Chocolate Ville Bangkok: Complete Guide 2026 — Entry Fee, Opening Hours, How to Get There

Chocolate Ville Bangkok — Bangkok's Lit-Up European Village After Dark
The lanterns above the cobbled street come on around 6:30 PM, exactly as the last of the daylight drains from the sky over the lake. You are sitting at an outdoor table on what looks like a side street in a Tuscan village, in a country where the alphabet is Thai and the temperature an hour ago was 34 degrees. This is Chocolate Ville — Bangkok's most photographed open-air restaurant village, built like a film set, and located 18 kilometres northeast of central Bangkok in the Khan Na Yao district on Prasert-Manukitch Road.
It is the city's easiest evening to underestimate before you arrive — and the easiest one to recommend to friends afterwards. There is no equivalent in central Bangkok. No rooftop bar, no Sukhumvit restaurant, no shopping mall food court replicates the experience of dinner inside a European village square at dusk, with a lake, a lighthouse, dozens of independent restaurants, and fairy lights overhead.
This guide covers everything you need to know before your visit: the honest entry fee explained, opening hours, how to get there (and the return-journey problem nobody warns you about), what time to arrive, the daily shows, the restaurants, and how Chocolate Ville pairs naturally with a Safari World day for the perfect Bangkok day + evening combination.
We are a TAT Licensed Tour Operator — Licence No. 14/04232 — and we run a private door-to-door transfer service to Chocolate Ville for ฿2,500 per vehicle (SUV up to 4 passengers, or van up to 9). Details and the full evening itinerary are at the bottom of this guide.
What Chocolate Ville Actually Is (and What It Is Not)
Let's clear up a common misunderstanding before going any further.
Chocolate Ville is not a theme park. There are no rides. There is no chocolate factory tour. There are no rollercoasters, no Ferris wheel, and despite the name, no chocolate-themed attractions in the conventional sense. The "ville" part is the accurate one — it is a village, built to look like a European town, with restaurants instead of houses.
What Chocolate Ville is, very specifically, is a purpose-built open-air dining complex designed around photography and atmosphere. The owners built an entire streetscape — three or four storeys of pastel-coloured buildings with arched windows and wrought-iron balconies, a working lighthouse rising above the rooftops, cobbled pedestrian streets, a central lake with a small bridge, and roughly twenty independent restaurants and food kiosks operating throughout the village. The whole place is built to be walked, photographed, and eaten in.
The genuine draw — the reason it appears on every Bangkok Instagram feed — is the moment the lights come on at dusk. Until around 6 PM, Chocolate Ville is a pleasant late-afternoon dining area. From 6:30 PM, when the fairy lights and lanterns above the streets switch on against the darkening sky, the whole village transforms. The lighthouse glows gold. The lake reflects the LED boat that drifts across the water as part of the daily evening show. The European-style buildings, lit from below, take on the appearance of a film set after dark.
It is one of the few places in Bangkok where the city's standard rule does not apply: there is no temple to visit, no shrine to bow at, no monument to admire. You go, you walk, you eat, you photograph, you leave. The simplicity is the point.

The ฿150 Entry Fee Explained Honestly (the question every visitor asks)
This is the question Bangkok visitors search for the most and the one most online guides answer badly. Here is the straight answer.
How much is the Chocolate Ville entrance fee in 2026?
The standard entry fee at Chocolate Ville is ฿150 per person, paid in cash or by card at the ticket window when you arrive at the main gate. Peak days — Thai public holidays, some Saturday evenings during high season, and special event nights like Loy Krathong — charge ฿180 to ฿200 per person. The standard ฿150 applies on the vast majority of visiting days throughout the year.
Here is the part nobody explains clearly
When you pay the ฿150 entry fee, the ticket you receive includes a ฿100 voucher attached to it. That voucher is redeemable inside the village during the same visit. You can use it for:
- A meal at any of the restaurants (it comes off your bill as a ฿100 discount)
- Drinks at one of the kiosks
- Ice cream
- Popcorn
- One of the small activities (bubble boat tickets, romantic confession boat, etc.)
