Best Restaurants for Family-Friendly Dining in Bangkok (2026)
Family-Friendly · Bangkok · 7 tables ranked · Updated May 2026
Bangkok is an easier city to eat in with children than its reputation for chilli and traffic suggests. Thai dining culture is communal and unhurried, kids are welcomed almost everywhere, and the city's best family rooms tend to solve the two real problems at once: the heat and the fussy eater. The map splits on those problems. A small set of garden cafes, open-air food halls and air-conditioned comfort-food rooms give a family space to spread out, a menu broad enough for every age, and a kitchen that does not flinch at a stroller. A much larger set of celebrated rooms runs the adults-only tasting-menu or late-night-bar register that makes a hard evening with young children. The seven below sit in the first set. Most cluster around Thonglor and the Sukhumvit sois, and the lever on the busiest of them is booking the weekend table or arriving before the mall crowd.
The ranking
1. The Commons Thonglor · Open-air food hall · Thonglor
335 Soi Thonglor 17, Sukhumvit Soi 55 (Thonglor) · vendor dishes around 150 to 350 THB · opened 2016
The Vichit-Vadakan siblings' open-air community hall; many food vendors and a kids' play centre on site. Go early on weekends.
Varatt and Vicharee Vichit-Vadakan opened The Commons on Soi Thonglor 17 in 2016 as an open-air community mall, and it is the most purpose-built family destination in the city. The ground-floor Market is a rotating roster of food vendors, so a single table can feed a cautious child plain noodles and an adult something more adventurous, with most dishes around 150 to 350 THB. The structural advantage is upstairs: a dedicated children's play centre and a child-and-pet playground that lets parents finish a meal while the kids burn off energy in sight. The whole place is naturally ventilated and shaded rather than mall-sealed, which makes it pleasant in a way Bangkok food courts rarely are. Weekends fill, so the play is to arrive for an early lunch before the crowd builds. For a family with mixed ages and a short attention span at the table, nothing else in Bangkok is designed this well around the problem.
2. Roast · All-day brunch cafe · Thonglor
The Commons, Soi Thonglor 17; also The EmQuartier, Phrom Phong · mains around 250 to 450 THB · founded around 2014
Varatt Vichit-Vadakan's all-day cafe; Benedicts, pancakes and a familiar Western menu kids actually eat. Take the EmQuartier garden table.
Roast, founded by Varatt Vichit-Vadakan around 2014, runs an all-day Western comfort menu that is the easy answer for a family with a child who wants pancakes rather than papaya salad. The kitchen does eggs and Benedicts, pancakes, burgers and a strong coffee programme, with mains around 250 to 450 THB and the signature iced espresso latte from 120 THB. There are two useful locations: the original inside The Commons on Thonglor, which pairs the meal with the play centre upstairs, and a branch on the first floor of The EmQuartier overlooking the mall's vertical garden, which is cool, easy with a stroller and has a calming green outlook. The all-day format matters with children, since it removes the pressure of hitting a narrow lunch window. The food is familiar without being bland, the room is relaxed, and the staff are used to families. It is the safe, reliable pick that still tastes good.
3. Patom Organic Living · Garden cafe · Thonglor
9/2 Soi Phrom Phak, Sukhumvit Soi 49 area · dishes and drinks around 120 to 280 THB · open daily 9am to 6pm
The Theppabutra family's glass garden pavilion; organic Thai plates and room to roam. Bring the children on a calm weekday afternoon.
Patom is the cafe arm of the Theppabutra family's organic farm network, the people behind Suan Sampran, and it occupies an award-winning glass-and-reclaimed-wood pavilion set in a green pocket off Soi Phrom Phak near Thonglor. The draw for families is the setting: a calm garden a family can actually wander, well away from the Sukhumvit traffic, with organic Thai dishes, salads, and pandan and herbal drinks mostly between 120 and 280 THB. There is no single celebrity chef; it is a family-run organic kitchen, and the cooking is gentle, fresh and easy for children who are wary of heat. Vegetarian and vegan options are plentiful, which helps a mixed table. It is open daily from 9am to 6pm, so it works as an early lunch or an afternoon stop rather than a dinner. For parents who want a quiet, leafy break from the city with the children in tow, this is the most restful room on the list.
