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Best Bars and Nightlife on Sukhumvit by BTS Stop: Nana, Asok, Phrom Phong, Ekkamai, and Thonglor
Listicle Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Best Bars and Nightlife on Sukhumvit by BTS Stop: Nana, Asok, Phrom Phong, Ekkamai, and Thonglor

Ride the BTS to the best bars and clubs on Sukhumvit. Station-by-station guide to Nana, Asok, Phrom Phong, Thonglor, Ekkamai—plus tips, prices, and late-night eats.


We step off at BTS Nana and the night hits us in layers: neon glare bouncing off tuk-tuk chrome, the thump of bass from Soi 11, the sweet rot of durian mingling with grilled moo ping smoke. This is Sukhumvit nightlife by BTS stop—our favorite way to map a night out that actually makes sense, station by station, no taxi roulette required.

Data Freshness + Pricing:

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

If you want a broader neighborhood overview, we’ve also broken down Sukhumvit by area here: Best Bars and Nightlife on Sukhumvit by Area: Nana, Asok, Phrom Phong, Ekkamai & Thonglor. But tonight, we’re riding the skytrain.

How to use this Sukhumvit nightlife by BTS stop guide

We’ll hop from west to east on the BTS Sukhumvit Line, focusing on the key nightlife stations: Nana, Asok, Phrom Phong, Thong Lo (Thonglor), Ekkamai, Lazy Day The Resort, and one off coffee. For each stop we’ll break down vibe, where to drink and dance, late-night food, and practical tips—so you can match your mood with the right platform and exit.

  • Typical drink prices: local bars pour large beers for approx. 120–180 THB; Thonglor/Ekkamai cocktails run approx. 280–420 THB; rooftops often 350–550 THB.
  • Club entry: approx. 200–500 THB, usually with one drink.
  • Street food suppers: a bowl of boat noodles or bamee moo daeng is often 40–80 THB.
  • BTS fares: approx. 17–59 THB per ride depending on distance.

For even more inspiration on where to party in Bangkok beyond Sukhumvit, check our citywide primer: Bangkok Party Street: Complete Guide to the City's Best Nightlife.

Sukhumvit nightlife by BTS stop: where to hop off and why

Nana (BTS Nana, E3)

Nana is the first stop where the night truly shifts gears. Step out and the air is thick with sanuk—fun, slightly chaotic, and very Bangkok.

  • Vibe: Party-heavy, high-energy, backpackers and long-term expats swirling together. It’s louder than your hotel AC and twice as sticky.
  • Where to drink: Soi 11 is the main artery—start around the mid-soi stretch where bars cluster, then drift toward small alleys for craft beer dens and late-night DJ rooms. Soi 4 is its own beast: neon go-go bars stacked into Nana Plaza and open-front pubs spilling onto the pavement. Fancy views? Soi 11 does rooftops with skyline drama without the five-star dress codes.
  • Music and clubs: Expect commercial EDM, hip-hop, and open-format DJs. Most dance floors here stay friendly to farang tastes—nothing too underground.
  • Late-night eats: Khao pad, pad kra pao, and moo ping skewers line Sukhumvit Road after midnight; Soi 11 has decent post-club pad thai (approx. 80–120 THB) and the odd 24-hour joint.
  • Practical: From Nana station, Soi 11 is about a 5–8-minute walk from Exit 3. Keep small bills handy; moto-taxis for short hops run approx. 20–60 THB. Watch your drink, keep your phone zipped, and be clear about cover charges before you climb any stairs.

Who should get off here: If you want bar hopping on one street, quick wins, and zero pretense. Nana is your warm-up or your entire night, depending on your stamina.

Asok (BTS Asok, E4 / MRT Sukhumvit)

Asok is where the lines cross and the scenes collide. The BTS meets the MRT, Terminal 21 glows like a spaceship, and Soi Cowboy is neon-signed and impossible to ignore.

