# Thai public holidays: what closes, the alcohol ban, and how to plan around it

> A practical guide to Thai public holidays in Chiang Mai: the dates that shift, the alcohol-sale bans, and which errands to run before things close.

Thailand keeps a busy calendar of public holidays, and most of the time they pass by pleasantly — a quieter street, a long weekend, a temple busier than usual. But a few of them carry real, practical consequences: the banks shut, the immigration office closes, and on certain days the shops simply won't sell you a beer. Knowing which is which saves you a wasted trip across town or a dry dinner you didn't plan for. Here's how the year actually works on the ground in Chiang Mai.

## The holidays you can set your watch by

A good chunk of the calendar sits on fixed dates, so you can plan around these well ahead:

- **New Year's Day** (1 January) — usually padded with an extra government day off either side.
- **Chakri Memorial Day** (6 April) — honours the founding of the current royal dynasty.
- **Songkran** (13–15 April) — the Thai New Year and the year's biggest event, when the whole moat becomes a three-day water fight. We've a full [Songkran survival guide](/blog/songkran-chiang-mai) for that one.
- **Labour Day** (1 May) and **Coronation Day** (4 May).
- **The Queen's Birthday** (3 June) and **the King's Birthday** (28 July).
- **Mother's Day** (12 August) and **Father's Day** (5 December) — the birthdays of the Queen Mother and the late King Bhumibol, observed warmly nationwide.
- **Chulalongkorn Day** (23 October) and **Constitution Day** (10 December).

![Thai public holidays: what closes, the alcohol ban, and how to plan around it](/blog/public-holidays-thailand/visual.webp)

## The Buddhist holy days that move each year

Three of the most important holidays don't sit on a fixed date at all — they follow the lunar calendar, so they shift every year. Check them annually rather than assuming:

- **Makha Bucha** (around February–March)
- **Visakha Bucha** (around May–June), marking the Buddha's birth, enlightenment and passing
- **Asanha Bucha** (around July), followed immediately by **Khao Phansa**, the start of Buddhist Lent — the three-month "rains retreat" when monks stay close to their temples.

These are the country's most sacred days. Temples fill with people making merit and walking candle-lit circles around the chedi at dusk; it's a gentle, beautiful thing to witness if you're quietly respectful about it. Our [guide to Thai Buddhism](/blog/understanding-thai-buddhism) explains what's going on, and a quick read on [Thai etiquette](/blog/thai-etiquette-for-visitors) covers how to behave at a temple. They also come with one rule that trips up almost every newcomer.

## The alcohol ban that surprises everyone

On each of those four Buddhist holy days — Makha Bucha, Visakha Bucha, Asanha Bucha and Khao Phansa — the sale of alcohol is banned nationwide, from midnight to midnight. That means 7-Eleven, the supermarkets, the bars and most restaurants won't sell you a drink all day. It catches people out every single time: you wander down for a sundowner and find the beer fridge roped off or padlocked. The same ban applies on election days, usually from 6pm the evening before until the polls close.

A couple of things worth knowing. The ban is on selling, not on drinking — anything already in your fridge at Ada House is fine. Some licensed hotel bars quietly serve guests anyway, but don't count on it. And quite separately from the holidays, Thailand restricts everyday alcohol sales to roughly 11am–2pm and 5pm–midnight, which surprises people doing an afternoon shop. If a holy day is coming up and you'd like a drink with dinner, simply buy it the day before. Our [craft beer and nightlife guide](/blog/nightlife-craft-beer-chiang-mai) covers where to drink the rest of the time.

![Thai public holidays: what closes, the alcohol ban, and how to plan around it](/blog/public-holidays-thailand/visual-2.webp)

## Banks, immigration and your visa errands

This is the one that genuinely costs you time. On every public holiday the banks close, and so do all government offices — including the immigration bureau out at Promenada. If you need to file a [90-day report](/blog/ninety-day-report-chiang-mai) or sort out a [visa run or extension](/blog/visa-runs-chiang-mai), check the holiday calendar first. Turning up to a shuttered immigration office on Chakri Day is a classic rookie error, and the queues the morning after a long weekend are brutal. The same goes for anything at a bank counter — opening an account, a large transfer, signing paperwork. ATMs and banking apps keep working, but the counters don't, so plan around it; our [money and banking guide](/blog/banking-money-chiang-mai) is worth a look before you do. One more wrinkle: when a holiday falls on a weekend, the government usually grants a substitution day off on the Monday, which closes everything all over again.

## What actually stays open

The good news is that day-to-day life barely pauses. The big malls — Central, MAYA, the night bazaar — stay open right through, often with holiday events laid on. The 7-Elevens and family marts never close (just no alcohol on ban days). Restaurants, street stalls, cafés, markets, Grab, songthaews and the airport all run as normal, and pharmacies and private hospitals keep going too. In practice, unless you specifically need a bank, a government office or a beer on a holy day, you may not notice anything beyond a happier, busier city.

## Plan around the calendar, not against it

Several public holidays double as Chiang Mai's finest festivals, which is the real reason to time a visit well. Songkran in April, the Vegetarian Festival in autumn and the lantern nights of Yi Peng all land on or near these dates — our [festivals calendar](/blog/chiang-mai-festivals-calendar) maps the whole year so you can pick your moment. Keep a holiday calendar handy, run your bank and visa errands a few days early, and stock the fridge before a holy day. Do those three small things and the Thai calendar becomes a pleasure to live by rather than a puzzle to trip over.
