Ten years ago, finding a proper bowl of boat noodles in Hong Kong meant a trek to Kowloon City. Today the best Thai restaurants in Hong Kong are everywhere — fiery Isaan grills in Sheung Wan, Bib Gourmand noodle counters in Wan Chai, and Bangkok imports opening at a clip. The city has fallen hard for sweet, sour, salty and spicy, and it shows.

This is our working shortlist: eight spots we come back to, chosen for authentic flavour rather than hype, and spread across the city so there's one near you. Every address, price band and opening detail was checked against the restaurants' own listings and Hong Kong food press in July 2026.

The short version: For Isaan fire go to Chachawan (Sheung Wan); for boat noodles, Samsen (Bib Gourmand) and ThongSmith in Wan Chai; for a Michelin-recommended newcomer, Siaw in Tsim Sha Tsui; and for Kowloon City's Little Thailand, Thonglor. Budget roughly HK$120–450 per head.

In This Guide

  1. A quick map of Hong Kong's Thai scene
  2. Chachawan — Isaan fire in Sheung Wan
  3. Samsen & ThongSmith — the boat-noodle kings
  4. Siaw — Tsim Sha Tsui's walk-in sensation
  5. Thonglor — Kowloon City's Little Thailand
  6. KIN KAO & Krua Walaiphan — everyday Thai
  7. O'Thai — harbourfront Thai in Whampoa
  8. Which Thai restaurant should I choose?
  9. At a glance
  10. FAQ

A quick map of Hong Kong's Thai scene

Thai food in Hong Kong splits roughly three ways. There's Isaan — the pungent, chilli-forward cooking of Thailand's northeast, all pounded salads and charred meats. There's boat noodles, the rich, dark, spiced beef broth that has become the city's Thai obsession. And there's the broad church of Bangkok street food and home cooking: green curry, pad krapow, tom yum, papaya salad.

The other thing to know is geography. Kowloon City (九龍城) is the historic heart, but the island's Wan Chai (灣仔), Sheung Wan (上環) and Tsim Sha Tsui (尖沙咀) now hold their own. Here's where to eat, by style and by neighbourhood. For more of the city's dining, see our 50 best restaurants in Hong Kong.

Chachawan — Isaan fire in Sheung Wan

Chachawan has been Hong Kong's Isaan benchmark for over a decade, and it earned the Foodie Forks 2024 award for Best Thai Restaurant. It was the city's first restaurant dedicated to northeastern Thai cooking, and it still hits hardest — think grilled gai yang chicken, a green-papaya salad spiked with salted crab, and a whole salt-crusted sea bass stuffed with lemongrass.

Style: Isaan (northeastern Thai) · Signature: gai yang grilled chicken · Price: roughly HK$300–450pp · Where: G/F, 206 Hollywood Road, Sheung Wan · MTR: Sheung Wan, Exit A2 (about a 10-minute walk uphill)

It's loud, dark and fun, with a soundtrack to match the heat on the plate. Come with a group so you can order across the menu, and don't skip the sticky rice — you'll want it to cool the chilli. Book ahead at weekends.

Samsen & ThongSmith — the boat-noodle kings

If Hong Kong has a signature Thai dish, it's the boat noodle, and two Wan Chai names own the category. Samsen, chef Adam Cliff's street-food concept, has grown from its 2016 original into a mini-empire with a Michelin Bib Gourmand to its name; the wagyu beef soup noodles and the Sheung Wan branch's khao soi are the dishes to beat.

Style: Thai street food & boat noodles (Bib Gourmand) · Signature: wagyu beef soup noodles · Price: roughly HK$150–250pp · Where: 68 Stone Nullah Lane, Wan Chai (also Sheung Wan & Central) · MTR: Wan Chai, Exit A3

Just around the corner, ThongSmith brought its famous Bangkok boat-noodle chain to Hong Kong — its first outpost outside Thailand — leaning on premium Australian wagyu and Kurobuta pork in a slow-simmered, properly spicy broth. Between the two, Wan Chai is quietly the city's boat-noodle capital.

Style: Bangkok boat noodles · Signature: wagyu boat noodles (from HK$128) · Price: roughly HK$200–350pp · Where: Shop 1–6, G/F, Spring Garden Mansion, 38 Spring Garden Lane, Wan Chai · MTR: Wan Chai, Exit A3
Hong Kong's Thai scene has gone from a handful of stalwarts to a citywide obsession — boat noodles, Isaan grills and som tum on nearly every corner.

Siaw — Tsim Sha Tsui's walk-in sensation

The buzziest arrival of the past year, Siaw opened in mid-2025 and promptly landed a Michelin recommendation plus the Foodie Forks 2026 award for Best New Restaurant. Chef Art Sinlaparkorn cooks bold, wok-charred Thai with real heat — the crispy catfish with green-mango salad and the spicy beef flat noodles are early classics.

Style: modern Thai (Michelin-recommended) · Signature: crispy catfish & green-mango salad · Price: roughly HK$200–350pp · Where: G/F, 8 Hart Avenue, Tsim Sha Tsui · MTR: Tsim Sha Tsui, Exit N2

The catch: it's walk-in only, and the queues are real. Go early — ideally before the door opens — or off-peak, and be ready to wait. It's worth it.

Thonglor — Kowloon City's Little Thailand

No Thai round-up is complete without Kowloon City (九龍城), Hong Kong's Little Thailand, where grocers, temples and restaurants cluster and the Songkran water festival takes over each April. The standout right now is Thonglor, the Foodie Forks 2026 Best Thai Restaurant, a film-themed spot channelling rustic Bangkok street food.

