# A Guide to Chiang Mai's Neighbourhoods: Where to Live

> Nimman, the Old City, Santitham, the Riverside or the suburbs? An honest local guide to choosing where to live in Chiang Mai for a longer stay.

One of the nicest things about Chiang Mai is how much it changes from one street to the next. Cross the moat, ride ten minutes north, or head out towards the mountains, and the pace, the price and the whole texture of daily life shift with you. When you're here for a week, the area barely matters. When you're staying for months, it's the single biggest decision you'll make — bigger, honestly, than the flat itself. So here's our candid take on the main neighbourhoods: who each one suits, the vibe, the rough rent feel, and the trade-offs nobody mentions until you've signed a lease.

## Nimman: cafés, coworking and an easy landing

If you've read anything about remote work in Thailand, you've read about **Nimman** (Nimmanhaemin). It's the most walkable corner of the city and the unofficial home of the nomad crowd: speciality coffee on every block, fast wifi as standard, and a [coworking space](/blog/coworking-spaces-chiang-mai) within a few minutes of wherever you land. The flip side is price — Nimman commands the highest rents in town, studios get snapped up quickly, and landlords increasingly want a year's commitment. It suits you if convenience and community matter more than square metres, and if a good flat white feels like an essential rather than a treat. We've a whole guide to the [coffee around Nimman](/blog/coffee-around-nimman) if that's your weakness.

![A Guide to Chiang Mai's Neighbourhoods: Where to Live](/blog/chiang-mai-neighbourhoods/visual.webp)

## The Old City: temples, the moat and a central base

Just east of Nimman, the **Old City** sits inside the square moat — the historic heart, dense with [temples and Lanna history](/blog/old-city-temples-chiang-mai). Living here means waking to monks chanting, cycling past 700-year-old chedis, and being walkable to markets and the weekend walking streets. It's central, charming and well-connected, with a mix of guesthouses, older apartment blocks and a few smarter condos. Rents sit a notch below Nimman. The trade-offs: traffic snarls at the gates, building heights are capped so there are no glossy high-rises, and the most photographed lanes can feel busy. It suits people who fell for the romance of the place and want to live right inside it.

## Santitham: local life, a short ride from everything

Tuck yourself just north of Nimman and you reach **Santitham** — where a lot of nomads quietly move after their first month. This is ordinary Thai neighbourhood life: morning food stalls, family-run shops, small night markets, and apartment buildings made for residents rather than holidaymakers. Rents are meaningfully lower than Nimman for similar flats, which makes it some of the best value in the city; our [cost-of-living guide](/blog/cost-of-living-chiang-mai) sets out the wider picture. You're still a ten-minute scooter ride from Nimman's cafés, so you give up very little. The trade-off is polish — fewer English menus, plainer buildings — but you'll be living in the real city. It suits budget-minded long-stayers who don't mind navigating in a bit of Thai.

## The Riverside: leafy, calm and a little slower

Over towards the **Ping River** — the **Wat Ket** and **Charoenrat** side especially — everything slows down. This was Chiang Mai's original expat quarter, and it still has a gentle, leafy, arty feel: old teak shophouses, riverside cafés, galleries and a handful of well-kept condos with actual views. It's greener and calmer than anywhere central, and a lovely antidote if Nimman starts to feel over-caffeinated. The catch is that you'll lean on a scooter to get around, and the truly walkable cluster is small. It suits couples, families and anyone after a quieter, more settled rhythm without leaving the city behind.

![A Guide to Chiang Mai's Neighbourhoods: Where to Live](/blog/chiang-mai-neighbourhoods/visual-2.webp)

## Hang Dong and Mae Hia: space, gardens and the mountains

Head south and the city loosens into suburbs. **Hang Dong** and **Mae Hia** are where you go for room to breathe — houses with gardens, gated estates, and the lowest rents in the area, often a whole home for the price of a Nimman studio. You're near Doi Suthep's foothills, international schools and big shopping centres. A [scooter or car is non-negotiable here](/blog/owning-a-scooter-chiang-mai); without one you'll feel stranded. It suits families, remote workers who want a proper home office, and anyone happy to swap walkable cafés for space and quiet. One honest note: the southern and rural fringes tend to feel the smoke more during [burning season](/blog/burning-season-chiang-mai), so weigh that in.

## Chang Khlan and the Night Bazaar: better to visit than to live

Between the Old City and the river sits **Chang Khlan**, home to the famous **Night Bazaar**. It's lively and well-placed, thick with hotels and serviced condos, and perfectly fine for a short stay. For actually living, though, most long-termers find it too touristy — pricier than its charm warrants, noisy after dark, and thin on everyday local life. We'd come for the markets rather than rent here, unless you genuinely love the buzz.

## So, where should you live?

Honestly? Don't overthink the first month. Most people we know booked somewhere central and walkable to begin with — usually Nimman or the Old City — then moved once they'd found their own rhythm. If you're weighing up places, our guides to [finding accommodation](/blog/where-to-stay-chiang-mai) and the [practicalities of renting](/blog/renting-apartment-chiang-mai) will save you some pain. The right neighbourhood isn't the one with the best reputation; it's the one whose daily rhythm matches the life you actually want here. Come and walk a few — you'll feel it surprisingly quickly.
