
The Bottom Line
7.5 / 10ASAI Bangkok Chinatown gets the most important thing right: location. It sits inside the I’m Chinatown department store on Yaowarat Road, a useful base for exploring old Bangkok at a fair price. Rooms are clean, MRT Wat Mangkon is a short walk, and the neighbourhood does the rest. The parking policy is oddly penalising for guests who drive, and some lobby noise does carry into the rooms. Worth booking if you are here to explore Chinatown. Not the right call if you want a pool or a resort stay.
If you are looking for a boutique hotel in Bangkok’s Chinatown with real character and easy MRT access, ASAI is worth a look. I stayed one night in a non-road-facing room in 2026. Here is what I found about the rooms, the location, the value, and the parking policy that nobody seems to mention.
Overall Rating
Price Paid
฿2,000–3,000
Property Type
Boutique Hotel
Room Type
Standard, 7th floor
Visit Date
2026
Best For
Getting to ASAI Bangkok Chinatown: First Impressions
ASAI Bangkok Chinatown is inside the I’m Chinatown department store on Yaowarat Road, with the hotel lobby on the 4th floor. Arriving by car the first time takes a moment. You pull into a department store, find the dedicated hotel parking, and take a separate lift to check in. Worth knowing before you arrive.
The parking is narrow. If you are in anything larger than a standard sedan, take note. There is a dedicated lift from the parking area straight to the hotel floors, which helps. The pricing is less good: the first hour is free, then guests get a 50% discount after that. Paying for parking at your own hotel is odd, and this is not flagged clearly at check-in.
I arrived behind a large group and was asked to wait. Staff handled it well and the delay was short. The lobby has a gift area with Pakaoma Thai textiles alongside packaged snacks and food. Prices are tourist rates, but the textile selection is worth a look if you are after locally made souvenirs.


The Room
I stayed on the 7th floor in a non-road-facing room, which is the right call on Yaowarat. The street is busy and loud, particularly on evenings and weekends when the night market picks up. Facing away from the road makes a real difference.
The room is clean and the design has a nod to the Chinatown surroundings without going overboard. The mosaic tile around the amenity nook is well done. Layout is efficient. There is enough space for what you need, but this is not a large or particularly airy room.
The bathroom is the best part of the room. Walk-in glass shower, vessel sink, blue mosaic tile backsplash: all well done and better than you would expect at this price. Fixtures are solid, everything works, and the ASAI-branded toiletries are a good finishing detail.
Soundproofing from the street is fine. I had no issues with outside noise or other guests. The one thing worth knowing is that ambient sound from the main lobby does carry up into the rooms. It did not affect sleep, but it is there.




Dining
I did not eat at the hotel. The lobby snacks and grab-and-go items are priced for convenience, and when you are in Chinatown, there is no reason for that. One look at the grab-and-go board settled it.
The bar has a happy hour buy-one-get-one deal on cocktails, wine, beer, and liqueurs. I can see it working for a drink before heading out to Yaowarat Road, but I did not use it.
Chinatown is the dining draw, full stop. Roasted duck, dim sum, fresh seafood, Thai-Chinese street food: it is all within a short walk of the hotel entrance. The hotel cannot compete with that and does not try to.

Amenities
ASAI has a bar, a games room with a pool table, a grab-and-go area, and a shop. I did not use any of them. That is not a comment on quality. When the hotel sits in Chinatown, you will spend your time outside.
The games room works for a slow morning or a late night in. The shop has Pakaoma textiles, Tlejourn recycled flip-flops, Thai spice kits, and Bangkok books, more interesting than most hotel shops. No pool, gym, or spa. This is not that kind of hotel. Being inside a department store does mean air-conditioned mall access when you need a break from the heat.



