# Night Safari and the Zoo: an evening with the family

> A family guide to Chiang Mai Night Safari and the city zoo: tram zones, after-dark animals, timing, transport and honest welfare notes.

Some evenings in Chiang Mai are made for slowing down — but every so often the children want a little adventure after dark, and the grown-ups want something that runs on its own momentum. That's exactly the gap a trip out to the **Chiang Mai Night Safari** or **Chiang Mai Zoo** is built to fill: a few hours of wide eyes, plenty of fresh air, and the easy magic of spotting animals just as the sky turns to indigo.

Both sit on the south-western edge of the city, near the foot of Doi Suthep, so neither is a five-minute hop — but with a little planning they make one of the more relaxed family outings you can have from the house. Here's how the Ada House team would approach an evening of it.

## An easy win for families

If you're travelling with little ones, the appeal is simple: there's room to roam, the pace is gentle, and no one has to keep quiet the way they would in a temple. We'd file it alongside the other low-stress days in our guide to [Chiang Mai with kids](/blog/chiang-mai-with-kids) — the kind of outing where the children set the tempo and the adults happily trail behind. An evening start also sidesteps the hottest part of the day, which makes a real difference when small people are involved.

![Night Safari and the Zoo: an evening with the family](/blog/night-safari-zoo-chiang-mai/visual.webp)

## Inside the Night Safari

The **Night Safari** is the headline act, and it's a proper after-dark experience rather than a daytime zoo with the lights turned low. The main event is an open-sided **tram** that loops slowly through two night zones: the **Savanna Safari**, home to giraffes, zebras, rhinos and other plains animals that often amble right up to the rail, and the **Predator Prowl**, where tigers, lions, bears and hyenas watch back from the dark. A guide narrates as you go, and the whole loop takes about an hour.

There's more on foot, too. The **Jaguar Trail** is a walking circuit of around a kilometre around a lake, open from late morning, so early arrivals can stretch their legs before the trams start. Across the evening you'll also find scheduled **shows** and a musical fountain display near the entrance. Trams generally run well into the night, with one leaving every fifteen minutes or so — aim to arrive before sunset so you catch the last of the daylight on the walking trail and roll into the tram just as it turns properly dark.

## Chiang Mai Zoo, at the foot of the mountain

A little closer to town, tucked against the green slope right below **Doi Suthep**, sits **Chiang Mai Zoo** — the older, sprawling, hillside option. It's a daytime visit rather than a night one, and worth knowing that it is genuinely large and genuinely hilly: expect a lot of walking, often uphill, with trams and shuttle buggies running between sections for tired legs. For years its best-known residents were its **giant pandas**, and it has long been famous for its **aquarium**, once billed among the largest in the region with a long underwater tunnel. Both have had their ups and downs over the years, so it's worth checking what is actually open before you build a day around either.

Because the zoo sits at the base of the mountain, it pairs naturally with a temple morning — many people fold it into our [weekend at Doi Suthep](/blog/doi-suthep-weekend), doing the temple early and the zoo after, or the other way round.

## A gentle word on animal welfare

We'll be honest with you, because we'd want the same. Animal attractions anywhere sit on a spectrum, and experiences here vary from enclosure to enclosure and from year to year. Our quiet steer is to treat the visit as a chance to **observe** rather than to handle: enjoy the tram and the trail, skip anything that involves close contact or photo props, and let the children watch how animals behave when they're simply left in peace. Trust your own eyes on the day — if something doesn't sit right with you, it's perfectly fine to walk on. Approaching the evening thoughtfully is, we think, part of what it can teach.

## Getting there, and timing it right

Both venues are out of town, so transport is the one thing to sort in advance — this isn't somewhere to stroll to. A pre-booked **Grab** or a chartered **red songthaew** that waits for you is the least stressful choice with children in tow; our rundown on [getting around Chiang Mai](/blog/getting-around-chiang-mai) covers the options and rough fares. Bring **mosquito repellent**, a light layer for the cooler night air, water, and a little cash for snacks and tram tickets. Go on a full stomach, or plan an early dinner nearby, as the little ones will flag if they're hungry on top of being out late.

Whichever you choose, it's the kind of evening that sends everyone home happily worn out — come and tell us which animal stole the show.
