The first thing to settle about The Peninsula Bangkok is which side of the river you want to wake up on. The four other Forbes 5-Star and Forbes-Recommended icons of the Chao Phraya line up on the east bank between Klong Toei and Bangrak. Mandarin Oriental, Four Seasons at Chao Phraya, Capella, and Shangri-La all sit on that side. Peninsula faces all four from the west bank, the Klongsan side, the only major luxury hotel over there. That bank decision is the entire trade.

If you book Peninsula expecting to step out of the lobby into Sukhumvit or Silom on foot, the friction shows up by night two. If you book it for the water, the quiet, and a hotel that uses an antique teak shuttle boat as theatre rather than transit, the choice works the way it’s designed to work.

Peninsula Bangkok quick facts and figures


Property: The Peninsula Bangkok, 333 Charoen Nakhon Road, Khlong Ton Sai, Khlong San, Bangkok 10600. West bank of the Chao Phraya (เจ้าพระยา).
Opened: 1998. 37 floors, 367 rooms and suites, W-shaped tower so every key has a river view.
Owner: Hongkong and Shanghai Hotels Limited, full owner since the 2020 buyout of the Phataraprasit family stake.
Awards: Forbes Travel Guide 5-Star 2025 (one of three in Bangkok, with Capella and Mandarin Oriental). Two Michelin Keys.
Guest score: 9.2 across 3,041 verified guest reviews. 4.5 on TripAdvisor, ranked #69 of about 1,477 Bangkok hotels.
Entry rate (live): from approximately USD 299 per night at time of publish. Seasonal range USD 400 to 620 for the Deluxe Room category.

The Peninsula Bangkok W-shaped tower seen from the Chao Phraya RiverPhotographer: Fabio Achilli from Milano, Italy. Source: Wikimedia Commons. License: CC BY 2.0.
The W-shaped tower from a Chao Phraya tour boat.

Method note. We did not stay overnight at The Peninsula Bangkok during research for this review. This Mode B writeup synthesizes fourteen verified sources. Aggregator guest review trends across more than 3,000 stays. Professional travel media coverage. Japanese, French, Spanish, and Italian-language travel blogs. The property’s own published material. Where ranges appear instead of single rates, that reflects honest seasonal variance, not vagueness. Live “from” pricing is linked at every CTA so the number you see is the number the affiliate program is quoting today.

The Klongsan side bet

Peninsula opened in 1998 on a piece of west-bank land the other luxury operators didn’t want. The bank-side bias in Bangkok hotel real estate runs deep. Bangrak is where the BTS terminates at Saphan Taksin. Where the foreign embassies clustered in the colonial period. Where the heritage hotels of the Mandarin Oriental lineage have anchored for a century and a half. Klongsan got industrial wharves and warehouses. Peninsula’s decision to build a 37-floor tower across the water from all of that was a long bet that the river itself was the asset.

That bet looks better in 2026 than it did in 2003. ICONSIAM (ไอคอนสยาม) opened on the Klongsan side in 2018. The BTS Gold Line added a Charoen Nakhon station 450 meters from the hotel in 2020. The river-shuttle culture matured. The Klongsan side stopped being isolated. It still feels quieter at street level than Bangrak does. If your idea of a hotel district is restaurants you can walk to without a boat or a Grab, this is not that. If your idea of a hotel district is a 37-floor tower with an 88-meter pool and nothing across the road but the Charoen Nakhon side streets, Peninsula’s setting carries you.

The reading from over 3,000 verified guest reviews is consistent. Returning guests, the ones who have already stayed at Mandarin Oriental or Four Seasons on the other bank, often cite the Klongsan quiet as the reason they switched. First-time Bangkok travelers who want walkable nightlife sometimes find the crossing a tax. Read the Sukhumvit Bangkok neighborhood guide if you want a sense of what the east-bank-walkable alternative looks like before committing.

Every key, every river view

The W-shaped tower is not a marketing flourish. It was engineered into the floor plan so that all 367 rooms and suites face the Chao Phraya. There are no garden-view rooms here because the architecture made them impossible. Compared to Mandarin Oriental’s three-wing layout, where river-facing rooms cost a premium over courtyard-facing rooms, Peninsula’s every-room-river-view is the structural commitment of the property.