  • Vibe: Convenient, central, and unapologetically bright. A candy-colored mix of office crowds, tourists, and party hunters.
  • Where to drink: Treat Asok as your pre-game hub—easy meet-ups under the BTS skywalks, then slide into pubs along Sukhumvit Soi 23 or the corners bracketing Soi Cowboy for buckets of beer (approx. 120–180 THB a bottle during happy hour). There are cocktail rooms tucked just far enough from the glare if you want a calmer pour.
  • Nightlife landmarks: Soi Cowboy is the red-light strip—if you’re curious, go with a friend, keep it respectful, and know that some bars add “ladies drinks” and service fees. Plenty of regular pubs sit just off the soi if the neon is too intense.
  • Late-night eats: Terminal 21’s food court closes earlier, but street carts on Sukhumvit sling bamee and gai yang till late (approx. 50–100 THB). On rainy nights, look for 7-Eleven toasties—your emergency backup for 30–40 THB.
  • Practical: Asok’s your best interchange if you’re staying anywhere on the MRT Blue Line. It’s also where we often book accommodation nearby—handy to stumble onto the first train home in the morning without playing taxi tag.

Who should get off here: If you value convenience and variety—pre-drinks, people-watching, and a hop to either Nana or Phrom Phong. Also solid for first-timers who want big-night energy with easy exits.

Phrom Phong (BTS Phrom Phong, E5)

Phrom Phong is where the drinks get a touch more polished and the playlists cool down. The EmQuartier and Emporium malls loom large; the side sois hum with cocktail craft and izakaya chatter.

  • Vibe: Upscale without being icy. Think date-night bars, Japanese gastropubs, and neighborhood haunts that still know your name by midnight.
  • Where to drink: Start near EmQuartier and wander Sukhumvit Soi 24 and Soi 22. You’ll find casual wine bars, craft beer spots, and cocktail lounges with attentive bartenders who stir before you ask. Prices are a nudge higher—cocktails approx. 320–450 THB—but you’re paying for finesse and quieter corners.
  • Rooftop options: Several hotels around Soi 24 and Soi 26 host rooftops with mellow beats and skyline views—good for golden-hour pre-drinks before you push deeper down the line. For more specific sky-high picks around Sukhumvit, this roundup helps: Best Rooftop Bars in Sukhumvit Worth the Taxi from Khao San Road Road.
  • Late-night eats: Soi 22 is your friend after midnight—congee, moo ping, and peppery noodle soups (approx. 50–90 THB). If we’re flagging, a bowl of tom saep wakes us up better than any espresso.
  • Practical: From the station, Soi 24 and Soi 22 are easy flat walks. If you’re in nicer shoes, skip the puddles—Bangkok’s sudden storms turn curb cuts into mini khlongs.

Who should get off here: If you like measured nights with good cocktails, soft lighting, and the option to level up or down in minutes.

Thong Lo (BTS Thong Lo, E6)

Thonglor is the apex predator of Sukhumvit nightlife: sleek, trend-forward, and expensive enough to thin the herd by the second round. But when it’s good, it’s unbelievable.

  • Vibe: Upscale, design-obsessed, and wonderfully extra. You’ll drink in sculpted rooms, share pavements with impossibly groomed dogs, and hear three languages at any given corner.
  • Where to drink and dance: Sukhumvit Soi 55 is the spine; turn into Soi 10 and nearby lanes for high-gloss cocktail bars, speakeasy-style rooms, and late-night clubs that go heavy on hip-hop and house. Expect crowds after 11 pm, velvet ropes on weekends, and cover around 300–500 THB at the bigger rooms.
  • Live music: Jazz bars and indie stages pop up on the smaller sois—listen for horn lines drifting up staircases.
  • Late-night eats: Sukhumvit Soi 38 still hosts a cluster of street vendors post-midnight—boat noodles, mango sticky rice, and rad na (approx. 60–120 THB). Many ramen counters along Soi 55 slurp till late too.
  • Practical: From the station it’s a quick stroll to Soi 55. If the clubs run past the BTS schedule, Grab or a metered taxi back to central Sukhumvit should be approx. 120–220 THB depending on distance and traffic.

