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If you are planning a trip to Thailand and looking for a room on your business trip, holiday or family holiday, you are at the right place. We offer the biggest collection of hotels and resorts in Thailand ranging from budget rooms, boutique resorts, luxury hotels and service apartments at the best deal. Our dedicated professional team are pleased to make your trip the utmost enjoyable time with the fast response. Please let us know your request, we will do the rest. |
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Bangkok The capital city of Thailand, known as one of the world’s most exciting cities with world – class facilities. |
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Hua Hin The oldest resort town of Thailand with the unique charm of the old days - small but cosy. |
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Pattaya Thailand's premier beach destination. Spend your days under the sun with the variety of entertainment and beach activities. |
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Phuket The largest island of Thailand is a world-class destination. Full of well-appointed accom, choices of entertainment and great food. |
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Koh Chang For those who’s seeking an escape to a virgin tropical island. Diving, kayaking, trekking and all beach activities are available. |
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Koh Samui This most popular island consists of pristine sandy beaches, waterfalls and plenty of hotels, restaurants, bars, and shops. |
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Koh Samed This small island is well-known for its powdery sand and clear sea. |
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Krabi The hidden paradise for those who love sun, sea, kayaking, diving and rock climbling. Nowhere to compare. |
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Cha-Am A seaside town with resorts lying along the long sandy beach. Only 2 hours from Bangkok. |
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Koh Lanta Heaven island of Andaman Sea. Plenty with forest, coral reefs and under water life. |
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Chiang Mai An old city with proud history, thousands temples, beautiful mountains and good manner of hospitality. |
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Khao Lak Located just north of Phuket Island. Most peaceful resort destinations. The stretch of coastline with beaches that go on for miles. |
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Mae Hong Son / Pai Where you can experience living on high among the natures and learning the folk life of hilltribes. |
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Koh Phangan Well-known for its full moon party. People from around the world gather here to enjoy the party, sandy beaches, snorkeling and diving. |
Central & Eastern Thailand
There are 26 provinces that make up Central and Eastern Thailand, and Bangkok is one of them. Geographically, this is Thailand’s heartland, extending from Lop Buri in the north and covering the rice bowl of the Central Plains around the Chao Phraya River. Further south, the area embraces the east and west coasts of the upper Gulf of Thailand.
This is Thailand’s most fertile farming area, a wide-ranging landscape of paddy fields, orchards and plantations. More than 1,000 years ago Thai settlers moved down from the north, gradually replacing Mon and Khmer influences and establishing communities at Lop CENTRAL & EAST COAST Buri then at Sukhothai, before founding a kingdom that lasted 417 years with Ayutthaya as its capital. When the Burmese destroyed Ayutthaya in 1767, the capital moved to Bangkok.
Northern Thailand
The North is the birthplace of the earliest Thai civilisation and has many sites of archaeological and cultural interest. Northern people are famous for their courtesy and hospitality, and the region is also noted for its variety of cultural traditions. Many tourists from the surrounding provinces converge on Chiang Mai for the annual Songkran Festival, and to Sukhothai for Loi Krathong.
The North falls into two distinct areas, the plains of the lower north from Nakhon Sawan to Sukhothai, and the mountainous upper north leading to borders of Myanmar and Laos. The mountain ranges along the borders are breathtaking, with waterfalls and fast-flowing rivers ideal for rafting. They are also the home of many ethnic hill people.
The region has three seasons, hot from March to May, wet from June to November and cool from December to February. High up in the mountains, though, “cool” may often mean extremely cold.
Northeastern Thailand
The Northeast of Thailand, a vast plateau covering nearly one third of the country, is usually known as Isan. It extends northwards to the Mekong River which divides Thailand from Laos, and to the south and it ends at the Dong Rek mountain range along the border with Cambodia.
It is known to be an arid region with soil of poor quality, but for tourism, Isan is one of the country’s most intriguing destinations with many Stone Age and Bronze Age dwellings and artifacts, and several significant temples that are a legacy of the great Khmer empire.
The sandstone shrines are popular tourist attractions, particularly the superbly restored sites at the historical parks of Phimai in Nakhon Ratchasima and Phanom Rung in Buri Ram. The great temple complex at Khao Phra Viharn in Si Sa Ket on the border with Cambodian is now accessible to visitors after a long period of isolation.
Southern Thailand
This region extends southward along a narrow peninsula lying between the Andaman Sea its west side and the South China Sea on the east. It is a rich land in terms of the abundance of its natural resources, the fertility of its soil, the diversity of its people and its commercial viability.
The South is made up of 14 provinces from Chumphon in the north down to the Malaysian border 1,200 kilometres from Bangkok. It has a long coastline on either side with sandy beaches and offshore islands on both, and a rugged central hinterland of mountains and forests.
The east coast on the Gulf of Thailand always seems to be more relaxed, with long, wide bays and calm seas; the Andaman Sea coast tends to be more rugged and exhilarating, with its strange limestone rock formations and cliffs.