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Bangkok Rooftop Bars in Silom Worth a Khao San Road Detour for Craft Cocktails and City Lights
Listicle Sunday, June 21, 2026

Bangkok Rooftop Bars in Silom Worth a Khao San Road Detour for Craft Cocktails and City Lights

Silom’s best rooftop bars for craft cocktails: signature drinks, prices, dress codes, transit, and the skyline moments worth the detour from Khao San.


We slip out of Sala Daeng station into Silom’s evening glow—office towers humming, skewers hissing on a curbside grill, the sweet rot of durian lingering near Soi Convent, and Patpong’s neon warming up. We’re here for Bangkok rooftop bars in Silom for craft cocktails—the kind of spots where the skyline does the flirting and the drinks are more than just sweet-and-strong. We’ll chase sunset up a few elevators, compare house infusions, and duck the tourist traps where we can.

Data Freshness + Pricing:

  • Prices are approximate and in THB.
  • Last checked: June 2026.
  • Happy hour and promo details change frequently—confirm locally.

The Silom skyline, shaken not stirred

Bangkok is a rooftop city, and Silom/Sathorn is the money shot: Mahanakhon’s pixel tower, the Chong Nonsi skywalk, a slice of the Chao Phraya to the west. Our hit list leans into craft—house-made syrups, Thai herbs, proper ice—and places where the bar team actually talks flavors, not just photo ops. We’ll share price ranges (approx. THB), dress codes, when to go, and how to get there without melting.

Pro tip: These bars often add service charge and VAT (approx. 17%). Crowd builds at blue hour, then again post-9 pm when office crews clock out. Rainy season (May–Oct) can shut terraces; there’s usually an indoor fallback, but it’s never as magic as open air.

Bangkok rooftop bars in Silom for craft cocktails

Sky Bar at State Tower (Lebua) — Iconic view, better at the rail

  • Why we go: That wraparound bend in the river and a vertigo-inducing ledge. Yes, it’s famous (farang magnets thanks to The Hangover), but the view is still a gut punch at dusk.
  • What to drink: Go once for the Hangovertini—lychee, green tea, citrus—then switch to spirit-forward classics or citrusy highballs. Expect solid technique, glossy garnishes, and big hotel polish.
  • Prices: Cocktails approx. 600–900 THB; premium pours higher. Expect a minimum spend zone near the rail during peak times.
  • Dress code: Smart-casual; no beachwear/flip-flops. They can be strict about shorts and athletic wear.
  • Best time: Sunset into blue hour. After 10 pm thins a little.
  • Reservations: Helpful for prime slots, though the bar often takes walk-ins for standing areas.
  • Vibe: Touristy but electric. The city hums 60 floors below; phones come out; we nurse one pricey drink and soak it in.
  • Getting there: BTS Saphan Taksin, exit 2, then a 10–12 minute walk up Charoen Krung/Silom to State Tower. Tuk-tuk if the heat is savage.
  • Nearby: Sathorn Pier for the Chao Phraya Express boat, Sri Maha Mariamman (Wat Khaek) on Silom Road for a quick cultural detour.

If you’re chasing a first-timer’s big-view checklist, we also rounded up classic options here: Bangkok Rooftop Bars for First-Time Visitors Who Want a Classic City View.

Yao Rooftop Bar (Surawong/Silom) — Chinese-inspired, date-night sleek

  • Why we go: A terrace that frames Mahanakhon and a menu flirting with Chinese botanicals—think oolong, chrysanthemum, five-spice syrups—with Thai citrus and pandan sneaking in.
  • What to drink: Look for tea-infused gin sours, Shaoxing riffs on Manhattans, and lemongrass-tinged spritzes. Balanced, aromatic, and not just sugar bombs.
  • Prices: Cocktails approx. 350–500 THB; sharing snacks 200–400 THB.
  • Dress code: Smart-casual; you’ll feel underdressed in flip-flops.
  • Best time: Golden hour for photos; later for city lights and a softer breeze.
  • Reservations: Recommended on weekends for front-row terrace seating.
  • Vibe: Polished but playful. A good “impress them without emptying your wallet” pick.
  • Getting there: MRT Sam Yan or BTS Chong Nonsi, then a 10–15 minute walk along Surawong; taxis know the Marriott on Surawongse.
  • Nearby: Sam Yan Chinatown-style eats, Neilson Hays Library, and the alleys off Silom Soi 4 for late-night people-watching.

