Bars in Suphan Buri Center (Sing Buri)
Low-key Sing Buri nights: riverside beer gardens, Thai live-band pubs, and friendly, far-from-farang prices.
792 places within 3km
7.6
Hotel
Khaosan Palace Hotel
See prices
7.0
Hotel
Yes kaosan
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8.8
Hotel
Tara Place
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9.5
Hotel
Diff Apartel
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9.0
Hotel
Lost Inn BKK
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Jaywalk Cafe
Cafes $$$
8.7
Hotel
Dinsomon Hotel
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7.7
Hotel
Diamond House Hotel
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8.9
Hotel
Time Sabai 134 Hostel
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Madame Musur
Restaurants $$$
9.2
Hotel
Samsen Street Hotel
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8.6
Hotel
The Raweekanlaya Bangkok
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9.1
Hotel
Red Door Samsen Hotel
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8.9
Hotel
Vali Villa Bangkok
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8.9
Hotel
Villa Bangkok Formerly Villa Phra Sumen
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8.2
Hotel
Roof View Place Hotel
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7.0
Hotel
Bewel Hostel
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6.5
Hotel
Oh Boutique Guesthouse.
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8.7
Hotel
The Orchid House 153
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9.0
Hotel
PAPERMOON
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Immortal Open Air
Clubs $$$
Khao San Road Police Station
Services $$$
8.4
Hotel
Casa Nithra Bangkok
See prices
Sky 666
Bars $$$
About Bars in Suphan Buri Center (Sing Buri)
We slip off the main road just as the sky turns mango-orange, the Chao Phraya sliding past in lazy ripples and the grills firing up with snakehead fish and sizzling pork neck. If you were hunting for “bars in suphan-buri-center” but you’ve landed in Sing Buri town, you’re in the right orbit: a compact, very local scene where ice buckets clink, the band covers Carabao and Bodyslam, and the tab stays friendly.
Data Freshness + Pricing:
- Prices are approximate and in THB.
- Last checked: June 2026
- Happy hour and promo details change frequently—confirm locally.
## Is “bars in suphan-buri-center” your scene?
### The vibe
This is small-town central Thailand, not a neon jungle. We’re talking open-air beer gardens by the river, Thai-style pubs with live bands from about 8:30 pm, and a couple of karaoke lounges glowing pink on quiet sois. Most spots are family-run, with aunties ferrying plates of laab and baskets of sticky rice to plastic tables. Expect sawadee smiles, curious glances if you’re a farang, and a lot of sanuk once the music warms up.
Crowds skew local: off-duty teachers, civil servants, and students home on weekends. Midweek can feel sleepy. On Fridays and Saturdays, it thumps until around midnight–1:00 am. English is limited but the universal language of clinking glasses—chok dee!—works wonders.
### Who will love it
- Travelers who want a Thai night out without the Bangkok markup
- Fans of live bands, cold beer on ice, and riverside breezes
- Food-first drinkers who measure a bar by its grilled pork and som tam
### Who might skip it
- Club hunters chasing DJs and 3 am closings
- Folks needing craft tap lists or rooftop views on demand
## Where to drink in Sing Buri’s center
### Riverside beer gardens
Follow the river through the Na Mueang area and you’ll find no-frills platforms and garden setups where the breeze does half the work. We grab a big Leo (approx. 80–100 THB) or a small Tower lager if we’re sharing (approx. 260–320 THB) and let the ice bucket do its thing. Order grilled snakehead fish (pla chon) with spicy dipping sauce and watch scooters zip past. It’s mellow, affordable, and exactly why we’re here.
### Thai live-music pubs
By 8:30–9:00 pm, bands strike up: luk thung, Carabao covers, maybe an Oasis singalong if the guitarist is feeling generous. These pubs usually have waitstaff topping up your whisky-soda at warp speed. A 700 ml local whisky bottle runs approx. 300–480 THB; mixers are 20–40 THB each; set ice bucket around 60–90 THB. Draft beer is rare; bottled is king. There’s often a 20–50 THB per person music fee added late.