4. Cabbages and Condoms · Thai with a garden · Khlong Toei
6 Sukhumvit Soi 12, Khlong Toei · mains around 200 to 500 THB · founded by Mechai Viravaidya
Mechai Viravaidya's non-profit Thai room with a big garden; steamed sea bass and prawn cakes. Sit outside with the kids.
Cabbages and Condoms is the long-running Thai restaurant Mechai Viravaidya founded as a social enterprise for his Population and Community Development Association, and the profits fund rural development programmes. The cheeky family-planning theme is tame and educational rather than off-colour, and the real reason it works for families is the large garden seating, where children have room and a meal can run at its own pace. The kitchen does dependable Thai classics: steamed sea bass with lime, prawn cakes, and a pad Thai wrapped in egg, with mains around 200 to 500 THB. It sits on Sukhumvit Soi 12, a five-minute walk from Asok, and is open daily into the evening. The cooking is solid rather than groundbreaking, but the combination of garden space, easygoing service and a menu of recognisable Thai dishes makes it a genuinely comfortable family dinner. Sit outside and let the kids spread out.
5. Broccoli Revolution · Plant-based · Thonglor
899 Sukhumvit Road, near Thong Lo BTS · mains around 220 to 350 THB · daily
A spacious two-floor plant-based room with familiar global dishes; the charcoal broccoli-quinoa burger. Good for a mixed-diet family.
Broccoli Revolution runs a plant-filled, two-floor space on Sukhumvit Road near Thong Lo BTS, and it is the answer for the family with a vegetarian or a fussy eater at the table. The menu is plant-based but built around familiar, globally-inspired dishes rather than worthy substitutes: the charcoal broccoli-quinoa burger is the signature, alongside a cauliflower dynamite maki and big salads and bowls, with mains around 220 to 350 THB. The space is airy and roomy, comfortable with a stroller and cool against the heat. Proceeds from its bottled drinks support at-risk Thai youth, which is a quiet bonus rather than the point. The food is approachable enough that children who would never order a vegan plate eat it happily, and the breadth covers a mixed-diet family in one booking. For a healthy, easy lunch where everyone at the table is catered for, it is the practical Thonglor choice.
6. Baan Ying Cafe and Meal · Thai comfort food · multiple malls
Branches at Siam Center, CentralWorld and more · dishes around 120 to 250 THB · founded 1999
The 25-year-old Thai-Mom comfort-food chain in air-conditioned malls; omelette rice and stir-fries kids love. The cheapest table here.
Baan Ying began in Siam Square in 1999 as a family-recipe Thai comfort-food kitchen, and at past twenty-five years it has grown into a reliable mall-based chain that solves the practical side of dining out with children. The cooking is home-style Thai: omelette rice, stir-fries, and family-style sharing plates, all gentle enough for cautious palates, with dishes around 120 to 250 THB, the most affordable on this list. The branches sit inside air-conditioned malls such as Siam Center and CentralWorld, which means easy stroller access, clean facilities and a cool room in any season. There is no celebrity chef; it is a family-operated brand, and the appeal is exactly its dependability. For parents who want a low-stakes, low-cost, recognisable Thai meal in a comfortable space, with no risk of a too-spicy surprise for the kids, Baan Ying is the everyday workhorse of family dining in Bangkok.
7. Karmakamet Diner · Garden conservatory bistro · Phrom Phong
30/1 Sukhumvit Soi 24, behind The Emporium · mains around 300 to 500 THB · opened 2013
The fragrance brand's glass conservatory wrapped in garden; Western-Thai bistro plates and famous marshmallow ice cream. Save room for dessert.
Karmakamet Diner is the dining arm of the Karmakamet aromatics brand, founded by Jatuwat Kerdmongkol, and it occupies an iron-and-glass conservatory wrapped in tropical garden on Sukhumvit Soi 24, behind The Emporium. The setting is the draw: a cool, light-filled greenhouse that reads as a treat rather than a routine lunch, and a garden that gives a family a sense of space in the middle of Phrom Phong. The menu is Western-Thai bistro cooking, with the marshmallow ice cream and the dessert programme its best-known feature, and mains around 300 to 500 THB. It is the most dessert-forward room on the list, which is a genuine advantage with children, and the relaxed weekend-brunch feel suits a family meal that is meant to be an occasion. It runs a little pricier than the others, which is why it lands at the foot of the ranking, but for a special family afternoon the conservatory is worth it.