Vertigo & Moon Bar (Banyan Tree Bangkok, Sathorn) — Open-air legend with a proper bar team

  • Why we go: A true open deck—no overhead glass, just sky. Bartenders here still geek out on classics and keep the bar program tidy.
  • What to drink: The Vertigo Sunset is the crowd-pleaser (tropical, bright), but the wins are well-built martinis, Thai basil gimlets, and seasonal sours with kaffir lime.
  • Prices: Cocktails approx. 450–700 THB; tasting flights occasionally rotate.
  • Dress code: Smart-casual; closed shoes recommended for men.
  • Best time: Sunset; it can get windy—secure that garnish.
  • Reservations: Book if dining; the bar can sometimes seat walk-ins at the ledge later in the night.
  • Vibe: Upscale date night; a little old-Bangkok glam.
  • Getting there: MRT Lumphini, then a 10-minute walk or short taxi up Sathorn; land at the Banyan Tree lobby and ride the elevator express.
  • Nearby: Lumphini Park for a pre-drink stroll under the sala trees; Sathorn soi-side eateries for post-drink noodles.

Scarlett (Pullman Bangkok Hotel G, Silom Road) — Wine brain, cocktail heart, killer terrace

  • Why we go: A breezy terrace high above Silom Road with a kitchen that actually keeps up with the drinks. Not a pure rooftop, but the views slap.
  • What to drink: French-leaning classics with Thai twists—pandan old fashioneds, rosemary G&Ts, and a negroni that tastes like someone cares about the vermouth.
  • Prices: Cocktails approx. 320–450 THB; wines by the glass from 280–380 THB.
  • Dress code: Smart-casual. You’ll see everything from date-night dresses to office shirts with sleeves rolled.
  • Best time: Weeknights for space; weekends for buzz.
  • Reservations: Good idea for the terrace or large groups.
  • Vibe: Lively bistro energy—music up, laughter louder.
  • Getting there: BTS Chong Nonsi or Sala Daeng, then a 10–12 minute walk along Silom/Narathiwas.
  • Nearby: Chong Nonsi Skywalk, Mahanakhon’s LED façade for post-dinner gawking.

The Roof @38 Bar (Mode Sathorn Hotel) — Neon trim, skyline rim

  • Why we go: A compact rooftop that somehow still gives you a 360 bite of the city without the megabar chaos.
  • What to drink: Citrus-forward signatures with yuzu or calamansi, butterfly pea gin sours that actually balance, and a respectable mezcal list for the agave-curious.
  • Prices: Cocktails approx. 320–450 THB; happy-hour deals sometimes dip lower.
  • Dress code: Smart-casual; sandals are usually fine if tidy.
  • Best time: Post-sunset when the city turns to glitter.
  • Reservations: Not essential on weekdays; weekends fill the front tables.
  • Vibe: Date-night cozy meets after-work chatter. DJs pop in on Fridays.
  • Getting there: BTS Surasak, you’re basically there—Mode Sathorn is beside the station.
  • Nearby: Stroll to Sri Maha Mariamman Temple or wander Silom Soi 20’s late-night eats.

ZOOM Sky Bar & Restaurant (Anantara Sathorn) — 360 sweep without the gridlock

  • Why we go: A broad terrace with menus that care—good barware, clarified punches on rotation, and bartenders who’ll tweak specs if you ask nicely.
  • What to drink: Clarified rum punch, lemongrass-coconut highballs, and a sharp Thai tea boulevardier if it’s on.
  • Prices: Cocktails approx. 320–500 THB; tasting snacks 200–400 THB.
  • Dress code: Smart-casual.
  • Best time: Blue hour into night; good spacing for groups.
  • Reservations: Recommended if you want corner banquettes.
  • Vibe: Polished but not precious; a little sanuk when the DJ gets going.
  • Getting there: BTS Chong Nonsi, then a short taxi or motorcycle; walking is doable but sweaty.
  • Nearby: Sathorn Soi 10–12 foodie strip; Chong Nonsi’s photogenic skywalk for a quick snap.

HI-SO Rooftop Bar (SO/ BANGKOK, Lumphini) — Park views, fashion crowd

  • Why we go: You get the green spread of Lumphini Park by day and mirror-ball city by night, with a drinks list that leans herbaceous.
  • What to drink: Galangal gimlets, makrut-lime collins, and seasonal spritzes that tend to be lighter ABV—nice for a long night.
  • Prices: Cocktails approx. 300–450 THB; bottles and carafes for groups.
  • Dress code: Fashion-forward smart-casual.
  • Best time: Sunset, obviously. Friday theme nights swing a scene.
  • Reservations: Handy for park-facing sofas.
  • Vibe: Chic but friendly; you’ll hear Thai, English, and a half-dozen more on any night.
  • Getting there: MRT Lumphini is across the road; breeze through the lobby and up.
  • Nearby: Evening joggers in Lumphini, night market snacks around Sala Daeng after.