Style: Bangkok street food · Signature: Wagyu beef boat noodles & papaya salad · Price: roughly HK$150–250pp · Where: G/F, 19 Lung Kong Road, Kowloon City · MTR: Sung Wong Toi (Tuen Ma Line), about a 12-minute walk

While you're there, wander the surrounding streets: this is the best neighbourhood in the city for spontaneous Thai eating, from skewer joints to grocery-store curries. It pairs neatly with our guide to the best cha chaan teng in Hong Kong if you want to eat your way across Kowloon.

KIN KAO & Krua Walaiphan — everyday Thai done right

Not every Thai dinner needs to be an event. KIN KAO is the reliable everyday choice, with several bright, no-frills branches across Hong Kong Island turning out honest classics at friendly prices — the Chiang Mai khao soi and crabmeat omelette are the picks.

Style: Thai classics (casual) · Signature: khao soi (HK$80) · Price: roughly HK$120–200pp · Where: multiple locations across Hong Kong Island · MTR: varies by branch

For something more considered, Krua Walaiphan in Sai Ying Pun (西營盤) has quietly cooked MSG-free Thai since 2017, with ingredients flown in fresh from Thailand. The tom yum goong and smoked-duck red curry show a lighter, cleaner hand than the street-food crowd.

Style: home-style Thai (MSG-free) · Signature: tom yum goong (HK$128) · Price: roughly HK$250–400pp · Where: G/F, Hang Sing Mansion, 64 High Street, Sai Ying Pun · MTR: Sai Ying Pun, Exit B2

O'Thai — harbourfront Thai in Whampoa

For a Thai meal with a view, O'Thai sits on the Hung Hom (紅磡) waterfront at Whampoa, an al-fresco spot led by Chiang Mai native chef "Amoo" Kunchit. It leans into Land of Smiles street-food flavours — wagyu boat-noodle soup, prawn egg-cream curry with baguette, spicy tofu basil — with the harbour as a backdrop.

Style: Thai street food (al-fresco) · Signature: wagyu boat-noodle soup (HK$158) · Price: roughly HK$250–400pp · Where: Shop G1, G/F, One Harbourfront, 18 Tak Fung Street, Whampoa, Hung Hom · MTR: Whampoa (Kwun Tong Line)

It's a handy one to bank if you're heading to the Whampoa area for a show — the TIDES concert venue is a short walk away, making O'Thai an easy pre-gig dinner.

Which Thai restaurant should I choose?

Go by craving. Want it fiery and social? Chachawan. After the city's best bowl of noodles? Samsen or ThongSmith. Chasing the newest, buzziest cooking? Queue for Siaw. Want the full neighbourhood experience? Head to Kowloon City and start at Thonglor.

On budget, casual noodle spots come in well under HK$250 a head, while the sit-down restaurants climb toward HK$450 once you add grilled dishes and a whole fish. For where Thai fits in the wider scene, see our best Cantonese restaurants and best hotpot in Hong Kong guides.

Best Thai restaurants in Hong Kong at a glance

Eight Thai standouts (checked July 2026)

RestaurantStyleAreaPrice (pp)
ChachawanIsaanSheung Wan~HK$300–450
SamsenBoat noodles (Bib Gourmand)Wan Chai~HK$150–250
ThongSmithBangkok boat noodlesWan Chai~HK$200–350
SiawModern Thai (Michelin-rec.)Tsim Sha Tsui~HK$200–350
ThonglorBangkok street foodKowloon City~HK$150–250
KIN KAOThai classicsHK Island (multiple)~HK$120–200
Krua WalaiphanHome-style (MSG-free)Sai Ying Pun~HK$250–400
O'ThaiAl-fresco street foodWhampoa, Hung Hom~HK$250–400

Prices and hours change, so confirm before you go. Two useful cross-checks are Foodie's Thai round-up and the Michelin Guide's Hong Kong Thai listings.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best Thai restaurant in Hong Kong?
It depends on what you are after. For fiery Isaan grills, Chachawan in Sheung Wan is the original. For boat noodles, Samsen holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand and ThongSmith brings a famous Bangkok chain to Wan Chai. Siaw in Tsim Sha Tsui is a Michelin-recommended newcomer, while Kowloon City is packed with authentic spots led by Thonglor.
Where is Hong Kong's Little Thailand?
Kowloon City (九龍城) is Hong Kong's unofficial Little Thailand, home to a dense cluster of Thai grocers, restaurants and a lively New Year water festival each April. Thonglor and Golden Thai BBQ are among the standouts. The nearest MTR is Sung Wong Toi on the Tuen Ma Line, about a 12-minute walk away.
How much does a Thai meal cost in Hong Kong?
Casual boat-noodle and street-food spots such as KIN KAO, Samsen and Thonglor run roughly HK$120 to HK$250 a head. Sit-down restaurants like Chachawan, Krua Walaiphan and O'Thai land around HK$250 to HK$450 per person, depending on how many grilled dishes and whole fish you order.
Do I need to book a Thai restaurant in Hong Kong?
For the busiest tables, yes. Siaw is walk-in only and draws long queues, so arrive early. Chachawan, Samsen and Krua Walaiphan all fill up at weekends and take bookings, while neighbourhood spots like KIN KAO and Thonglor are easier midweek. Always confirm hours and prices before you go.
Thai Food Restaurants Boat Noodles Kowloon City Hong Kong 2026