The categories that matter to most travelers are the Deluxe Room (from approximately 45 square meters), the Grand Deluxe, the Deluxe Suite, the Grand Deluxe Suite, and the Peninsula Suite at the top of the floor plan. The Grand Deluxe gets one or two extra windows and a slightly larger footprint. The standard finishes are polished teak floor, silk wall panels, hand-carved wood detailing, and a marble bathroom with double vanities and a separate shower. Japanese reviewer thailandgaho.com, returning in 2023 after a first stay a decade earlier, noted the Grand Deluxe on the 22nd floor still photographed cleanly with the framework that drew them the first time.

The honest counterpoint, surfaced by Fused Magazine and echoed across guest review trends, is that the design language reads as classic luxury rather than design-forward luxury. If the four-year-old Capella or Four Seasons at Chao Phraya is your reference for what “new” looks like on the river, Peninsula’s teak and silk will feel warmer to some readers and dated to others. The Capella Bangkok review and the Four Seasons Bangkok at Chao Phraya review walk through the alternative aesthetics if that comparison matters to you.

The shuttle boats and getting around

The fleet of antique green-roofed teak shuttle boats is the answer to the bank question. They run from the hotel’s private pier to Sathorn Pier, also called Central Pier, every ten minutes from 06:00 to midnight. Sathorn Pier sits at the foot of BTS Saphan Taksin (สะพานตากสิน), Silom Line, Exit 2. The walk from the pier to the BTS turnstile is under a minute. End to end, lobby to BTS, the crossing takes about six minutes on the boat plus the connecting walk.

The second shuttle runs to ICONSIAM, every 30 minutes between 10:00 and 22:30. That route gets you to the mall, the food court, and the riverside boardwalk on the Klongsan side without a Grab. The Gold Line’s Charoen Nakhon station is 450 meters from the lobby on foot. That gives you a third land-side option once you’re at street level.

The honest limitation is the midnight cut-off on the main shuttle and the 22:30 cut-off on the ICONSIAM run. If your return from a Sukhumvit dinner falls after midnight, you’re in a Grab going around the Memorial Bridge or the Taksin Bridge, not on a boat. Japanese review runbkk.net flagged this same window as the practical edge of the experience. It is not a deal-breaker for the demographic Peninsula is selling to. It is the friction.

Mei Jiang, Thiptara, and where breakfast peaks

The dining footprint is smaller than what a 367-room property might suggest, and Peninsula does not run a club lounge. That is by design, not by oversight. The three on-site venues are Mei Jiang (梅疆), Thiptara (ทิพย์ธารา), and the River Cafe and Terrace. Reviewer thailandgaho.com flagged the no-club-lounge structure as a fair limitation for some travelers. Capella and Four Seasons at Chao Phraya both run lounges. Peninsula does not.

Mei Jiang is the Cantonese fine-dining room. The signature plates recur across BK Magazine reviews, Top Tables hosting events, and the hotel’s own venue page. Dim sum lunch. Roast duck. Deep-fried snow fish with salt and chilli. Tenderloin beef with pepper paste. Mei Jiang sits on multiple Bangkok best-Cantonese lists. The link from the best restaurants in Bangkok hub piece points here for that reason. Book dim sum lunch over weekend dinner if you want to see the room at its busiest moment with locals at the next table, not other hotel guests.

Thiptara is the riverside Thai pavilion, set in a traditional teakwood pavilion at the water’s edge. Fused Magazine and the Japanese-language thailandgaho.com both describe the meal in the same shape. Curry-flour pancakes with river prawns to start. Lotus stem salad as a second course. Grilled Andaman snapper as a main. Red curry with duck if you want a heavier finish. A traditional Thai music performance after sunset. The pavilion seating is the seat to ask for. The indoor room is fine. The riverside terrace is the reason to book.

River Cafe and Terrace is the breakfast venue and runs the international buffet through the morning. French luxury-travel blog jet-lag-trips.com placed it in the top three Bangkok hotel breakfasts on a chef-led palate test. Spanish-language hypetv.es gave the same verdict. The guest review pile is densely positive on breakfast. If breakfast is the meal of the trip for you, that signal repeats across four sources in three language families and is the meal Peninsula is most consistently rated on.