Who should get off here: If you want your night curated—serious cocktails, dressed-up dance floors, and the city’s most polished crowds.

Ekkamai (BTS Ekkamai, E7)

Ekkamai is Thonglor’s younger sibling who raids the same closet but scuffs the shoes for fun. It’s where we go for live bands, beer gardens, and club nights that feel less staged.

  • Vibe: Trendy but relaxed; local and expat scenes meet in the middle. Lots of townhouse venues and former warehouses with bass-heavy rooms.
  • Where to drink and dance: Sukhumvit Soi 63 slices deep with bars every few minutes—the clusters around Ekkamai Soi 10 are reliable for bouncing between cocktails, craft taps, and DJ nights. Expect beer pints around 160–220 THB; cocktails 280–380 THB.
  • Live music: Rock and indie spots share calendars with Thai pop cover bands—great sing-along energy even if you only catch the chorus.
  • Late-night eats: We swear by late ramen bowls and fried chicken counters scattered along the main drag (approx. 100–180 THB). If you see a queue, join it—the turnover means fresh broth and hot oil.
  • Practical: Ekkamai Bus Terminal sits next door, so it’s a transit knot. After midnight, moto-taxis are plentiful on Soi 63; short rides cost approx. 40–80 THB.

Who should get off here: If you want variety without velvet rope drama—bar hopping, live bands, and a crowd that will cheer for the drop and the guitar solo.

Phra Khanong (BTS Phra Khanong, E8)

Phra Khanong is the sweet spot for a local-leaning night that won’t bulldoze your wallet. It’s lower-key than Ekkamai but still social.

  • Vibe: Residential-meets-creative; more Thai than touristy. You’ll hear easy Thai pop, see neighbors in flip-flops, and sip beers al fresco.
  • Where to drink: Open-air beer gardens and casual bars cluster near the station and toward Sukhumvit Soi 71. It’s a great pre-game zone—grab a few bottles (approx. 100–150 THB) before a short hop to Ekkamai or Thonglor.
  • Rooftop note: There’s a sky-high spot along Sukhumvit 69–71 territory that does sweeping river-to-city views—hit it for sunset, then drop back to street level for the night.
  • Late-night eats: Wok-fried anything—pad see ew, pad kee mao—sizzles well past midnight (approx. 60–100 THB). Look for aunties with wrist-flicks that send noodles airborne.
  • Practical: Fewer aggressive touts here; streets feel calmer. It’s also where we’ll often book an apartment for a longer stay—cheaper, easier, and one BTS stop from the action.

Who should get off here: If you want a mellow, local-first night that can scale up quickly with a one-stop ride.

On Nut (BTS On Nut, E9)

On Nut is where Sukhumvit exhales. Fewer dress codes, more apartment blocks, and an almost-townie feel under the tracks.

  • Vibe: Chill and affordable. Lots of casual beer spots, night market bites, and neighborly vibes.
  • Where to drink: Simple bar-restaurants near the station and down Sukhumvit Soi 50/52 pour cheap beers (approx. 90–140 THB) and keep the TV on for whatever match is playing.
  • Night markets: Expect grilled seafood, som tam, and spicy soups till late (approx. 50–120 THB). If we’re calling it early, this is where we stock up on mango and sticky rice for the ride home.
  • Practical: After midnight, Grab rides back to Asok or Nana hover around 150–250 THB depending on time and rain. On Nut is also a good base if you want to spend less on accommodation but still be on the line.

Who should get off here: If you’re easing into Bangkok nights, on a budget, or need a low-key reset before firing back toward Thonglor tomorrow.

