# A year of Chiang Mai festivals: when to visit for the best ones

> A month-by-month guide to Chiang Mai festivals — Songkran, Yi Peng, flowers, lanterns and more — and how to plan your trip around them.

Chiang Mai throws some of Thailand's best parties. The old Lanna kingdom kept its own calendar of water, fire and flowers, and the city still marks it with a procession or a parade most months of the year. Get your timing right and you'll catch the place at its most alive — but the headline festivals also fill every bed in town, so a little planning goes a long way.

Most dates follow the lunar calendar, so they shift each year. Here's roughly when to look, season by season.

## January–February: flowers, umbrellas and lions

The cool, dry start of the year is the prettiest window to visit, and the festivals match the weather.

The **Bo Sang Umbrella Festival** lands in January (usually the third weekend) out in **Bo Sang**, the umbrella-making village along San Kamphaeng Road east of the city. The streets fill with hand-painted paper parasols, a parade of locals in full Lanna dress, music and craft stalls. It's free, low-key and a lovely way to see the region's [traditional handicrafts](/blog/lanna-handicrafts-chiang-mai) being made by the people who make them.

Then comes the headliner: the **Chiang Mai Flower Festival**, held over the first weekend of February. More than twenty floats buried under fresh orchids, roses and chrysanthemums roll from the Nawarat Bridge through the old town to Nong Buak Haad park, trailed by dancers and marching bands. It's free to watch — get there early for a kerb spot.

**Chinese New Year** usually overlaps, falling somewhere between late January and mid-February. The action centres on the **Warorot** district, the city's Chinatown, with lion and dragon dances, red lanterns strung across the lanes and food stalls running late. If you're nearby, [Warorot market](/blog/warorot-market-chiang-mai) is worth a wander any day, but it's electric during the new year.

![A year of Chiang Mai festivals: when to visit for the best ones](/blog/chiang-mai-festivals-calendar/visual.webp)

## April: Songkran, the water festival

If you only plan one trip around a festival, make it this. **Songkran**, the Thai New Year, runs **13–15 April** and turns the entire moat into a three-day water fight. Behind the soakings sits a gentler tradition — pouring water over Buddha images and the hands of elders for blessings. It's joyous, exhausting and unmissable, and we've written a full survival guide to [Songkran in Chiang Mai](/blog/songkran-chiang-mai) so you arrive ready. April is peak heat and peak demand, so this is the one to book furthest ahead.

## May–June: the city pillar

Quieter but deeply local, the **Inthakin** festival (also called Sai Khan Dok) honours Chiang Mai's sacred city pillar, usually across late May into June. For several days, thousands of residents file into **Wat Chedi Luang** to lay flowers, candles and incense at the pillar that's guarded the city for seven centuries. Buy a small flower offering for a few baht and join in — it's free, devotional and a world away from the water fights. A little [Lanna history](/blog/lanna-kingdom-history) makes the ritual land all the more.

## September–October: the Vegetarian Festival

For nine days around late September or early October, the **Vegetarian Festival** (Tesagan Gin Je) sweeps through Chinatown. Devotees wear white, eat strictly vegan and visit the Chinese shrines around **Warorot**, where yellow flags mark the stalls keeping the rules. There's no big parade here as there is in Phuket — the draw is the food. It's a glorious week to eat your way through the [vegetarian and vegan scene](/blog/vegetarian-chiang-mai), with dishes you won't find the rest of the year; our full guide to [the Vegetarian Festival and its nine days of going jay](/blog/vegetarian-festival-chiang-mai) explains the rituals behind the yellow flags.

![A year of Chiang Mai festivals: when to visit for the best ones](/blog/chiang-mai-festivals-calendar/visual-2.webp)

## November: lanterns and floating lights

The year's most photographed festival arrives on the full moon of the twelfth lunar month, usually November. Two celebrations happen at once and people often confuse them. **Loy Krathong** is the nationwide one: you float a small candle-lit basket on the river to thank the water goddess and let go of the past year — free, and beautiful along the Ping. **Yi Peng** is the Lanna sky-lantern tradition unique to the north, where glowing paper lanterns drift up into the dark.

A word of warning on the lanterns: aviation rules mean you can't legally release them anywhere in the city. The famous mass releases happen only at official, ticketed venues outside town, and those tickets are expensive and sell out months ahead. Our [Yi Peng lantern festival](/blog/yi-peng-lantern-festival) guide untangles the free riverside celebrations from the paid events so you can choose well.

## Plan around one — and book early

The festivals are the best argument for [timing your visit to Chiang Mai](/blog/when-to-visit-chiang-mai) deliberately rather than just turning up. The big four — Songkran, Yi Peng and Loy Krathong, the Flower Festival — empty the city's rooms fast, so decide which one you're chasing and reserve your stay well in advance. Settle in for a week or two and you'll catch a smaller celebration you never planned for, which is half the joy of being here in the first place.
