Best Nightclubs in Bangkok (2026): Top Clubs by Area
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The best nightclubs in Bangkok in 2026 are VOID and Onyx in RCA for large-scale EDM, and Sing Sing Theater on Sukhumvit for a more theatrical, design-led night out. Beyond those three, the city's clubbing scene spreads across RCA, Sukhumvit Soi 11, Thonglor and Khaosan Road, with genres running from festival-grade EDM to hip-hop, K-pop and house. Here's what's actually open right now, with covers, dress codes and how to get there.
Bangkok Nightclubs at a Glance
| Club | Area | Music | Typical cover |
|---|---|---|---|
| VOID | RCA | EDM, progressive house, techno | ~500 THB (incl. drinks) |
| Onyx | RCA | EDM | 400–500 THB |
| Route 66 | RCA | K-pop, hip-hop, EDM (3 rooms) | ~300 THB (incl. coupons) |
| Spaceplus | RCA | EDM | Free most nights; up to 1,000 THB on event nights |
| Sugar | Sukhumvit Soi 11 | Hip-hop, R&B, trap | 400 THB men / 200 THB women (incl. 1 drink) |
| Levels Club & Lounge | Sukhumvit Soi 11 | Commercial, hip-hop, party pop | Free before midnight; 300 THB after |
| Sing Sing Theater | Sukhumvit Soi 45 | House, melodic house | Usually free; cover on international DJ nights |
| MUIN | Thonglor | EDM, hip-hop, house-techno (3 zones) | ~500 THB (incl. 2 drinks) |
| The Club Khaosan | Khaosan Road | EDM, hip-hop, pop | 120–150 THB (incl. 1 drink) |
The Best Nightclubs in Bangkok (2026)
VOID (RCA)
VOID is the club most locals point to when you ask where Bangkok clubbing peaks right now. It's built around a 26-metre, 6K LED screen — one of the largest of any club in the region — paired with 16 lasers and a d&b sound rig, and it made its first appearance on DJ Mag's Top 100 Clubs list in 2026. The music is progressive house, techno and big-room EDM, with international headliners rotating through most weekends. Entry runs around 500 THB and usually includes a couple of drinks. Dress smart casual — trainers are fine, sandals aren't. Open Thursday to Sunday. Nearest transit: MRT Phetchaburi or Phra Ram 9, then a short taxi into RCA.
Onyx (RCA)
Onyx has long been one of Thailand's two big EDM anchors, sitting right on Royal City Avenue with room for around 2,500 people, VIP booths and an underground room for when the main floor gets overwhelming. Expect big-room house and EDM, often with the same touring DJs who play VOID and Spaceplus on other nights of the same trip. Cover is 400–500 THB for foreigners and typically comes with drink vouchers; if you're arriving as a group and taking a table, the entry fee is usually waived. Smart casual dress, ID required. Nearest transit: MRT Phetchaburi or Phra Ram 9, then taxi.
Route 66 (RCA)
Route 66 is the RCA option for people who don't want to commit to a single genre all night — it runs three connected rooms simultaneously: a K-pop floor, a hip-hop room and an EDM room, and the crowd is a genuine mix of Bangkok locals, Korean expats and tourists bouncing between all three. Entry is around 300 THB and comes with an equivalent value in drink coupons, making it one of the better-value clubs in Bangkok. Dress code is casual-smart — no flip-flops or vests, but no strict door policy either. Open nightly from around 9pm. Nearest transit: MRT Phetchaburi or Phra Ram 9, then a short taxi.
Spaceplus (RCA)
Spaceplus is the newest big room in RCA, built by the team behind Spaceplus Guangzhou and Nanjing, and it ranked #43 on DJ Mag's Top 100 Clubs in 2025. The look is futuristic — think spaceship interiors, moving light rigs and a production standard closer to a festival main stage than a typical club. Entry is free on most nights; on bigger event nights there's a minimum spend of around 1,000 THB redeemable at the bar. Smart casual dress is expected. It's an EDM room through and through, with visiting international DJs a regular fixture. Nearest transit: MRT Phetchaburi, then taxi into RCA.
Sugar (Sukhumvit Soi 11)
Sugar is Bangkok's dedicated hip-hop club, running rap, R&B and trap seven nights a week on Sukhumvit Soi 11, with a central dance floor and a VIP veranda ringing the room above it. It's built a real reputation on the international touring circuit, having hosted acts like Tyga, Lil Yachty and Rae Sremmurd alongside Bangkok's own hip-hop DJs and MCs. Entry is 400 THB for men and 200 THB for women, each including one drink. Dress smart casual — streetwear is fine, but flip-flops and tank tops will get you turned away. Open 10pm–4am daily. Nearest transit: BTS Nana, then a five-minute walk.
