮 Loy Krathong falls on the full moon of the 12th Thai lunar month — typically November.
💡 🕯 The Yi Peng sky lantern release in Chiang Mai is listed among the most beautiful festivals on Earth by National Geographic.
💡 🙏 Krathong floats are made of banana trunk, flowers, incense & candles — they carry away bad luck.
💡 🐘 Songkran in Surin traditionally involves elephants being blessed with water — a centuries-old royal ritual.
• Day 1: Bangkok Arrival – Festival Orientation & Evening Merit-Making
Arrive at Bangkok's Suvarnabhumi Airport. Transfer to your hotel near the historic Rattanakosin district — the heart of Songkran celebrations. Your festival guide meets you for an orientation briefing: the history and spiritual significance of Songkran (the Thai New Year, derived from the Sanskrit word for 'astrological passage'), the correct protocol for water pouring rituals on monks and elders (respectful, not the chaotic street battle), and what to expect over the coming 3 days. Evening: visit Wat Pho for pre-Songkran merit-making — Thais bring offerings of flowers, incense, and gold leaf to the Buddha images, and monks chant evening prayers that echo through the temple. The atmosphere the night before Songkran is one of reverent anticipation entirely different from the chaos that erupts the following morning.
• Day 2: Songkran Day 1 – Silom & Khao San Street Festival (B)
Songkran morning begins at dawn — put on your most colourful clothes and waterproof your belongings in a dry bag. The streets of Bangkok are immediately transformed: water cannons mounted on pickup trucks, children with super soakers on every corner, and a wall of water that hits you the moment you step outside. Silom Road is the epicentre of Bangkok's Songkran — a 2-km strip of continuous water battle with sound systems, foam machines, and hundreds of thousands of participants. Your guide navigates you through the safest and most exhilarating sections. Mid-morning: Khao San Road's Songkran — a more international crowd but equally chaotic. The water represents purification: pouring water on someone is an act of blessing, and accepting it is an act of receiving merit. By noon, you will be completely soaked, completely laughing, and completely understanding why this festival is beloved by everyone who experiences it.
• Day 3: Songkran Day 2 – Grand Palace Ceremonies & Sand Chedis (B)
The more traditional face of Songkran. Early morning at the Grand Palace for the Royal Songkran ceremonies — monks from across Thailand receive alms from the Royal Family in a procession of extraordinary dignity and colour. At Wat Pho, Wat Arun, and other major temples, Thais bring elaborate flower offerings and pour scented water mixed with jasmine over Buddha images in a ritual called 'rod nam dam hua.' Sand chedis: a uniquely Songkran tradition where worshippers build small stupas from riverbank sand in temple courtyards and decorate them with flowers and flags — symbolically returning the sand carried away from temple grounds by feet during the year. Afternoon: the water fights resume with full intensity on the streets around the palace.
• Day 4: Ayutthaya Traditional Songkran (B/L)
Drive to Ayutthaya for the most traditional Songkran experience available. Away from Bangkok's commercial festival atmosphere, Ayutthaya's Songkran is rooted in genuine local tradition: morning processions of Buddha images through the ancient ruins carried on decorated floats by monks and worshippers, elders seated on chairs receiving scented water poured over their hands by younger family members as an act of respect and blessing, and community water battles that are joyful rather than aggressive. Visit Wat Phra Si Sanphet for the temple ceremonies. Lunch at an Ayutthaya riverside restaurant. Return to Bangkok. This day reveals Songkran as it has been celebrated for centuries — a genuine spiritual and communal renewal, not merely a water fight.
• Day 5: Bangkok to Chiang Mai – Loy Krathong Arrival (B)
Morning flight to Chiang Mai — where the second great Thai festival of this trip awaits. Loy Krathong falls on the full moon of the 12th Thai lunar month (typically November) — a festival of light, water, and the release of misfortune. In Chiang Mai, it coincides with Yi Peng (the northern Thai lantern festival), creating the most visually spectacular festival event in all of Thailand. Afternoon: your guide takes you to a market to make your own krathong — a small float of banana trunk decorated with folded banana leaves, flowers, incense, and a candle. The craft is meditative and the guide explains the symbolic elements: the candle for illumination of the mind, the incense for reverence, the flowers as offerings. Evening: Chiang Mai begins to fill with the golden glow of early lanterns.
• Day 6: Loy Krathong Full Moon – Riverside & Moat Celebrations (B)
Full moon night. At dusk, Chiang Mai transforms. The ancient moat surrounding the Old City becomes a river of light: thousands of krathong floats carrying candles drift on the dark water, their reflections doubling the illumination. At Nawarat Bridge and along the Ping River, families of all ages stand knee-deep in the water releasing their krathongs — whispering prayers and wishes as they set them free. The atmosphere is profoundly moving: in a world increasingly divorced from natural rhythms, Loy Krathong returns everyone to the river, the moon, and the ancient practice of letting go. Release your own handmade krathong into the moat of the Old City — watch its candle join hundreds of others drifting into the darkness. Temple celebrations at Wat Phra Singh with music, dance, and traditional northern Thai performances.
• Day 7: Yi Peng Sky Lantern Release – 10,000 Khom Loi (B)
The night that defines this trip — and that many visitors describe as the most beautiful thing they have ever seen. Yi Peng culminates in a mass sky lantern release (khom loi launch). At the chosen moment, 10,000 lanterns — cylindrical paper tubes with a burning wax disc at the base that heats the air within — are lit simultaneously by thousands of hands. They lift from the ground slowly, wobbling as the hot air fills the paper, then rise steadily into the night sky. The sight of 10,000 glowing lanterns rising in silence into a full moon sky over Chiang Mai's ancient temples is genuinely, profoundly, overwhelmingly beautiful. From below: a sky full of orange stars, each one representing a prayer, a wish, or a letting-go. From above (visible on the night from mountain viewpoints): Chiang Mai appears to be breathing light upward into the universe. Arrive at the launch site 2 hours early with your guide for the best position.
• Day 8: Chiang Mai Morning After – Temple Peace & Departure (B)
The morning after the festivals. Walk through Chiang Mai's Old City in the early hours — the streets are quiet, littered with golden lantern paper and flower petals. The temples are open and peaceful, with monks chanting morning prayers in the early light. Collect any remaining lantern fragments from the pavement — a souvenir of the most beautiful night. Transfer to Chiang Mai International Airport for departure. You have witnessed the two greatest festivals in the Thai cultural calendar: Songkran's joyful renewal and Loy Krathong's luminous release. Thailand has given you memories that will last a lifetime.