Richseen Private Journeys · Thailand

Thailand Grand Prix: F1 Comes to Bangkok

Formula 1 Street Race — Bangkok · Chatuchak · Pattaya
5 Days · 4 Nights
From USD 15,000+ per person
"Bangkok's 5.7-kilometre Chatuchak street circuit — Southeast Asia's newest Formula 1 venue, with Alex Albon racing on home soil."
The Journey

F1 in
the City of Angels

When Thailand's cabinet approved a $1.23 billion bid to bring Formula 1 to Bangkok, the country joined a small group of nations that have successfully made the case to the Formula One Group that their capital city deserves a place on the calendar. The Thai Grand Prix — confirmed for a five-year run and scheduled for the Chatuchak district of Bangkok — will be the newest street circuit in Southeast Asia and the first Formula 1 race in Thailand's history. The 5.732-kilometre clockwise circuit threads through eight of Bangkok's most significant urban landmarks: the Bang Sue Grand Station (the largest railway terminal in Southeast Asia), the Chatuchak Weekend Market, Queen Sirikit Park, Chatuchak Park, and the Wachirabenchathat Park complex — a route that showcases modern Bangkok at its most ambitious and most liveable simultaneously.

The Thailand Grand Prix will take place annually in Bangkok's Chatuchak area, in either March or September depending on the final calendar position. The race carries an additional dimension that no other Southeast Asian Grand Prix can claim: Alex Albon — the Thai-British Williams driver and the only current Thai Formula 1 competitor — will race on home soil in front of a Thai crowd that has been following his career since his debut in 2019. The home-race effect on crowd atmosphere and ticket demand, as demonstrated by the Japan and Singapore Grands Prix, is likely to make the Bangkok race one of the most subscribed events on the calendar from its inaugural edition.

This five-day itinerary combines the complete race weekend — practice, qualifying, and the race itself across three consecutive days — with two days of Bangkok's most compelling experiences: the Grand Palace and Wat Phra Kaew, the floating markets, the Chatuchak Weekend Market that forms part of the circuit itself, and the Terminal 21 Pattaya shopping complex. Bangkok is one of Asia's great cities — a place where temple culture, street food, and contemporary design coexist at a density that rewards the visitor who moves at the city's own pace rather than attempting to impose a schedule upon it.

Signature Moments

Six Encounters
with Bangkok

Thailand's inaugural F1 race — Alex Albon on home soil, a 5.7-kilometre circuit through the city's most compelling urban district, and Bangkok at its most extraordinary.

01
Alex Albon Racing on Thai Soil — the Home Race Effect
The only current Thai Formula 1 driver, racing in Bangkok in front of a Thai crowd that has followed his career since 2019 — the home-race effect that Japan and Singapore demonstrate is among the most emotionally charged environments in the sport, and this race will have it from its inaugural edition.
02
Chatuchak Circuit — Racing Through Southeast Asia's Largest Market
The 5.732-kilometre street circuit through eight Bangkok landmarks — including Chatuchak Weekend Market (15,000 stalls, 200,000 weekend visitors) and the Bang Sue Grand Station, the largest railway terminal in Southeast Asia. A circuit where the urban context is as extraordinary as the race itself.
03
Grand Palace and Wat Phra Kaew at First Light
The Emerald Buddha in the Temple of the Emerald Buddha — Thailand's most sacred image, changed into three seasonal costumes by the King himself — and the Grand Palace compound, accessed in the morning hour before the organised tours arrive and before the heat makes the marble courts less comfortable than they deserve to be.
04
Wat Arun from the Chao Phraya at Dawn
The Temple of Dawn on the west bank of the Chao Phraya — the 17th-century tower encrusted with fragments of Chinese porcelain, visible from the river at the moment the sun rises behind it and the porcelain catches the light in the specific way that has made this the most photographed sunrise in Bangkok for the past two centuries.
05
Bangkok Street Food — the Most Complex Cuisine on a Plastic Stool
Jay Fai's crab omelette (Michelin-starred, $50, served at a street stall where the cook wears ski goggles against the wok smoke); the boat noodles of the Klong Lat Mayom floating market; the pad see ew at the Thip Samai on Mahachai Road — Bangkok's food culture conducted at the level of technical ambition that Michelin arrived to confirm in 2017 and has been recognising in increasing numbers since.
06
Bangkok Rooftop Culture — Vertigo, Sky Bar, and the City at Night
Bangkok's rooftop bar culture — the Vertigo at Banyan Tree at 61 floors; the Sky Bar at Lebua State Tower where The Hangover II was filmed; and the Octave Rooftop Lounge at the Marriott Sukhumvit — a city of 10 million lights seen from above in the particular tropical night air that Bangkok produces from November through February, when the heat has moderated and the city is at its most liveable.
Curated Highlights

