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.
Overview
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. Restaurant hours adjust in muslim-majority areas; international hotels run Ramadan packages catering specifically to GCC visitors.
Iftar timing & where to break fast
Maghrib in Bangkok shifts roughly between 18:35 and 18:55 depending on time of year (Ramadan moves ~11 days earlier annually on the Gregorian calendar). Most major hotels — Marriott, Hilton, Sheraton, Centara, Anantara, Banyan Tree — run Ramadan buffets at their flagship Bangkok locations. Al Meroz, Bangkok's largest halal hotel, runs the most authentic spread.
Mosques during Ramadan
Tarawih prayers run nightly after Isha at every Bangkok mosque. Foundation Mosque (Charoen Krung), Darul Aman (Sukhumvit), Haroon (Bang Rak), and the Indonesian Mosque (Phra Khanong) all welcome visitors. Tarawih usually starts ~20:00 and runs 1-2 hours. Friday Jum'ah crowds are noticeably larger during Ramadan.
Suhoor options
Suhoor (pre-dawn meal) is less commercialized — most muslim travelers eat at the hotel or order in. A handful of 24h halal restaurants on Sukhumvit Soi 3 and Indra Square cover the suhoor crowd. Some hotels run quiet suhoor buffets 03:30-05:00 — confirm in advance.
Travel etiquette during Ramadan
Eating publicly during fasting hours is fine — Thailand is a buddhist-majority country, no public-fasting expectation exists. Drinking water in muslim-majority areas (deep south, Krabi, Pattani) during Ramadan is technically OK but considered polite to be discreet. Alcohol availability is unchanged.
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]AlAdhan Prayer Times API · BangkokPrayer-times reference
- [2]Halal Food Council of Thailand · Ramadan scheduleLocal authority
§See also
- 🍽 Iftar buffets in Bangkok— Top hotel & restaurant iftar tables
- 🛫 Prayer rooms at Thai airports— Suvarnabhumi · Don Mueang · Phuket · Krabi
- 🤝 Muslim travel etiquette in Thailand— What to expect, what to ask, what to bring
- 🔍 Halal vs. muslim-friendly— The label difference explained
- 📚 All wiki entries— browse the index