Location and Getting Around
ASAI is in Yaowarat, Bangkok’s historical Chinese quarter. MRT Wat Mangkon is about a five-minute walk, which puts the Blue Line at your disposal. Hua Lamphong, Silom, and Sukhumvit are all easy from here.
On foot from the hotel you have Yaowarat Road’s street food, Wat Traimit (the Temple of the Golden Buddha), and the heritage area of Talat Noi. This is a part of Bangkok that rewards walking, and the location puts you right in it.
Traffic in the area gets heavy, especially on weekends. If you are driving in or out, leave extra time. For shorter trips across the river or into the centre, Grab is reliable. Anything further afield, the MRT.
Looking at other parts of Bangkok? Our Bangkok hotels guide covers the main areas and neighbourhoods.
What Works and What to Keep in Mind
What Works
- Location is the main draw: Yaowarat street food, temples, and neighbourhood character right outside the door
- MRT Wat Mangkon station a short walk away, making the rest of Bangkok easy to reach
- Rooms are clean, well-maintained, and adequately soundproofed from street noise
- Bathroom quality above average for the price bracket
- Fair value at 2,000–3,000 THB per night with department store access included
Keep in Mind
- Parking is not complimentary: first hour free, 50% discount after that
- Lobby noise carries into rooms to some degree
- Non-road-facing rooms have an underwhelming view
- Lobby food and grab-and-go priced at tourist convenience rates. Eat outside instead
- No pool, gym, or resort-style facilities
ASAI Bangkok Chinatown Review: Final Verdict
Good
ASAI Bangkok Chinatown works because it does not try to be more than it is. Clean rooms, fair price, one of Bangkok’s most interesting neighbourhoods on the doorstep. The MRT is a short walk and Yaowarat will keep you busy for days. The parking policy is an unnecessary headache, and the lobby noise is worth knowing about if you are a light sleeper. Book this if you want a base in historical Bangkok without the Sukhumvit price tag.
- Prime Yaowarat location with immediate street food access
- MRT Wat Mangkon a short walk away
- Above-average bathroom quality for the price bracket
- Good value at 2,000–3,000 THB per night
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Frequently Asked Questions
Is ASAI Bangkok Chinatown worth it?
Yes, if you are here to explore Chinatown and old Bangkok. At 2,000–3,000 THB a night, the value is good for the location. Rooms are clean, MRT Wat Mangkon is nearby, and Yaowarat’s street food is right outside the door. Skip it if you want a pool or spa.
What is ASAI Bangkok Chinatown like?
ASAI Bangkok Chinatown is a boutique hotel inside the I’m Chinatown department store on Yaowarat Road. The lobby is on the 4th floor and has a games room, bar, grab-and-go, and a shop with Pakaoma Thai textiles. Rooms are on higher floors, clean and well-laid-out, with bathrooms that punch above the price. The feel is urban and contemporary with some Chinatown character worked in.
How do you get to ASAI Bangkok Chinatown?
The easiest option is MRT to Wat Mangkon, a short walk from the hotel. By car, there is dedicated guest parking inside I’m Chinatown with a direct lift to the hotel floors. Spaces are narrow. Parking is not free: the first hour is included, then a 50% discount applies. Grab works well for trips across the city.
Is ASAI Bangkok Chinatown good for families?
It works for families who want a central base for sightseeing in Bangkok. There is no pool or kids’ club, so it suits families with older children who are happy exploring the area on foot. The department store access is useful. If you have young children and need resort facilities, look elsewhere.
What is the parking situation at ASAI Bangkok Chinatown?
The hotel has dedicated parking inside I’m Chinatown with a direct lift to the hotel floors. Spaces are narrow: standard sedans are fine but larger vehicles will find it tight. The first hour is free, then a 50% discount applies. It is an odd policy for a hotel and worth knowing before you drive in.
Which room should I book at ASAI Bangkok Chinatown?
Request a non-road-facing room. Yaowarat gets busy and loud, especially on evenings and weekends, and street-facing rooms take the brunt of it. The view from the quieter side is nothing special, but you will sleep better.