Two notes on what is no longer on the menu. The Pen restaurant referenced in older reviews and the Jesters Mediterranean venue mentioned in Italian-language coverage are historical, not current. The three venues above are what the property runs today.

The three-tier cascading riverside pool at The Peninsula Bangkok with view across the Chao PhrayaPhotographer: Pixabay user keikiwai. Source: Wikimedia Commons. License: CC0.
The 88-meter three-tier riverside pool. The lowest tier sits close enough to the water that swimmers see longtail boats pass.

The pool, the spa, and the wellness layer

The Peninsula Bangkok pool is, by reviewer count and length, the longest hotel pool on the Chao Phraya. The figure that recurs is 88 meters, structured as a three-tier cascade that steps down toward the river. The lowest tier sits close enough to the water that swimmers see longtail boats pass while floating. Specialist hotel-review site onceinalifetimejourney.com walked through the pool engineering in detail. If pool time is part of why you book a Bangkok hotel, the structural commitment here outranks the courtyard pools at Mandarin Oriental and the smaller plunge pool at Capella.

The Peninsula Spa Bangkok sits in a dedicated three-storey colonial-style building, separate from the main tower. The therapists are Wat Pho-trained (วัดโพธิ์). That means the lineage of Thai massage practice the spa draws on traces to the country’s most authoritative teaching temple. Italian-language Michelin coverage and Japanese reviewer thailandgaho.com both treat the spa as a destination venue rather than a hotel amenity. Treatment menu names rotate seasonally. Book direct if a specific protocol matters to you, the third-party listings are not always current.

Peninsula Academy is the property’s programming layer, which runs Muay Thai (มวยไทย) sessions, Thai cooking classes, and sunset yoga on the helipad. The helipad is the rooftop here, and that is the answer to the question about a sky bar. Peninsula does not run one. The roof is for landing helicopters and, occasionally, for yoga at sunset. If your evening is the Lebua, Vertigo, Sirocco, or Tichuca tier of Bangkok sky bars, that’s not what this hotel is selling. The best rooftop bars in Bangkok piece sends you to that circuit. Peninsula trades the rooftop spotlight for old-money quiet, deliberately.

What you actually pay by tier

Rates move with season, demand, and how far ahead you book. The ranges below are paraphrased from booking aggregators, reviewer-reported nightly figures across five language families, and the hotel’s own published rate context.

  • Deluxe Room (entry, ~45 sqm): from approximately THB 14,000 to 22,000 per night (USD 400 to 620), low season into high season. Live “from” rate at time of publish was USD 299, which falls below that range as a flash promotion. Check the live link.
  • Grand Deluxe and Deluxe Suite: from approximately THB 22,000 to 35,000 per night (USD 620 to 1,000). The Grand Deluxe is the room category most reviewers stay in.
  • Peninsula Suite (flagship): ultra-premium tier. The “from” rate sits well above THB 150,000 (USD 4,000-plus) at most booking windows. Check live rates for the actual night. This is the only suite tier where the public rate ranges are wide enough that a single number on this page would mislead you.

The honest framing on direct versus aggregator. The entry-rate gap is usually small once tax and service charge are added. The affiliate program runs live discount programs more aggressively. The listed rate at the link below is usually the floor you’ll see for any given night. Check live availability and rates at The Peninsula Bangkok.

The Peninsula Bangkok tower seen from Khlong Ton Sai, Khlong San districtPhotographer: trungydang. Source: Wikimedia Commons. License: CC BY 3.0.
The tower from the Khlong Ton Sai approach in Khlong San.

Peninsula vs Capella vs Four Seasons vs Mandarin Oriental vs Sukhothai

The five hotels that compete for the river-luxury booking in Bangkok split along three axes. Bank side, design era, and rooftop bar.

Bank side. Peninsula is alone on the west bank. The other four (and the Shangri-La) all sit on the east bank, walking-adjacent to Saphan Taksin BTS without a boat. If walkability to the BTS without a five-minute crossing is non-negotiable, Peninsula is the wrong pick. Look at the Mandarin Oriental Bangkok review instead.