So your real out-of-pocket entry cost is ฿50 per person, not ฿150. The ฿100 you "pay" up front comes back to you in the form of food, drinks, or an experience inside the village.
How to use the voucher
The simplest method: hand the voucher to your server at dinner when you ask for the cheque. They apply ฿100 to your bill before payment. Done.
If you prefer to use it for ice cream, drinks, or popcorn at a kiosk during the evening, present the voucher when you order. The kiosk operators all know the system. The voucher is per person and cannot be combined across a table — each guest applies their own ฿100. A family of four has four separate ฿100 vouchers to spend.
The voucher expires at the end of the same visit. You cannot save it for a future trip. Use it before you leave.
Why we explain this upfront
Most online guides — and most tour operators — tell you "entry is ฿150" and leave you to figure out the redeemable portion when you arrive at the gate. That creates two problems: you feel surprised at the ticket window when the cashier mentions the voucher (it can sound like an upsell pitch), and you sometimes leave without using it because nobody explained how. We say it upfront because every Bangkok visitor asks the same question on arrival.
Interested in this tour?
Contact us on WhatsApp for instant booking and custom itineraries.
How to Get to Chocolate Ville (and the Return-Journey Problem)
Chocolate Ville is approximately 18 kilometres northeast of central Bangkok at 23 1-16 Prasert-Manukitch Road, Khan Na Yao district. It sits outside the BTS and MRT network — no Skytrain station nearby, no metro line that drops you within walking distance — and outside the standard Grab service zone that Bangkok visitors are used to.
There are essentially three options for getting there.
Option 1: Grab (one way)
A Grab from central Bangkok (Sukhumvit, Silom, Siam) to Chocolate Ville costs approximately ฿250 to ฿400 one way and takes 30 to 45 minutes depending on traffic. Inbound, this works perfectly well. Order the car, sit back, arrive.
The return journey is the problem. This is the part no online guide we have read explains adequately, and it is the reason we built our private transfer service. By 9:00 PM, Grab coverage in Khan Na Yao collapses. The neighbourhood is residential and quiet, very few drivers idle in the area, and the algorithm struggles to match riders to vehicles. Visitors who arrived by Grab and then need to return to central Bangkok routinely:
- Wait 30 to 60 minutes for a ride confirmation
- Pay a 1.5x to 2x surge fare when a driver eventually accepts
- Or queue at the venue's small public taxi stand for one of the limited cars available
We have stood in the Chocolate Ville car park at 9:30 PM and watched groups of visitors refreshing the Grab app for half an hour at a time. It is the universal post-dinner experience for anyone who did not plan the return.
Option 2: Private taxi (round trip, you arrange yourself)
You can hire a private Bangkok taxi to take you, wait, and return. Typical rate ฿1,800 to ฿2,200 for the round trip with waiting. The challenge is finding a driver willing to wait at the venue for 5+ hours — most public taxi drivers prefer continuous fares — and confirming the waiting cost upfront in English. Workable, but requires negotiation.
Option 3: Our private transfer (the recommended option)
Trip Thai Tour runs a dedicated private evening transfer to Chocolate Ville for ฿2,500 per vehicle:
- Door-to-door hotel pickup at 3:00 PM from any Bangkok hotel
- SUV for up to 4 passengers OR van for up to 9 passengers — vehicle assigned based on your group size, same flat rate either way
- 6 to 8 hours of driver waiting time on-site at no extra charge
- Return to your hotel any time before midnight — WhatsApp your driver when ready
The ฿2,500 covers the vehicle, not per person. For a couple, that is ฿1,250 per head for a fully managed round-trip private transfer. For a family of 4, ฿625 per head. For a group of 9, ฿278 per head. Compared to two separate Grab fares (฿250–400 each way for two people = ฿1,000–1,600) plus the return-journey risk, the private transfer becomes cheaper at three or more passengers — and removes the problem entirely.
