# The Vegetarian Festival in Chiang Mai: nine days of going jay

> The Vegetarian Festival (Tesagan Gin Je) in Chiang Mai — what it is, when it falls, and where to eat the best vegan food of the year.

For a few days each autumn, you'll notice the city change colour. Little **yellow flags** with a red character sprout from food stalls and shopfronts, kitchens drop the garlic, and meat quietly disappears from menu after menu. This is **Tesagan Gin Je**, the Vegetarian Festival — nine days when a good slice of Chiang Mai goes vegan together.

## What it is, and when it happens

Despite the English name, "vegetarian" undersells it. The festival is a **nine-day period of purification and merit-making** rooted in **Chinese-Taoist tradition**, honouring the **Nine Emperor Gods**. Thai-Chinese communities have kept it for generations, and it has spread well beyond them — these days plenty of Chiang Mai locals with no Chinese ancestry join in, if only for the food.

The timing follows the lunar calendar, falling over the **ninth Chinese lunar month** — in practice, **late September or early October**. Like [Yi Peng](/blog/yi-peng-lantern-festival) and the city's other moveable feasts, the exact dates shift each year, so it's worth checking ahead; our wider [festivals calendar](/blog/chiang-mai-festivals-calendar) is a good place to start when you're planning a trip around them.

![The Vegetarian Festival in Chiang Mai: nine days of going jay](/blog/vegetarian-festival-chiang-mai/visual.webp)

## The practice behind the plate

To "**gin je**" (กินเจ) is to eat *jay* — and *jay* is stricter than ordinary vegetarian. Devotees give up all meat, seafood, egg and dairy, which makes the diet fully **vegan**. They also avoid the **pungent vegetables** — garlic, onion, chives, leeks — believed to inflame the passions and cloud the mind. Alcohol goes too, along with other indulgences, for the duration.

The deeper point is **purification**. Many observers dress head to toe in **white** as a sign of inner cleanliness, keep their thoughts and language gentle, and treat the nine days as a reset for body and spirit. If you've ever sat in on a [monk chat](/blog/meditation-monk-chat-chiang-mai) or looked into [Thai Buddhism](/blog/understanding-thai-buddhism), the logic will feel familiar: what you put in your body and your mind are part of the same practice.

## Where it centres in Chiang Mai

The heart of it all is the city's **Chinatown**, around [Warorot Market](/blog/warorot-market-chiang-mai) — locals call it Kad Luang — and the **Chinese shrines** tucked into the lanes nearby. During the festival the old market dresses itself in yellow, the temples hold ceremonies and offerings, and temporary stalls spill out along the streets, each one flying that **red "เจ" (jay) flag** to show its food meets the rules.

It's a gentler affair than the famous **Phuket** version, where devotees pierce their cheeks and walk on coals. Here the spectacle is quieter — incense smoke, chanting, a slow procession, tables of food laid out as offerings. Come in the morning when the shrines are busiest and the cooking is fresh, wander the riverside lanes, and let the crowds carry you.

## The best week of the year to eat vegan

Here's the happy secret: Chiang Mai is already [one of Asia's easiest cities to eat plant-based](/blog/vegetarian-chiang-mai), and the festival turns that up to eleven. For nine days, stalls and restaurants that never normally cook *jay* switch their whole menu over, and dishes appear that you simply won't find the rest of the year.

Look for the yellow flags and graze with abandon: mock-meat *khao soi* and curries built on tofu and mushroom, point-and-pick rice buffets for a handful of baht, deep-fried taro and pumpkin, fresh soy milk, sticky black-rice puddings. Even if you usually eat meat, it's a glorious excuse to discover how good vegan **Northern Thai food** can be — and a reminder that [Lanna cooking](/blog/northern-thai-food) has always leaned on its vegetables and herbs.

A small kindness goes a long way: if you're eating at a *jay* stall, keep it strictly plant-based on your plate — no fish sauce on the side, no sneaking your own snacks — out of respect for the people fasting around you. A smile and a quiet "**gin je**" will tell a vendor exactly what you're after.

Watch for the first yellow flags, follow them down to the river, and eat well. We'll see you there.

— The Ada House team
