# Mae Kampong: a misty mountain village near Chiang Mai

> Mae Kampong is a cool, 100-year-old mountain village an hour east of Chiang Mai — a waterfall, treehouse cafés, miang tea and slow village mornings.

When the city heat gets too much, the locals do one thing: they drive up. An hour east of Chiang Mai, the road climbs through tea and coffee terraces into the clouds, and **Mae Kampong** appears — a 100-year-old Northern Thai village at **1,300 m**, where the air is cool, a stream runs through the lanes, and life moves at mountain pace. It's our favourite easy escape, and here's how to do it.

## What it feels like

Mae Kampong is **slow travel in one village**: simple wooden houses lining a narrow street, a stream crossed by little bridges, and a shrine built right over the water. For over a century the community lived off **miang** (fermented tea leaves); today **coffee** grows alongside it on the surrounding hillsides. It's a living village, not a theme park — quiet, green and nostalgic, and noticeably **cooler** than Chiang Mai (bring a light layer, especially in the misty mornings).

![Mae Kampong: a misty mountain village near Chiang Mai](/blog/mae-kampong-chiang-mai/visual.webp)

## Things to do

- **Mae Kampong Waterfall** — a multi-tiered cascade just above the village, with a short streamside trail and shady spots to sit. Paths get slippery after rain, so wear decent shoes.
- **The stream-side temple** (Wat Kantha Phueksa) — shrines built over the water, a calm place for a slow wander.
- **Treehouse cafés & viewpoints** — the hills are dotted with hillside cafés overlooking the valley. The famous one is **The Giant**, a café built around a huge tree. Most serve **locally grown coffee and miang tea** — turn the afternoon into a tasting.
- **Flight of the Gibbon** — a jungle zipline in the same Mae On district, for guests who want an active day to go with the café-hopping.

## Make a loop of it

Mae Kampong sits in the same direction as the **[San Kamphaeng Hot Springs](/blog/san-kamphaeng-hot-springs)** — so the classic full day is: village + waterfall + cafés in the morning, then soak your feet at the springs on the way back. Nature, culture and a hot mineral bath in one easy loop.

## Getting there

It's about **1–1.5 hours** east via Route 1317, and the final climb is **steep, narrow and winding**:

- **Car or a day tour** — the most comfortable choice for most people, and the easiest way to combine the village with the hot springs.
- **Scooter** — possible, but only for **confident riders**: the mountain curves are real and get slick in the rain (read our [scooter guide](/blog/renting-a-scooter-chiang-mai) first).
- **Grab** works but is pricey for the distance, and a return ride isn't guaranteed; songthaews/vans go partway but need transfers. For the full picture, see our [getting-around guide](/blog/getting-around-chiang-mai).

## When to go & a few manners

The **cool season (Nov–Feb)** is prime — crisp air, misty valleys, lush hills — and **mornings on a weekday** are the quietest (Thai visitors pack it out on cool-weather weekends). Since it's a real village, keep noise down, ask before photographing homes or elders, cover shoulders and knees at the temple, buy from local cafés and stalls, and take your litter back with you.

Prices for cafés, homestays and entry fees are modest but do change, so check before you count on a number. Tell us at the house if you fancy the trip — we'll help you plan the loop and point you to the best treehouse café for that valley view.