💬 Plan Your Chocolate Ville Evening
WhatsApp +66 89 949 6235 to confirm your pickup time and vehicle. We run private transfers to Chocolate Ville 365 days a year. SUV or van assigned to your group size at the same ฿2,500 flat rate. Confirmation within one hour during business hours (08:00–21:00 Bangkok time).
Chocolate Ville Opening Hours 2026
Chocolate Ville is open every day of the year with no scheduled closures. Hours differ between weekdays and weekends.
| Day | Opening Hours |
|---|---|
| Monday – Friday (weekdays) | 3:00 PM – 12:00 midnight |
| Saturday – Sunday (weekends) | 2:00 PM – 12:00 midnight |
| Thai public holidays | 2:00 PM – 12:00 midnight (treated as weekend hours) |
| Christmas, New Year, Songkran, Loy Krathong | 2:00 PM – 12:00 midnight |
The village stays open through the major Thai holidays. Songkran (April 13–15), Loy Krathong, Christmas Day, New Year's Eve — all operate as normal evenings, with peak-pricing entry on the busiest dates.
The first daily shows — the LED boat show on the lake, the snow show at the lighthouse square, the bubble parade, and the daily birthday surprise — begin running from approximately 4:00 PM through the evening. None of these run to a strict published schedule. Each one cycles multiple times through the evening, so walking the village from 4 PM onwards you will encounter them naturally.
The Best Time to Arrive — Why 4:00 PM Matters
If we had to pick a single arrival time to recommend, it would be 4:00 PM exactly. Here is why.
4:00 PM — the late-afternoon walk
You enter the village while the daylight is still strong but the heat has eased. The cobbled streets, the lighthouse, the lake, the European-style buildings — you see everything clearly, you photograph the architecture in good light, you map the layout, and you choose your restaurant for the evening. The first shows have just started; you catch the snow show or the LED boat doing an afternoon run.
5:00 PM — sit down, order, slow down
By 5:00 PM the daylight is softening and the village is starting to fill. This is the right time to sit down at your chosen restaurant. Seating is first-come, first-served — sitting before 6:30 PM almost guarantees an immediate table at any venue. After 7 PM on weekends, the most popular restaurants begin a 15–30 minute wait list.
6:30 PM — the transition
The fairy lights and lanterns above the cobbled streets switch on. The lighthouse illuminates. The LED boat begins its evening loops on the lake. This is the moment Chocolate Ville stops being a quiet open-air dining area and becomes the lit-up village that fills every Instagram feed.
6:15 PM – 6:45 PM — the photographic peak
This 30-minute window is when most visitors take their best photographs. The sky is darkening but not yet fully dark — the deep blue against the warm lantern light produces the colour balance every camera handles best. Earlier the lights are not yet on; later the sky is fully black and the contrast becomes harsher.
7:00 PM onwards — the lit-up evening
The whole village is now at its photographic peak. After dinner, walk a second loop. The exact same lighthouse square you walked at 4 PM is now a different place. Most visitors take more photographs in the 90 minutes after 7 PM than during the entire afternoon combined.
Our 3:00 PM hotel pickup is timed exactly around this arrival window — leaving central Bangkok at 3 PM puts you at the Chocolate Ville gate around 3:45 to 4:00 PM, giving you the full hour-long pre-dinner walk in late-afternoon light.
The Daily Shows at Chocolate Ville
Four signature shows run every day at Chocolate Ville. None of them require an extra ticket — they are all included with your ฿150 entry. None of them runs to a strict published schedule; each one cycles multiple times through the evening from around 4:00 PM onwards.
The LED Boat Show 🚣
Chocolate Ville's signature evening performance. A lit-up boat — strings of LED lights along its hull and superstructure — drifts a slow loop across the central lake, synchronised to a soundtrack. The boat is visible from anywhere along the lakefront. It runs from approximately 6:30 PM through the evening, repeating multiple times. The lake reflects the lit hull, doubling the visual effect.
