# Sukhothai from Chiang Mai: the dawn of happiness

> An overnight trip to Sukhothai from Chiang Mai: cycling among the ruined temples of Thailand's first kingdom, a UNESCO site at dawn.

Some places ask you to slow down before they give anything up. **Sukhothai** is one of them — a field of ruined temples five hours south of here, where Thailand's first kingdom rose in the 13th century. The name means *dawn of happiness*, and on a still morning, with mist on the lotus ponds, you'll understand exactly why. This is a pilgrimage worth making.

## Why Sukhothai matters

Long before Chiang Mai's **Lanna kingdom** found its feet, Sukhothai was the capital of the first Thai kingdom, founded in 1238. It's where the Thai alphabet was invented and where a recognisably Thai art and architecture first took shape. Today the **Sukhothai Historical Park** — a UNESCO World Heritage Site — protects nearly 200 monuments across a green, walled landscape: brick *chedis*, columned halls open to the sky, and **Buddha images** that have weathered seven centuries with extraordinary grace. The most famous of them sit serene among the brickwork, while others *walk* — a flowing, almost weightless pose that Sukhothai's sculptors made their own. If you've enjoyed digging into [Lanna kingdom history](/blog/lanna-kingdom-history), this is the chapter that comes before it.

![Sukhothai from Chiang Mai: the dawn of happiness](/blog/sukhothai-from-chiang-mai/visual.webp)

## Cycling among the ruins

Here's the secret to a good visit: **hire a bicycle**. The park is large and beautifully flat, the temples linked by shaded paths and reflecting pools, and a bike costs only a few baht for the whole day from the shops by the central gate. Go at **dawn or dusk**, when the light turns the brick gold and the crowds thin to almost nothing, and pedal slowly from one ruin to the next. It's the single best way to feel the place — quiet, unhurried, just you and the old Buddhas. If you already love [cycling around Chiang Mai](/blog/cycling-chiang-mai), you'll feel right at home; if not, this gentle, traffic-free circuit is the loveliest place to start.

## Old town, new town

A small but important detail: there are two Sukhothais. **New Sukhothai** is the modern town with the bus terminal and most cheap rooms, about 12km from the ruins. **Old Sukhothai**, right by the historical park, is where you want to stay — a cluster of guesthouses and cafés within cycling distance of the gates, so you can be among the temples before breakfast and back after sunset. Book a night here and the whole trip changes character.

## The quieter sister: Si Satchanalai

If you have a second morning, point your wheels — or a *songthaew* — toward **Si Satchanalai**, about an hour north. Part of the same UNESCO listing, it's a quieter, leafier sister site: ruined temples among trees and rice fields, often with barely another visitor in sight. Many travellers come away preferring it to Sukhothai itself for the sheer sense of having walked into a forgotten world.

There's a seasonal magic here too. Sukhothai is widely held to be the birthplace of **Loy Krathong**, the festival of floating candles that lights up Thai waterways each November. The park stages one of the country's most beautiful celebrations among its ponds and ruins — a perfect companion to Chiang Mai's own [Yi Peng lantern festival](/blog/yi-peng-lantern-festival) if your timing lines up.

## Getting there, and when to go

Be honest with yourself about the distance: Sukhothai is roughly **320km and 5–6 hours** south. Frequent **buses and minivans** leave from [Chiang Mai's Arcade terminal](/blog/bus-station-chiang-mai) several times a day, or you can take a short flight or drive. Whichever you choose, this is an **overnight (two days)**, not a day trip — cram it into one and you'll spend more time on the road than among the ruins. It slots beautifully into [a week in Chiang Mai](/blog/one-week-in-chiang-mai). Aim for the cool, dry months of **November to February**, when mornings are crisp and the dawn light does its best work; we've gathered the full seasonal picture in [when to visit Chiang Mai](/blog/when-to-visit-chiang-mai).

Pack light, set an early alarm, and let Sukhothai unfold at the pace it deserves. Safe travels — and tell us which Buddha you couldn't stop looking at.

The Ada House team