Getting around the Sukhumvit Line at night

  • Last trains: The BTS generally runs until around midnight, with last departures varying by station and direction (approx. 23:30–00:20). Always check the station boards before you dive into a second round.
  • Exits to know:
    • Nana: Exit 3 for Soi 11; Exit 2 for Soi 4.
    • Asok: Exit 3 takes you beside Soi Cowboy; interchange with MRT Sukhumvit via skybridges.
    • Phrom Phong: Exits 1–2 for Emporium/Benchasiri Park side, 5–6 for EmQuartier; Soi 24 and 22 are easy from here.
    • Thonglor: Exit 3 toward Soi 55.
    • Ekkamai: Exit 1 for Soi 63 and the bus terminal.
    • Phra Khanong: Exits 3–4 for markets and Soi 71.
    • On Nut: Exits 2–3 for night market bites and supermarkets.
  • Backups after the BTS sleeps: Metered taxis are easy to flag on Sukhumvit; insist on the meter. Short hops are often cheaper with Grab during rain surges—compare before you commit. Tuk-tuks are fun for a blast of humid air and glittering tail-lights—agree a fare first (short rides approx. 60–150 THB).
  • Walking reality: Bangkok pavements are an obstacle course—broken tiles, sudden steps, and mystery puddles. Wear shoes you can dance and dodge with. If a soi looks unlit, grab a moto instead.
  • Safety: Bangkok feels safe late, but basic smarts apply—watch your drink, keep bags zipped, and don’t flash the newest phone on the darkest corner. In go-go zones, be clear on prices and what’s included.

Match your mood to your stop

  • For bar hopping on one street: Nana (Soi 11) and Thonglor (Soi 55 and nearby Soi 10). Ekkamai if you like live bands in between.
  • For clubbing late: Thonglor and Ekkamai’s bigger rooms push deepest into the night; Nana has party stamina too.
  • For pre-drinks and meet-ups: Asok—easy rides from both BTS and MRT, and endless corner pubs for a first round.
  • For rooftops without the stuffiness: Nana’s Soi 11 towers and Phrom Phong hotel-tops. More ideas here if you’re chasing views: Bangkok Rooftop Bars with Skyline Views of Sukhumvit Worth the Trip from Khao San Road.
  • For LGBTQ+ nights: Sukhumvit is broadly queer-friendly, especially in Thonglor/Ekkamai’s cocktail bars. For concentrated LGBTQ+ clubbing, Silom’s Soi 2 and Soi 4 are a quick MRT ride from Asok.
  • For post-midnight food: Thonglor’s Soi 38, Nana’s curbside grills, and Phrom Phong’s Soi 22 keep the woks going.
  • For a chill, local night: Phra Khanong or On Nut.

Planning a perfect BTS-powered night

Here’s how we’d stitch a night with minimal faff and maximum fun:

  • The Smooth Climb: Sunset drink near Phrom Phong, BTS to Thonglor for cocktails, then one-stop to Ekkamai for a live band and a club room. Taxi back when the trains sleep.
  • The Classic Chaos: Start at Nana—bar hop Soi 11, fuel up on street pad kra pao (approx. 70–100 THB), peek into Soi 4 if you’re curious, then bail to Asok for last-call pints before the final trains.
  • The Local Loop: Beers and snacks in Phra Khanong’s open-air spots, hop to Ekkamai for a DJ set, end with noodles on Soi 38 and a gentle moto home.

If you want to cross-reference with the broader party map of the city’s biggest strips (Khao San, RCA, Patpong and more), this piece pairs nicely with your BTS plan: Top party streets in Bangkok — Khao San Road, Sukhumvit Sois, RCA, Patpong and more.

Where to base yourself on Sukhumvit

With nights built around stations, sleeping near the line is gold. We usually crash near Asok for the interchange, Nana if we’re feeling social, or Phra Khanong/On Nut for quieter mornings and cheaper coffee. If you’re plotting a longer stay, check the sois around Ekkamai Soi 63 and Thonglor Soi 55—easy walks, lots of late-night snacks, and quick rides home after the last round.

Final sips

Bangkok rewards momentum. Pick a station, pick a soi, and ride the line until the bass fades and the woks take over. We’ll be the ones fanning the steam off a 2 am bowl of noodles and calculating whether we can make one more stop—because Sukhumvit nightlife by BTS stop keeps tempting us one platform at a time.

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