# Brunch & comfort food in Chiang Mai for homesick nomads

> Chiang Mai brunch done properly — eggs, avocado toast, burgers, wood-fired pizza and Western food for when you miss home for a morning.

You came for the food, and you've been eating like it — khao soi for lunch, sai ua from the night market, a curry you can't pronounce but now dream about. Then one morning, somewhere around week three, you wake up wanting nothing but eggs done properly and a coffee that isn't sweetened. That craving is completely normal. And the good news is that Chiang Mai, thanks to its enormous nomad and expat crowd, answers it better than almost any city its size.

## Why brunch is a whole thing here

A few years of remote workers wanting a familiar Saturday morning has built something real. **Brunch is a genuine scene in Chiang Mai**, and **Nimman is its beating heart** — the leafy grid of sois around Nimmanhaemin Road is wall-to-wall with cafés that take their eggs seriously.

Think proper **eggs benedict** with a hollandaise that holds, **avocado toast** on actual sourdough, fluffy **pancakes**, **smoothie bowls** under a hill of granola, and the kind of **flat white** that would pass muster in Melbourne. Spots like **The Larder**, **Manifreshto**, **Groon** (their smoked-salmon bagels are a thing) and **Smoothie Blues** are reliable starting points — though cafés here open and close at speed, so treat any name as a lead to chase rather than gospel. Half the fun is the wander. The same neighbourhood is also where you'll find the city's best beans, which we get into over in our guide to [coffee around Nimman](/blog/coffee-around-nimman).

![Brunch & comfort food in Chiang Mai for homesick nomads](/blog/brunch-comfort-food-chiang-mai/visual.webp)

## When you want a burger, not a bowl

Some cravings aren't dainty. For those, Chiang Mai delivers comfort food with a straight face.

**Burgers** are easy — places like **September Brasserie** and **The Duke's** do a proper one, the latter also slinging ribs, nachos and burritos for good measure. **Wood-fired pizza** is genuinely strong: **Adirak** runs a few sourdough-based pizzerias across town, and tucked-away spots near Wat Umong turn out blistered, thin-crust pies that hold their own. Craving **Mexican**? **Salsa Kitchen** on the Nimman side is the long-standing favourite for fat burritos and tacos, while **El Diablo's** near Thapae Gate does a tidy Mission-style wrap. If it's flaky flatbread and curry you're after, the city's [Thai-Muslim roti and biryani lanes](/blog/thai-muslim-food-chiang-mai) scratch that same comfort-food itch with a local twist. And for **real bread** — sourdough loaves, croissants, a flat white and a cinnamon thing — the city's small bakeries have quietly multiplied.

## The price reality

Here's the honest bit. **Western food costs more than Thai food** — that's true everywhere, and Chiang Mai is no exception. A 50-baht plate of khao soi from a street stall is one of the great deals on earth; a brunch with eggs benedict, a smoothie and a coffee will run you more like **180–350 baht a dish**, sometimes more at the fancier end.

But zoom out. By the standards of London, Sydney or Berlin, even a treat-yourself brunch here is still remarkably cheap — you're paying café prices for what would be a proper sit-down bill back home. If you're tracking your spending over a long stay, we break the numbers down in our [cost of living in Chiang Mai](/blog/cost-of-living-chiang-mai) guide. The short version: a weekly Western brunch won't dent your budget.

## Balance it with local

A word from people who've watched a lot of nomads settle in: the trick isn't choosing between brunch and the night market — it's having both. Eat your avocado toast on Sunday morning, then go demolish [Northern Thai food](/blog/northern-thai-food) by night. Many of these brunch cafés double as excellent laptop spots, which we cover in [work-friendly cafés](/blog/work-friendly-cafes-chiang-mai), so a leisurely breakfast can quietly turn into a productive morning. And if you eat plant-based, you're spoilt — Chiang Mai is one of Asia's best cities for it, as our [vegetarian guide](/blog/vegetarian-chiang-mai) will happily prove.

So go ahead and have the burger, order the pancakes, get the good coffee. Missing home for one morning doesn't mean you're doing the trip wrong — it means you've been here long enough that Chiang Mai has started to feel like home too. Tuck in, then go find your khao soi.

Warmly,
The Ada House team
