Tracey, this is going to be a brilliant trip. Fourteen nights split between Bangkok’s electric gay scene and Hua Hin’s breezy beachfront gives you exactly the mix you asked for: thumping clubs, temple mornings, pool parties, and long lazy days by the Gulf of Thailand. Let’s make every baht count.
I’ve chosen the comfort tier for your hotels because it sits comfortably within roughly 40 percent of your budget and puts you in properties that are gay-friendly, well-located, and genuinely lovely to come back to after a big night out. That frees up a healthy chunk for the nightlife and activities your vibes are all about.
The split I’d recommend: 8 nights in Bangkok (gay nightlife capital of Southeast Asia) then 6 nights in Hua Hin (beach days, pool parties, and a gentler pace to finish).
Where Your Money Goes
| Hotel | around $1,880 | 8 nights BKK ~$90/nt + 6 nights HH ~$100/nt, comfort tier |
| Food | around $440 | ~$33/day Bangkok, ~$33/day Hua Hin, 14 days |
| Nightlife & fun | around $800 | Bars, clubs, cabaret, pool parties across both cities |
| Activities | around $720 | Temple tours, water park, island trip, spa, cooking class, elephant sanctuary |
| Getting around | around $260 | Airport transfers, Bangkok BTS/taxis, Bangkok to Hua Hin bus/train, local transport |
| Total | $4,100 to $4,700 | Within your $4,700 budget |
All figures are estimates. Street food days bring costs down; a big night at a rooftop bar pushes them up. The range gives you room to move.
Where to Stay in Bangkok (Nights 1 to 8)
You want to be in Silom, full stop. The gay bars are literally on your doorstep and you will never pay for a taxi home.
Where to Stay in Hua Hin (Nights 9 to 14)
Hua Hin is all about the beach and the pool. The right hotel here is part of the experience.
Bangkok: Days 1 to 8
You have the whole gay capital of Southeast Asia. Here are your first three days in detail.
Check in, drop your bags, and breathe. Your airport transfer into Silom will run around $10 to $15 by metered taxi; just make sure the driver uses the meter. The BTS Skytrain from Mo Chit or Phaya Thai is even cheaper and takes about 45 minutes if you are light on luggage. Get oriented, find a coffee, and start slow.
Ease in with the Jim Thompson House Museum, a gorgeous shaded teak house with an air of mystery that no one has ever quite solved. It’s close to the MBK area and makes for a cool, calm first afternoon. Admission runs around $7 to $10 and guided tours are included. Afterwards, wander across to the nearby malls for a smoothie and some air conditioning while the jet lag settles.
Tonight is the Bangkok Night Tour by Tuk-Tuk: zip through the old city after dark, hitting hidden food stalls, a flower market, and floodlit temples. It’s the perfect first-night activity because it orients you to the city while filling your stomach. Come back to Silom around 10pm and take a wander down Soi 4 to find your bar legs. No pressure tonight, tomorrow the real dancing starts.
Up early and straight to the Grand Palace and Wat Phra Kaew. Be at the gates right at opening (8:30am) to beat both the heat and the tour groups. The Emerald Buddha and the gilded spires are genuinely jaw-dropping. Strict dress code: cover shoulders and knees, or the guards at the door will send you away. Entry runs around $16 and is absolutely worth it. Budget around $20 to $45 for a guided tour option through Klook if you want the stories behind the architecture.
Hop on a ferry from Tha Tien pier to cross the river to Wat Arun. The Temple of Dawn’s porcelain-encrusted spire is even more beautiful up close than in photographs. Then walk five minutes to Wat Pho for the giant reclining Buddha and, crucially, an authentic Thai massage right there on site. Budget around $15 to $40 for a session. You have earned it after all that temple climbing. The Wat Arun and Wat Pho Temple Tour on Klook bundles this nicely if you prefer a guide.
Dinner in Silom, then the full Silom Soi 2 and 4 Gay Nightlife Crawl. Start on Soi 4, the more relaxed bar street, for cocktails and people-watching. Then from around 11pm, migrate to Soi 2 and into DJ Station. Bangkok’s most iconic gay superclub has multiple floors, massive drag shows, and a dance crowd that goes until dawn. The small cover charge usually includes a drink. Pace yourself, Tracey. The week is long and the nights are deep here.
A gentle start. Book ahead at Health Land Spa for a traditional Thai massage, the standout treatment and superb value at around $15 to $40. This is your post-DJ Station recovery session and it will absolutely bring you back to life. The Asoke branch is convenient if you fancy a change of neighborhood; Klook also has a booking option for the Health Land Spa Asoke with good deals.
Head to Asiatique The Riverfront in the late afternoon. Take the free shuttle boat from Sathorn pier (it is genuinely part of the experience and beats the traffic). Wander the converted warehouse district as sunset turns the Chao Phraya golden. Great for shopping, browsing, and a pre-show dinner.
Calypso Cabaret at Asiatique: Bangkok’s premier ladyboy cabaret show, high-energy lip-sync, lavish costumes, and genuinely talented performers. Book the earlier show through Klook so you have the full evening after. Tickets run around $20 to $35. Then spin the Ferris wheel and stroll the night market before heading back to Silom for a nightcap.
Days 4 to 8 in Bangkok: The Rest of Your Trip
You have five more full days in Bangkok, and this is where you really pack it in. Here is how I would theme them, Tracey:
Hit Chatuchak Weekend Market on a Saturday or Sunday morning, arriving by 9am before the heat. Fifteen thousand stalls of vintage, art, plants, fashion, and street food. The hidden design section (Section 7) is a gem. Spend the afternoon at ICONSIAM on the riverside for air-conditioned luxury and the spectacular indoor SookSiam floating market on the ground floor. Take the free shuttle boat from BTS Saphan Taksin. Evening: the Chinatown Yaowarat Street Food Tour after dark for charcoal-grilled seafood and mango sticky rice under neon lights. Go hungry after 6pm.
Take the Ayutthaya Ancient Capital Day Trip: crumbling temples, the famous Buddha head entwined in tree roots, and a UNESCO World Heritage atmosphere just north of Bangkok. Leave early and take the river-cruise return option for a relaxed finish. Budget around $30 to $60 for a guided day trip. Alternatively pair it with the Damnoen Saduak Floating Market and Maeklong Railway Market tour for a wonderfully surreal full day. Leave by 7am to beat the tour buses and catch the train rolling through the market stalls in real time.
Morning: the Thai Cooking Class with Market Visit. You shop a fresh market with a chef, then cook and eat green curry, tom yum, and pad thai. Budget around $25 to $50 and you will leave with recipes and new friends. Afternoon: the Thonburi Canals Longtail Boat Tour, roaring through the old canal neighborhoods of stilt houses and riverside temples. Evening: dress up smart (no shorts or flip-flops) and head to the Sky Bar rooftop experience at Lebua for cocktails over the city at golden hour. Budget around $20 to $40 for drinks. Glamorous and absolutely unforgettable.
Sleep in. Afternoon at the Mahanakhon SkyWalk observation deck: time your ticket for just before sunset, catch both daylight and the city lights, and stand on the glass floor for the money shot. Budget around $20 to $35. Then: the Manohra Dinner Cruise, a restored teak rice barge gliding past floodlit temples with a beautiful dinner on board. Budget around $45 to $75. Afterwards, back to Silom for a final big night: Soi 4 cocktails, DJ Station dancing, and Babylon gay sauna and social scene if the mood takes you. Afternoons at Babylon are low-