# Running in Chiang Mai: where, when and how to beat the heat

> A runner-to-runner guide to Chiang Mai: dawn routes, lake and campus loops, seasons and smoke, races, Hash House Harriers and soi-dog etiquette.

Chiang Mai doesn't look like a runner's city at first glance. The pavements are an obstacle course, the traffic is spirited, and for a good chunk of the year the afternoon heat is frankly hostile. And yet some of our happiest kilometres have been run here — because once you learn the city's rhythm, it quietly hands you misty lake loops, shaded campus paths and a mountain climb most cities would kill for. Here's the runner-to-runner version.

## First light is everything

The single most useful thing we can tell you: run at dawn. Chiang Mai sits close enough to the equator that **first light arrives at roughly 6am all year round** — Thailand doesn't do daylight saving — and that first hour is a different city. The air is at its coolest, the dust hasn't been stirred up, the soi dogs are still dozy, and the traffic that makes daytime road running miserable simply hasn't woken up yet. By 9am, even in the cool season, sun and humidity turn an easy run into a grind. Evening running is possible, but you'll be sharing the roads with rush hour. Morning people win here.

## The lake and the canal path

Ask any local runner for their favourite route and you'll hear the same name: Huay Tung Tao. The reservoir at the foot of the mountains, roughly 12 km north of the Old City, has a flat perimeter road of **roughly 3.5 km per lap** — traffic-free, water on one side, forested hills on the other. Entry is roughly 50 baht for foreigners, and the lakeside bamboo huts sell cold coconuts for afterwards; we've written a full guide to [Huay Tung Tao](/blog/huay-tung-tao-lake). Getting there under your own steam is half the route: the canal road has a paved cycle track running north out of town alongside the irrigation canal, flat and uninterrupted for kilometre after kilometre, and local runners use it as their long-run artery.

![Runners on a flat lakeside path at dawn, mist lifting off the water and forested hills behind](/blog/running-chiang-mai/visual.webp)

## Campus loops, the moat and a proper track

Closer in, Chiang Mai University is a gift to runners. The Ang Kaew reservoir on campus has a small, scenic loop under big trees, and the surrounding university roads and the arboretum next door add up to several shaded, mostly traffic-free kilometres. The Old City moat makes an atmospheric circuit of roughly 6 km past brick bastions and ancient gates — lovely at 6am, genuinely unpleasant once traffic builds, so treat it strictly as a dawn route. For structured sessions, the 700th Anniversary Stadium sports complex out towards Mae Rim has flat, well-lit roads and paths that are free to run and popular with locals in the evenings; there's a proper athletics track in the main stadium too, though access depends on what's on that day, so ask at the gate. And for the brave: the Doi Suthep road climbs roughly 11 km and roughly 700 m of vertical to the temple. Start at first light, keep to the shoulder, and know that a songthaew can carry you back down with your dignity intact.

## An honest word about seasons

Cool season, November to February, is glorious — dawn can be cool enough for arm warmers, the skies are clear, and it's no accident that the racing calendar crams itself into these months. Burning season, roughly February to April, is the catch: agricultural smoke can push air pollution to genuinely unhealthy levels, and breathing hard in bad air is exactly what you don't want. Make checking the AQI part of your pre-run routine and take it indoors without guilt when the number is ugly — our [burning season guide](/blog/burning-season-chiang-mai) covers how the smoke works and how locals cope. The rainy season, roughly June to October, is far better than it sounds: showers are dramatic but short, they rarely last long enough to cancel a run, and the washed air afterwards is some of the best of the year. Just mind the slick tiles.

![A runner pausing under an old brick gate as a short monsoon shower passes, clouds parting over the mountain](/blog/running-chiang-mai/visual-2.webp)

## Races and running company

Chiang Mai's big one is the Chiang Mai Marathon, held each December with the start and finish at Tha Phae Gate — the full marathon sets off at roughly 3am to beat the sun, which tells you everything about running here. Half marathon, 10 km and shorter distances run the same morning. The surrounding mountains also host a lively trail-racing scene through the cool months, including an event in the UTMB world series, with dates that shift year to year, so check the calendars once you land. For company with a sense of humour, the Hash House Harriers have been running (and drinking) in Chiang Mai since the early 1980s, with several groups meeting weekly — self-described as a drinking club with a running problem, and genuinely welcoming to newcomers of any pace.

## Dogs, sweat and the treadmill fallback

Soi dogs deserve one honest paragraph. Most street dogs ignore runners entirely; a few consider chasing you the highlight of their week. The etiquette that works: slow to a walk as you pass a pack, don't make eye contact, give them the width of the road, and if one commits, stop and face it — miming picking up a stone is understood by every dog in Thailand. Our [guide to Chiang Mai's animals](/blog/dangerous-animals-chiang-mai) has the fuller picture, including what to do in the rare event of a bite. On hydration: you'll sweat far more here than at home, so make electrolytes routine — every 7-Eleven sells them, and there's never one far away. And when heat or smoke wins, lose gracefully: plenty of [gyms around town](/blog/gyms-fitness-chiang-mai) sell cheap day passes for a treadmill session. The mountain will still be there at dawn tomorrow.
