# Khao soi: Chiang Mai's signature noodle bowl

> Khao soi is Chiang Mai's must-eat dish — a coconut-curry noodle soup. What's in the bowl, how to eat it like a local, and where to find the best.

If you only eat one thing while you're here, make it **khao soi**. It's the dish that says "Northern Thailand" more than any other — a golden bowl of coconut curry and noodles that locals are quietly, fiercely proud of. The good news for you: there's brilliant khao soi a few minutes from the house, and a bowl rarely costs more than a coffee back home.

## What's in the bowl

Khao soi is a **coconut curry noodle soup**, mild-to-medium spicy, rich and a little sweet. The clever part is the noodles — **soft egg noodles** swim in the broth, and a tangle of **crispy fried noodles** sits on top for crunch. It usually comes with **chicken** (*khao soi gai*) or beef. On the side you'll get a little plate of **pickled mustard greens, sliced shallots, lime, and chili paste in oil**.

A nice bit of history: khao soi came down through **Yunnanese-Muslim (Chin Haw) traders**, which is why it's a cousin of Burmese curry noodles — and why some of the best versions in town are at Muslim-run shops. It's one thread in the wider tapestry of Northern Lanna cooking; for the full sit-down version of that tradition, see our guide to the [khantoke dinner](/blog/khantoke-dinner-chiang-mai), where a spread of regional dishes is served low-table, Lanna-style.

![Khao soi: Chiang Mai's signature noodle bowl](/blog/khao-soi-chiang-mai/visual.webp)

## How to eat it like a local

Those condiments aren't a garnish — they're the whole game. The local move:

1. Squeeze in the **lime**.
2. Add a forkful of **pickled greens** and some **shallots**.
3. Stir in a little **chili oil** (taste first — you can always add more).
4. Mix it all up so the crispy noodles start to soften into the broth.

Chopsticks for the noodles, spoon for the broth, and don't worry about slurping. Each shop's balance is a bit different, which is the fun of it — you'll quietly develop a favourite.

## Where we send people

The scene shifts (shops move, sell out, change hours), so check a recent map listing before you go — but these are the classics:

- **Khao Soi Khun Yai** (near Chang Phuak Gate) — small, old-school, beautifully balanced broth. **Lunch only and it sells out**, so get there before 1pm.
- **Khao Soi Mae Sai** (Santitham, near Nimman) — a touch spicier, generous, several proteins to choose from.
- **Khao Soi Lam Duan Fah Ham** — one of the oldest names in the city, rich and coconut-heavy. A proper institution.
- **Khao Soi Islam** (Ban Haw Muslim quarter, near the Night Bazaar) — **halal**, less sweet and more aromatic, with biryani and curries alongside.

## Good to know

- **Price:** about **40–70 THB** a bowl at a proper local shop (a bit more in cafés and malls).
- **It's a lunch dish.** Most specialists are daytime-only and close once they sell out — aim for **late morning to early lunch**, and don't count on khao soi for dinner.
- **Halal** is easy around **Ban Haw**. **Vegetarian/vegan** khao soi exists in the café and health-food scene but not at the classic shops — ask for *jay* (vegan) or *mang-sawirat* (vegetarian).

It also happens to be the perfect lunch after a morning up at [Doi Suthep](/blog/doi-suthep-weekend) — come back down hungry. And if you're still finding your feet in your first week, our [settling-in guide](/blog/settling-in-chiang-mai) covers the rest of the essentials. Now go get a bowl while they're still serving.