The Snow Show ❄️
Several times an hour after dark, artificial snow falls from the rooftops around the lighthouse square. The "snow" is a fine soap-based foam that drifts down through the lanterns and onto the cobbled square below — extraordinarily photogenic in Bangkok's 30-degree evening heat, completely surreal for first-time visitors, and reliably one of the most-photographed moments of the night. Children stand in it. Adults stand in it. Everyone photographs it.
The Bubble Parade 🫧
A walking parade of staff blowing soap bubbles that drift through the cobbled streets, accompanied by balloon giveaways for children. The bubbles catch the warm light from the lanterns and become small floating globes against the dusk sky. Runs through the evening at irregular intervals.
The Daily Birthday Surprise 🎂
If someone in your group has a birthday — or if you tell the staff someone in your group has a birthday — a small live band tours the village singing Happy Birthday to celebrating diners. The band moves between restaurants throughout the evening. Tell the front gate staff at the ticket window when you arrive, give them your restaurant name, and the band visits your table at some point during dinner. No extra fee.

The Restaurants at Chocolate Ville — Walk-In Only
Chocolate Ville hosts more than twenty independent restaurants and food kiosks spread across the village. The mix is deliberately international.
| Cuisine | What you'll find |
|---|---|
| Thai | Pad Thai, Tom Yum, green curry, grilled fish — the casual Thai venues are the cheapest, around ฿400–500/pax |
| Italian | Wood-fired pizza, pasta, antipasti — typical Italian restaurant menu at Bangkok-Italian pricing |
| Japanese | Sushi, ramen, donburi at one dedicated Japanese venue |
| Steakhouse | Grilled steaks and Western mains at the larger lakeside restaurants — closer to ฿800/pax |
| Seafood | Bangkok-style seafood specialists with grilled prawns, fish, and shellfish |
| Dessert | Dedicated dessert restaurants with ice cream, waffles, cakes, and crepes |
| Kiosks | Popcorn, ice cream, drinks, small snacks scattered through the village |
How seating works (this matters)
Restaurant seating at Chocolate Ville is first-come, first-served. We do not pre-book tables for you. Nobody else can pre-book tables for you either — the venue does not take advance reservations from external operators. You walk in, you choose your restaurant, you wait if necessary, you eat.
In practical terms this is rarely a problem. The village holds thousands of diners across all venues simultaneously. Walk-in seating before 6:30 PM on weekdays is almost always immediate. Walk-in seating after 7:00 PM on Friday, Saturday, or Sunday at the most popular restaurants — usually the lakeside steakhouses and the dedicated dessert venues — may involve a 15 to 30-minute wait.
The simplest solution: sit down before 6:30 PM. This is one of the practical reasons our 3:00 PM hotel pickup gets you to the village by 4:00 PM with plenty of time to choose your restaurant before the peak window.
Typical food budget
| Spend level | What it buys |
|---|---|
| ฿400–500 per person | Casual Thai restaurant or food court meal with a soft drink |
| ฿600–800 per person | Italian, Japanese, or steakhouse meal with a glass of wine |
| ฿800–1,200 per person | Steakhouse with starter, main, dessert, and alcohol |
| ฿80–150 each | Ice cream, popcorn, soft drinks at kiosks |
Most restaurants accept Visa, Mastercard, and Thai QR payment. The smaller kiosks may be cash-only. Your ฿100 entry voucher applies to your restaurant bill — hand it to the server when you ask for the cheque.
Chocolate Ville with Kids
Chocolate Ville is suitable for all ages including infants and young children. The combination of open space to walk freely, visible daily shows that entertain children without screens or rides, kid-friendly menus across most restaurants, and the genuinely safe pedestrian-only village layout makes it one of the easier evening venues in Bangkok for families with children.
Practical notes for visiting with kids:
- Strollers can be used on all the main pedestrian streets. Surfaces are cobblestone but flat — no steps, no uneven sections. Avoid the bridge over the lake at peak times when foot traffic is highest.