What Defines This Journey

01🏁
Thailand Grand Prix — Southeast Asia's Newest F1 Circuit
The Bangkok street circuit: 5.732 kilometres, 18 corners, clockwise through the Chatuchak district, accommodating more than 108,000 spectators across 8 grandstand zones. The circuit passes the Bang Sue Grand Station, Chatuchak Weekend Market, three public parks, and the PTT headquarters — threading through Bangkok's most distinctive urban landscape at speeds that will make these familiar landmarks entirely new. Thailand's first ever Formula 1 Grand Prix.
02🏎️
Alex Albon — Thailand's Home Hero
Alex Albon is the only Thai driver currently competing in Formula 1 — and only the second Thai driver in the history of the sport. The Thai-British Williams driver, who visited the Thai government in 2024 to assist with the Bangkok F1 bid and described the project as "really promising," will race in front of a home crowd for the first time. The home-race effect, as demonstrated at Japan, Singapore, and Brazil, transforms an already exceptional race weekend into something categorically different.
03🏛️
Grand Palace and Wat Phra Kaew — Bangkok's Sacred Heart
The Grand Palace complex — the official residence of the Kings of Siam since 1782, a 218,000-square-metre compound of throne halls, royal courts, and ceremonial buildings in a style that combines traditional Thai and European influences. Within the compound: Wat Phra Kaew, the Temple of the Emerald Buddha, where the 66-centimetre jade Buddha image has been the most sacred object in Thailand for five centuries.
04🛒
Chatuchak Weekend Market — The World's Largest Weekend Market
The Chatuchak Weekend Market — 15,000 stalls across 35 acres of covered market space, trading in antiques, clothing, plants, pets, food, and art. The most concentrated expression of Thai commercial culture available in a single afternoon; also the landmark around which the Formula 1 circuit passes in its Chatuchak section, which means that the same route used by F1 cars on race day is accessible to the visitor on any weekend of the year.
05🌅
Khao San Road — Bangkok's International Night Culture
Khao San Road — the 400-metre stretch of Bangkok's Banglamphu district that has been the global backpacker destination since the 1980s and has evolved into the city's most internationally mixed nightlife zone. Street food vendors, live music bars, and the particular Bangkok atmosphere of a city that conducts its social life outdoors at all hours of the day and night, regardless of the temperature, with complete disregard for any other city's understanding of reasonable behaviour.
06🏖️
Pattaya Terminal 21 — World-Themed Shopping and Coast
Terminal 21 Pattaya — the shopping complex designed as a journey through six world cities (Paris, London, Italy, Tokyo, San Francisco, and Hollywood), each floor themed to a different destination, with a functioning aircraft at the entrance and the longest escalator in any Thai shopping centre. Located in Pattaya on the Gulf of Thailand coast, accessible as a day trip from Bangkok, combining retail culture with the seaside atmosphere that the city centre cannot provide.
Sample Itinerary

Key Moments & Movements

The Thailand Grand Prix is scheduled to take place annually in Bangkok's Chatuchak district, in either March or September. The race weekend spans three consecutive days: free practice, qualifying, and the race. March is the more likely calendar position — pairing the Thailand Grand Prix with the early-season flyaway races in Australia, China, and Japan for a Southeast Asian cluster that maximises logistical efficiency. The itinerary is structured to use the mornings for Bangkok's cultural circuit and the afternoons and evenings for the race programme.

Thailand's inaugural Grand Prix represents a historic moment for Southeast Asian motorsport. Every Richseen journey is individually crafted — race dates and specific hotel allocations will be confirmed as the event programme is finalised.