Design era. Capella (2020) and Four Seasons at Chao Phraya (2020) are the design-forward newcomers. Mandarin Oriental (1876 in lineage) and Peninsula (1998) are the heritage and classic-luxury references. The Sukhothai sits between them in a 1991 urban-garden frame. If you want the room to be the photograph of the trip, Capella’s all-suite layout is the most contemporary. Peninsula’s teak-and-silk reads as classic by intent. Read the Sukhothai Bangkok review if the no-river, garden-Sathorn alternative is on the shortlist.

Rooftop bar. Capella has Stella. Four Seasons has BKK Social Club. Mandarin Oriental has Bamboo Bar (a ground-floor heritage room, not a rooftop, but the same evening-program weight). Peninsula has none. If the after-dinner scene at your hotel is part of why you choose it, Peninsula needs you to walk to a different hotel for it. That can be a feature or a bug depending on how you travel.

Where to stay near Peninsula Bangkok

For the booking link to the property itself, the card below pulls live “from” pricing and availability through the affiliate program.

The Peninsula Bangkok SHA EXTRA PLUS ★ 9.2
Klongsan Riverside · BTS Saphan Taksin via shuttle boat, 6 min

The Peninsula Bangkok

Forbes Travel Guide 5-Star on the west bank of the Chao Phraya. 367 rooms in a W-shaped tower where every key looks at the river. Old-money quiet, three-tier pool, the colonial-style Peninsula Spa across three floors.

✓ Every room a river view, W-shaped tower, 88-meter pool

Frequently asked questions about Peninsula Bangkok

Is Peninsula Bangkok on the same side of the river as Mandarin Oriental and Four Seasons?
No. Peninsula is on the west bank (Klongsan side). Mandarin Oriental, Four Seasons at Chao Phraya, Capella, and Shangri-La all sit on the east bank (Bangrak side). The shuttle boat closes that gap in about six minutes from 06:00 to midnight.
How do I get to BTS from Peninsula Bangkok?
The hotel shuttle boat runs to Sathorn Pier every ten minutes between 06:00 and midnight. From Sathorn Pier it is a one-minute walk to BTS Saphan Taksin, Exit 2, Silom Line. The BTS Gold Line Charoen Nakhon station is also 450 meters from the hotel lobby on foot.
Does Peninsula Bangkok have a rooftop bar or sky bar?
No. The roof is a helipad used for occasional Peninsula Academy sunset yoga sessions, not a public bar. If a hotel sky bar is part of why you pick a Bangkok hotel, Peninsula is the wrong choice. The Bangkok rooftop circuit (Lebua, Vertigo, Sirocco, Tichuca) is reachable by Grab in 15 to 25 minutes from the hotel.
How does Peninsula compare to Capella for honeymoon or anniversary stays?
Capella is all-suite, intimate (101 keys), with the in-room private pool layout. Peninsula is a larger property (367 keys) with broader public spaces and the longer 88-meter cascading pool. Honeymooners who want a quiet, all-suite layout often prefer Capella. Couples who want the legendary Peninsula service ritual and the older property’s classic-luxury aesthetic prefer Peninsula. Both are Forbes 5-Star.
What is the best room category to book at Peninsula Bangkok?
The Grand Deluxe is the room category most professional and Japanese-language reviewers stay in. It is the smallest commitment that gets you the better river angle and the larger window framing. The Deluxe Room is fine, but the upgrade to Grand Deluxe is the one that returns the better photograph and the better corner of the W-shape.
Is breakfast included at Peninsula Bangkok?
It depends on the rate plan. Many rate plans bundle the River Cafe and Terrace breakfast into the nightly rate. Others price it separately at about THB 1,500 to 2,000 per person. Check the rate plan inclusions on the booking page before confirming. The breakfast is ranked among the top three in Bangkok by independent professional reviewers in French, Spanish, and English, so the included-breakfast plan is usually the better value.


Honest take. Peninsula Bangkok is the Klongsan-side answer to the east-bank-luxury question. It works if you want a quieter river-hotel experience with old-money service, an 88-meter pool, and a spa pavilion that justifies a treatment-only afternoon. It does not work if your trip is built around walkable BTS access, the Bangkok rooftop bar circuit, or a design-forward 2020s aesthetic. Forbes 5-Star sits on the box because the service, the rooms, and the public spaces all hold the rating, not because of marketing weight.

See live rates and check availability at The Peninsula Bangkok. Live affiliate-discount pricing reflects what you’ll pay tonight.