# Thai spirit houses: the little shrines you'll see everywhere

> What Thai spirit houses (san phra phum) are, the offerings inside, the red Fanta mystery, and how to be respectful around them in Chiang Mai.

Once you start noticing them, you can't stop. Outside almost every home, café and hotel in Chiang Mai stands a small, ornate shrine on a pedestal — fresh garlands draped over it, incense curling up, and very often a bottle of bright red Fanta. These are **spirit houses**, and they're one of the most charming windows into everyday Thai belief you'll find.

## What a spirit house actually is

The idea is gentle and very human. When people build on a piece of land, they believe they're sharing it with a **guardian spirit** who was there first. Rather than displace that spirit — and risk it moving into the building, where it might cause mischief or misfortune — they give it a home of its own. The shrine is, quite literally, a house for the spirit, so everyone lives in good order side by side.

This sits inside a beautiful blend of beliefs. Thailand is Buddhist, but daily life also carries a deep current of **animism** (the sense that places and natural things have spirits) and **Brahmanism**, the old priestly strand of Hinduism that shaped the early kingdoms here. The spirit house tradition is actually older than Buddhism in Thailand, woven through the [Lanna kingdom's long history](/blog/lanna-kingdom-history) in the North. None of it feels contradictory to Thai people — it all simply belongs together.

![Thai spirit houses: the little shrines you'll see everywhere](/blog/thai-spirit-houses/visual.webp)

## The two kinds you'll see

Look closely and you'll spot two common types. The smaller one, on a **single pillar**, is the *san phra phum* — the house of the land's guardian deity. Inside you'll often see a little figure holding a sword or staff: Phra Phum himself, the formal protector of the plot.

The larger, house-shaped shrine that stands on several legs (sometimes with a tiny ladder for the spirits to climb) is the *san jao thi*. This one welcomes ancestral and household spirits — Thais affectionately call it the "grandpa-grandma" shrine. One is celestial and formal; the other is homely and familial. Big hotels and old family homes often keep both.

## Offerings, and the red Fanta mystery

The little figurines, animals and fresh flowers aren't decoration — they're **offerings**, renewed daily as a small act of care. You'll see garlands of jasmine and marigold, lit **incense and candles**, plates of rice or fruit, and glasses of sweet drinks. Keeping the spirits content and well-fed is thought to keep the household lucky and at peace.

And then there's the **red Fanta**. The popular explanation is lovely: long ago, offerings to spirits sometimes included blood, a symbol of life and vitality. As tastes (and convenience stores) changed, a bottle of bright strawberry-red soda became a sweet, bloodless stand-in — the colour red being deeply **auspicious** in Thai culture. No one needs to slaughter anything; the spirits get something they're believed to love, and everyone's happy. It's folk belief at its most practical and warm.

## Where they're placed

Position matters enormously. A spirit house can't just go anywhere — the spot is chosen carefully, often with a **monk or a Brahmin priest** consulted for an auspicious date, direction and placement. The shrine should sit in sunlight, never in the building's **shadow** (no one wants to live in the dark), and it's raised on a pedestal, usually above eye level. You'll notice they're often tucked into a sunny corner of a courtyard, facing away from doors and bathrooms.

## How to be a respectful guest

This is where you come in, and the rule is simple: **enjoy them, but don't disturb them.** Don't touch, move or "borrow" the offerings, however photogenic that Fanta looks. Don't sit, lean or climb on the platform. If you can, step around a shrine rather than through the space directly in front of it, and lower your voice nearby — the same easy courtesy you'd bring to any sacred place. (It's all of a piece with the broader [etiquette that smooths daily life here](/blog/thai-etiquette-for-visitors).)

You don't need to share the belief to honour it, and a little curiosity goes a long way. If these everyday spirits intrigue you, the same animist threads run through Chiang Mai's [old-city temples](/blog/old-city-temples-chiang-mai), its [traditional healing customs](/blog/traditional-medicine-chiang-mai), and the quiet wisdom you can hear first-hand at a [monk chat](/blog/meditation-monk-chat-chiang-mai).

So next time you pass a spirit house — and in Chiang Mai, that'll be within the next few minutes — pause a second. There's a whole worldview in that small, bright shrine, and now you're in on it.

Warmly,
the Ada House team