King Power Mahanakhon — Sky-high bragging rights, solid builds

  • Why we go: The pixelated tower is Silom/Sathorn’s calling card; the rooftop bar serves the ultimate city-lights flex.
  • What to drink: Spritzes and highballs rule at the very top; one level down you’ll find more crafted builds—think pandan-washed rum or Thai tea riffs—depending on season.
  • Prices: Cocktails approx. 400–650 THB; observation deck tickets extra if you’re doing the glass tray.
  • Dress code: Casual-smart; nothing beachy.
  • Best time: Sunset sells out; later entries get cooler breezes and fewer selfie sticks.
  • Reservations: Check availability online for timed entries; bar seating is first-come.
  • Vibe: Spectacle with enough substance to justify one round.
  • Getting there: BTS Chong Nonsi, direct skybridge into the building.
  • Nearby: Chong Nonsi canal (khlong) paths and late-night soy milk stalls around Narathiwas.

Bonus: A riverside detour when Silom is slammed

If Silom is heaving, we sometimes taxi 10–15 minutes to the river for breezier rooftops with calmer crowds—and cheaper rounds. If that’s your mood, these lists keep the tabs friendly: Bangkok Rooftop Bars with the Best Cheap Drink Deals Worth Leaving Khao San Road For and Best Bangkok Rooftop Bars with Cheap Cocktails Worth the Trip from Khao San Road.

How we pick a craft-first rooftop in Silom

  • House-made ingredients: If they’re making their own syrups, cordials, or tea infusions (think chrysanthemum, pandan, lemongrass), we’re listening.
  • Ice and balance: Big, clear cubes or proper crushed for smashes; sours that hit citrus-sweet in the middle, not just syrup on syrup.
  • Menu storytelling: Drinks that nod to the neighborhood—Sri Maha Mariamman spices, Lumphini greenery, Chinatown teas—usually mean a bar team that cares.
  • Bartender’s choice: Ask for a build around makrut lime, galangal, or Thai cacao nibs; good bars love a prompt.

If you’re going big on dress codes and planning—blazers, heels, anniversary energy—scope this handy roundup: Bangkok Rooftop Bars with Dress Codes and Reservations Worth Planning For.

Practicalities: Prices, dress, and dodging headaches

  • Money: Expect cocktails around 300–700 THB in Silom’s rooftops, plus approx. 17% service/VAT. Happy hours can dip to 200–350 THB, but they’re slippery—confirm on the day.
  • Weather: Bring a light layer. Wind whips at altitude; rainy season hits hard and fast. Staff will shuffle you inside if lightning plays games over the river.
  • Shoes and shorts: Smart-casual gets you almost anywhere. Clean sneakers usually fly; flip-flops and beachwear don’t. Some spots frown at athletic shorts for men.
  • Photos: Tripods and big rigs catch side-eye. Some venues restrict rail lingering or have minimums for prime photo zones.
  • Scams and taxis: Around State Tower and Patpong, touts push “ping pong” shows and fixed-fare tuk-tuks. Smile, “mai ao khrap/ka” (no thanks), and use Grab or metered taxis.

Getting around Silom without melting

  • BTS/MRT: Sala Daeng (BTS), Chong Nonsi (BTS), Surasak (BTS), and Lumphini (MRT) are your anchor points.
  • Tuk-tuk hops: Great for 1–2 km hops between bars—agree on approx. 60–120 THB before you jump in.
  • River access: From Khao San, ride the Chao Phraya Express boat to Sathorn Pier, then BTS to Sala Daeng/Chong Nonsi. It’s breezier than sitting in traffic.
  • Walk smart: Use skywalks where you can; Silom Road crossings get hairy after dark.

Stringing it together: Our favorite Silom crawl

  • Start at Yao for oolong sours at sunset.
  • Zip to The Roof @38 Bar for a citrusy second round and that neon skyline.
  • Drift to Scarlett for a snack-heavy pit stop and a spirit-forward third—maybe a pandan old fashioned.
  • If the night still has legs, ascend Mahanakhon for the lights, or swing to Vertigo for a final martini under the open sky.

If dinner-with-a-view is the plan rather than a full crawl, cherry-pick from this: Bangkok Rooftop Bars for Sunset Dinner, Not Just Drinks.

Where we crash after a Silom night out

We keep it simple: if we’re bar-hopping, we bed down near BTS lines (Sala Daeng to Surasak) or along the river by Saphan Taksin for easy boat/BTS combos the next day. On Khao San nights, we just tuk-tuk home across the river—sanuk ride if the breeze is up.

Final sips

Silom’s rooftops aren’t just about the selfie; the best of them pour with intent. We’ll trade one expensive round at an icon for two thoughtful builds at a craft-forward terrace any night—and we’ll still chase that blue-hour gasp when the city clicks its lights on. Text us when you hit the skywalk; we’ll meet you by the escalator with a plan and a thirst.

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