### Karaoke lounges and neon-soi bars
Duck down a side soi and you might spot private karaoke rooms. They’re more about singing than cocktails—expect fluorescent lights, songbooks thicker than a phone directory, and fruit plates. Room charges vary (approx. 150–300 THB per hour), plus drinks. Go with friends, keep it light, and confirm prices upfront.
### Cafe-bars and early sips
A couple of coffee shops flip into bar mode after sunset: fairy lights, Thai pop, and whisky sodas. Great for a gentle start before the bands get loud. Think simple cocktails (approx. 120–180 THB) and beer (approx. 70–110 THB).
## What to eat with your drinks
Sing Buri stakes its reputation on freshwater fish, especially pla chon Mae La—smoky, flaky, and made for sharing. We pair it with:
- Som tam (papaya salad): approx. 50–80 THB, from gentle to fire-breathing
- Laab moo/larb gai: approx. 70–120 THB, minty, limey, perfect with cold beer
- Gai yang (grilled chicken) or moo ping skewers: approx. 15–25 THB per stick
- Tom yum talay: approx. 120–180 THB for a steaming pot that wakes the table
Most spots will happily do a fried river prawn plate if it’s in season—ask what’s fresh today.
## Prices and practicalities
- Beer (small bottles): approx. 70–110 THB; large bottles: 90–130 THB
- Thai whisky (700 ml): approx. 300–480 THB; premium imports much higher
- Mixers/ice: approx. 20–40 THB per soda, 60–90 THB per ice bucket
- Cocktails: basic highballs approx. 120–180 THB; classic cocktails are hit-or-miss
- Food plates: approx. 60–180 THB, riverside grills slightly higher
Hours: Many places open 5:00–6:00 pm; bands from 8:30 pm; last orders around midnight, later on weekends. Expect occasional police checkpoints after 10:00 pm—carry a copy of your passport.
Dress: Casual rules—shorts and sandals fine. It’s hot until the rain cools things, so we duck into 7-Eleven for that blessed AC blast between stops.
Cash vs card: Cash is king. Some pubs accept QR PromptPay; foreign cards are rare.
## Getting there and around
- From Bangkok: Vans from Mo Chit 2 run to Sing Buri bus terminal (approx. 120–180 THB; 1.5–2.5 hours depending on traffic). Big buses are similar in price/time. If you’re driving, Highway 32 (Asia Highway) is the straight shot—watch for speed cams.
- From Ayutthaya or Lopburi: Minivans and local buses make the hop in 60–90 minutes (approx. 60–100 THB).
- Trains: There’s no convenient train station in Sing Buri town; it’s bus/van territory.
- In-town: Motorbike taxis and songthaews handle short hops (approx. 20–60 THB). Grab works on and off in the center; prices run 60–120 THB for most rides. If someone offers a tuk-tuk, agree the fare before rolling.
Tip: If you’re staying riverside, most bars are a walkable cluster; otherwise, base yourself near the bus terminal or market area for easier late-night rides.
## Where to stay nearby
You won’t find glitzy rooftops here, but you will find decent value:
- Riverside guesthouses: Fan or AC rooms, quiet outlook, easy bar-hopping; approx. 500–900 THB per night
- Simple business hotels along the main road: AC, parking, breakfast rice porridge; approx. 700–1,200 THB
- Homestays toward the outskirts: Great if you’ve got wheels and want quiet mornings; approx. 400–800 THB
Book on flexibility if you can—weekends can spike a bit when there’s a local festival.
## Safety, etiquette, and little wins
- Price check: Ask for a menu and confirm bottle/set prices to avoid surprises.
- Noise: Live bands get loud. If you’re chatting, pick riverside tables away from the speakers.
- Politeness: A simple “khop khun krap/ka” goes far. Pour others before topping up your own glass.
- Street smarts: Same as anywhere—keep phones/wallets close, especially near closing.
When we want a night that feels properly Thai—ice-cold beer sweating into plastic buckets, grilled fish perfuming the river air, and a chorus of cheers when the band hits a classic—we come here. Start early by the water, slide into a live-music pub for a set, and cap it with a final soda-ya-dong nightcap. Next round’s on us, if you nail the chorus to “Wang Noi.”