Levels Club & Lounge (Sukhumvit Soi 11)
Levels sits on the 6th floor of the Aloft hotel on Soi 11 and spreads across several connected rooms, from a high-ceilinged main floor playing commercial anthems and party pop to smaller side rooms with hip-hop and vocal house. It's polished rather than underground — good for a first Bangkok club night if you want something glossy and easy to navigate. Entry is free before midnight and 300 THB after, and the dress code leans dressier than most Soi 11 venues, so skip the beach gear. Bring a physical passport or Thai ID; digital copies aren't accepted at the door. Nearest transit: BTS Nana.
Sing Sing Theater (Sukhumvit Soi 45)
Sing Sing is less a nightclub than an immersive set piece — a four-floor, six-level Chinoiserie theatre designed by Ashley Sutton, with birdcages, lanterns and performers weaving through the crowd. It marked ten years in business in October 2025, and its house and melodic house programming has hosted names like Dixon, DJ Tennis and Âme. There's usually no entrance fee, with cover charges appearing only on international DJ nights. The dress code is strictly enforced smart casual: no flip-flops, shorts, tank tops or open shoes. Open Tuesday to Saturday, 9pm till late; guests must be 20+ with original ID. Nearest transit: BTS Phrom Phong.
MUIN (Thonglor)
MUIN occupies the 5th floor of Donki Mall in Thonglor and brings a distinctly Korean-influenced production style to Bangkok clubbing, split into three zones under one roof: the Jack zone for EDM, Livin for hip-hop, and District for house-techno. It's a good pick if your group can't agree on one genre for the night, since you can drift between rooms without leaving the building. Cover is around 500 THB and includes two complimentary drinks. Dress smart casual. Open nightly from 9pm. Nearest transit: BTS Thong Lo, then a short walk or taxi to Soi 63.
The Club Khaosan (Khaosan Road)
The Club Khaosan is the biggest room on the backpacker strip and, on a peak night, feels like half of Khaosan Road has funneled through its doors. A 2025 upgrade added a Funktion-One Evolution X sound system and a 60-square-metre LED wall, and it ranked #71 on DJ Mag's Top 100 Clubs in 2026 — a rare backpacker-district club to make that list. Expect EDM, hip-hop and pop from around 10:30pm to close. Entry is 120–150 THB including one drink, rising for special events. Dress code is essentially nonexistent here — shorts and sandals are the norm. Nearest transit: no BTS or MRT nearby; it's a taxi or tuk tuk ride from MRT Sam Yot or BTS National Stadium.

Bangkok Nightlife Areas: Where to Go
RCA (Royal City Avenue) is Bangkok's purpose-built clubbing strip — a single road lined with VOID, Onyx, Route 66 and Spaceplus, all within walking distance of each other. It's the easiest area to club-hop in one night and the default answer if you want scale, lasers and big-room sound.
Sukhumvit Soi 11 is more mixed — Sugar and Levels sit alongside rooftop bars and international restaurants, so it works well if your night starts with dinner or drinks and slides into clubbing rather than being a dedicated club crawl.
Thonglor trades scale for polish. MUIN aside, the area is full of speakeasies, cocktail bars and smaller lounges, and it draws an older, more design-conscious crowd than RCA.
Khaosan Road is the budget-traveler epicenter — chaotic, cheap and casual, with The Club Khaosan as the main dance-floor option surrounded by street bars, buckets of cocktails and live-music pubs like Brick Bar.
Before You Go: Cover Charges, Dress Codes & Rules
Thailand's legal drinking and clubbing age is 20, and every club on this list checks ID at the door — bring your passport or a Thai national ID; photos or digital copies are often refused. Most covers run 300–500 THB and frequently include one or two drinks, so it's rarely a pure cash-grab. Dress codes vary by venue but skew toward smart casual across RCA, Sukhumvit and Thonglor: closed-toe shoes, no vests or sports shorts, no flip-flops. Khaosan Road is the exception — genuinely no dress code. Clubs generally run Tuesday or Thursday through Sunday, opening around 9–10pm and closing between 2am and 4am depending on the night and the venue's license.
Make a Night of It
If you'd rather ease into the night than walk straight into a dance floor, start with cocktails and end at a club: the Speakeasy Bar Hopping tour by electric tuk tuk takes you through Bangkok's hidden speakeasy scene before dropping you close to the RCA or Sukhumvit clubbing action, so you arrive relaxed instead of rushed. For the fuller picture of Bangkok after dark — rooftop bars, live-music pubs and more — see our full Bangkok nightlife guide.