Day 1
Bangkok Arrival — Pattaya Terminal 21
Arrive at Suvarnabhumi International Airport and transfer to the hotel — Grand Four Wings, Swissotel Bangkok Ratchada, or Jasmine Resort, all 5-star properties in Bangkok's central business district. Afternoon excursion to Pattaya: the Terminal 21 shopping complex for the world-cities-themed retail experience and the Gulf of Thailand seafront atmosphere that Bangkok's landlocked position cannot provide. Return to Bangkok for the evening.
Bangkok 5-Star Hotel (Grand Four Wings or equivalent)
Day 2
F1 Practice Sessions — Khao San Road Evening
Morning: the Grand Palace complex and Wat Phra Kaew — Bangkok's most sacred site, open from 8:30 AM and best visited before the afternoon heat arrives. The Emerald Buddha in its seasonal costume; the throne halls and ceremonial courts that represent Thai royal architecture at its most complete. Afternoon: F1 Free Practice sessions at the Bangkok street circuit — the Chatuchak area transformed by the circuit infrastructure, with the Bang Sue Grand Station and the weekend market visible from the grandstand zones. Evening: Khao San Road for the street food, live music, and the international atmosphere that makes this street unlike any other in Southeast Asia.
Bangkok Street Circuit — Practice
Day 3
Chatuchak Weekend Market · Temples · F1 Qualifying
Morning: the Chatuchak Weekend Market — 15,000 stalls and 200,000 visitors on a typical weekend, covering antiques, fashion, plants, food, and the full spectrum of Thai commercial production. The market sits within the circuit perimeter; walking through it on the morning of qualifying provides the unusual experience of a famous Bangkok landmark that is simultaneously a Formula 1 venue. Wat Arun — the Temple of Dawn on the Chao Phraya River, its central prang decorated with Chinese porcelain fragments in a pattern that is most impressive at dusk when the light catches the mosaic surface. F1 Qualifying at the Bangkok circuit in the late afternoon.
Bangkok Street Circuit — Qualifying
Day 4
Bangkok Cultural Morning · F1 Race — Thailand Grand Prix
Morning: Wat Pho — the Temple of the Reclining Buddha, home to the 46-metre gilded reclining Buddha figure and one of the oldest and largest temple complexes in Bangkok, adjacent to the Grand Palace. The traditional Thai massage school within the temple grounds — the origin of the practice that Thailand has exported to every major city in the world. Race at the Bangkok street circuit in the afternoon — Thailand's inaugural Formula 1 Grand Prix, with Alex Albon racing on home soil and a crowd of more than 108,000 spectators in the grandstands that line the Chatuchak circuit.
Bangkok Street Circuit — Race Day
Day 5
Departure — Bangkok
Morning at leisure in Bangkok — the Or Tor Kor market near the Chatuchak circuit for the organic produce and prepared food that represents Thai cuisine at its most considered; or the Jim Thompson House in the Siam neighbourhood for the 1960s silk merchant's collection of Southeast Asian art and the Thai house architecture he assembled on the canal-side plot before his disappearance in 1967. Private transfer to Suvarnabhumi International Airport for onward journey.
Luxury Stays

Where You Rest Matters

Bangkok, Thailand
Bangkok — 4 Nights
Grand Four Wings Hotel / Swissotel Ratchada (or equivalent)
Central Bangkok, Thailand
Bangkok's 5-star hotel options in the central business district provide the most practical base for the race weekend — positioned within BTS or MRT reach of the Chatuchak circuit and within practical distance of the city's cultural circuit. The Grand Four Wings and Swissotel Ratchada represent Thailand's luxury hospitality at its most operationally considered for the international race guest.
Exclusive Experiences

Moments Designed for You

🏁
Formula 1
Alex Albon — Thailand's First Home Race
The Thailand Grand Prix will be the first Formula 1 race ever held in Thailand — and the first time Alex Albon, the only Thai driver on the current F1 grid, races in front of his home crowd. The combination of national pride, a brand-new street circuit threading through the heart of Bangkok, and the particular atmosphere of a country experiencing its inaugural Grand Prix produces a race weekend atmosphere that will not be replicated in subsequent years. The first time is always different.
🏛️
Culture
Grand Palace and Emerald Buddha — Bangkok's Sacred Core
The Grand Palace compound — 218,000 square metres of Thai royal architecture on the east bank of the Chao Phraya, with Wat Phra Kaew at its centre and the 66-centimetre Emerald Buddha that has been the most sacred object in Thailand for five centuries. The palace was the residence of the Kings of Siam from 1782 and is the most architecturally concentrated expression of Thai royal tradition available to the visitor in a single site.
🛒
Market
Chatuchak Market — The Circuit's Weekend Neighbour
The Chatuchak Weekend Market — 15,000 stalls, 35 acres, 200,000 visitors on a typical operating day — sits within the perimeter of the Bangkok Formula 1 circuit. The same roads that F1 cars will use on race day pass within metres of the market's northern entrance. On the weekend of the Grand Prix, the market and the circuit will share the same geography — a juxtaposition of Bangkok's most commercial public space and its most technologically advanced sporting event, in the same neighbourhood simultaneously.
🍜
Food Culture
Thai Street Food — Bangkok's UNESCO-Calibre Culinary Tradition
Bangkok's street food culture — pad thai, tom yum goong, khao man gai, som tam, and the full spectrum of regional Thai cuisine available from mobile carts and hawker stalls at prices that make the city's culinary culture accessible to everyone. The Or Tor Kor market near Chatuchak for premium produce; the Khao San Road stalls for the full range of Thai snacks; and the restaurant tradition of Bangkok's hotel dining rooms, which have been among the best in Asia for three decades.
Visual Journey

Through the Lens

Begin Your Story

Craft Your
Private Journey

Every detail — from your first evening on Khao San Road to your final morning beside the Chao Phraya — is composed entirely around you. Speak with your dedicated Richseen journey consultant today.

From USD 15,000+ per person

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