Avoid for a family meal in Bangkok
Issaya Siamese Club · Sathorn. Ian Kittichai's garden-mansion modern-Thai room is one of the loveliest dining rooms in the city, but it is built for couples and special occasions, refined and slow-paced in a way that does not suit young children. It is open and excellent; it is simply the wrong register for a family lunch. Save it for an adults-only evening.
Err Urban Rustic Thai · Tha Tian. the small, cramped street-food bar from the Bo.lan team is a brilliant casual room, but it leans late-night and adult, with limited seating and a drinking atmosphere rather than a space for kids. For the family version of casual Thai, Cabbages and Condoms or Baan Ying give you the room and the comfort that Err deliberately does not.
Soul Food Mahanakorn · Thonglor. the Thonglor favourite closed permanently in 2021, so any listing still recommending it for a family dinner is out of date. Do not plan around it. The Commons, a short way up the same soi, is the open-air family destination that has replaced that kind of casual Thonglor dinner for families with children.
How to dine out with kids in Bangkok
The single best family-dining decision in Bangkok is to plan around the heat. A garden room like Patom or Cabbages and Condoms is a joy in the cooler morning and late afternoon and a sweatbox at midday, while the air-conditioned and naturally-ventilated rooms, Baan Ying, Roast, Broccoli Revolution and The Commons, hold up at any hour. For a midday meal with small children, pick the cool room; save the gardens for the gentler ends of the day.
Book the busy rooms and walk into the easy ones. The Commons fills on weekends, so an early-lunch arrival beats the crowd, and Karmakamet Diner is worth a weekend reservation for the conservatory. The mall-based and casual rooms, Baan Ying, Roast and Broccoli Revolution, rarely need a booking and are the dependable walk-in options when an afternoon goes sideways. Knowing which is which keeps a day with children from collapsing around a queue.
Use the menu breadth deliberately. Bangkok's spice is the usual worry with children, and the rooms on this list are chosen precisely because they solve it: the food-hall format at The Commons lets each person order separately, Roast and Broccoli Revolution run familiar Western and global dishes, and Baan Ying's home-style Thai is gentle by design. Order a couple of plain, non-spicy anchors for the kids and something more adventurous for the adults, and tell the kitchen mai phet, not spicy, which every one of these rooms will happily honour.
Frequently asked
What is the best family-friendly restaurant in Bangkok?
The Commons Thonglor, on Soi Thonglor 17. The open-air food hall lets each family member order from a different vendor, it is naturally ventilated rather than sealed, and it has a dedicated children's play centre upstairs. Go early on a weekend before the crowd builds.
Are Bangkok restaurants welcoming to children?
Yes. Thai dining culture is communal and child-friendly, and kids are welcomed almost everywhere. The rooms on this list go further with gardens, play space, air-conditioning and broad menus. The main thing to manage is the heat and the chilli, both of which any kitchen will adjust.
Which Bangkok restaurants have a garden or play space for kids?
The Commons Thonglor has a dedicated children's play centre and playground. Patom Organic Living and Cabbages and Condoms both have gardens children can wander, and Karmakamet Diner sits in a glass conservatory wrapped in tropical garden. These are the rooms that turn a meal into an afternoon.
Is Thai food too spicy for kids?
It does not have to be. Plenty of Thai dishes are mild, and every kitchen will cook to order. Ask for mai phet, not spicy, and stick to anchors like omelette rice, plain noodles, grilled chicken and steamed fish. The food-hall and Western-menu rooms on this list make it especially easy.
Do family restaurants in Bangkok take reservations?
The busier ones are worth booking. The Commons fills on weekends, so arrive early or reserve, and Karmakamet Diner's conservatory is worth a weekend booking. The mall-based and casual rooms like Baan Ying, Roast and Broccoli Revolution are reliable walk-ins.
What should families order in Bangkok?
Order a couple of mild anchors for the kids and something bolder for the adults. Plain noodles, omelette rice and grilled chicken are safe; the food-hall format at The Commons and the Western menus at Roast and Broccoli Revolution make it simple. Save room for Karmakamet Diner's marshmallow ice cream.
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Affiliate disclosure: RFK earns a commission on bookings made through partner platforms (Tock, Resy, OpenTable) marked with a "Reserve" link. Sponsored listings are clearly marked with a Sponsored badge and are not eligible for editorial ranking. The seven rooms on this list were ranked editorially and no booking partner influenced the order.