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Ramadan in Thailand

Ramadan in Thailand is a quieter, more accommodated experience than in muslim-majority countries — but the country has roughly 4-5 million muslim residents and a sizable annual GCC + Southeast-Asian muslim tourist flow, so iftar tables, Ramadan buffets, and special prayer schedules are easy to find in Bangkok, Phuket, Krabi, and the deep south.

Updated 2026-06-04~5 min readCross-verified across 8 sources

Overview

Iftar timing & where to break fast

Mosques during Ramadan

Suhoor options

Travel etiquette during Ramadan

Key takeaways

  • Maghrib in Bangkok: ~18:35-18:55 depending on year
  • Major hotels run Ramadan buffets; book ahead — they fill up
  • Tarawih at any Bangkok mosque ~20:00 nightly
  • No public-fasting expectation — eating publicly is fine in non-muslim areas

§References

  1. [1]
  2. [2]
    Halal Food Council of Thailand · Ramadan schedule
    Local authority

§See also