- Entry pricing is the same for children — ฿150 with the same ฿100 redeemable voucher. There is no children's rate. Toddlers in arms typically pass without a separate ticket but confirm at the gate.
- Highchairs are available at most restaurants on request.
- The snow show is the universal favourite with children aged 3 to 10 — most children stand in the falling foam for as long as you let them.
- The bubble parade travels through the streets at irregular intervals — children chase the bubbles.
- The bubble boat and romantic confession boat on the lake operate small paid rides for children — typical fees around ฿100–150, your ฿100 voucher applies.
- Bathrooms are available throughout the village, including baby-changing facilities at the main central restroom block.
For families coming straight from a full Safari World day, the combination works extraordinarily well: children are tired from the morning's drive-through and shows, the afternoon at Marine Park has burned the rest of their energy, and the evening at Chocolate Ville requires nothing more than walking and eating. We cover the combo in detail below.
Best Photo Spots at Chocolate Ville
You take your own photos at Chocolate Ville. There are no commercial photo packages, no required photographers, no fees for using your phone or camera in the public spaces. Bring whatever you shoot with.
The five spots that produce the best photographs in the 6:15–6:45 PM window:
-
The lighthouse square at dusk — the lighthouse glowing gold above the cobbled square, fairy lights running along the surrounding rooftops, the deep blue of the late-twilight sky directly behind. Best angle: from the south side of the square looking north toward the lighthouse.
-
The lake with LED boat — the lit boat reflected in the lake water, the shore-side restaurants illuminated behind. Best angle: from the bridge across the lake looking west at the boat's evening loop.
-
The cobbled main street — the long perspective of the street with fairy lights overhead, pastel-coloured buildings on both sides, the lighthouse rising at the end. Best after 7:00 PM when the lights are fully on and the foot traffic has settled.
-
The European-style restaurant facades — individual restaurant frontages lit from below, arched windows glowing warm. Most photogenic between 6:45 and 7:30 PM.
-
The snow show under the lanterns — the falling foam against the warm light of the overhead lanterns. Stand at the edge of the square rather than directly under the snow for a wider composition.
A small phone tripod helps in the lower-light evening shots. Stabilisation on most modern phones handles the 6:30 PM window without one.
Pair It With Safari World — The Bangkok Day + Evening Combo
This is the combination we recommend most often, and the one most Bangkok operators do not offer.
Safari World Bangkok finishes between 4:30 and 5:00 PM. Your day at Safari World has covered the morning Safari Zone drive, all six Marine Park shows, the Indian buffet at noon, and the afternoon shows through 3:40 PM. You are tired in the best way, you are in northeast Bangkok with a private vehicle that has been yours all day, and you are 15 minutes away from Chocolate Ville by car.
The combo works like this: add ฿600 to your Safari World private vehicle package, and the same driver and vehicle take you from Safari World directly to Chocolate Ville for dinner, wait 3 to 4 hours while you eat and walk the village, and return you to your Bangkok hotel before midnight.
One driver. One vehicle. Full day from 8:00 AM hotel pickup to 9:00–10:00 PM hotel return. The ฿150 Chocolate Ville entry is paid separately at the gate (with the ฿100 redeemable inside as normal). Total experience: the best Bangkok day + the best Bangkok evening, handled by one operator on one booking.
For Indian families and Gulf-region groups in particular, this combo is the highest-rated combination in our customer feedback. The kids are entertained from 8 AM to 10 PM. The Indian buffet at noon at Safari World solves lunch. The walk-in Chocolate Ville restaurants offer enough vegetarian options across the village to solve dinner without searching. The whole day is managed by one driver on WhatsApp.
See our full Safari World Bangkok tour page for the base Safari World pricing, or read the complete Safari World Bangkok guide for the full show schedule and timing. WhatsApp +66 89 949 6235 to add the Chocolate Ville extension to a Safari World booking.

What Our Customers Say
"Chatree arranged our SUV pickup at 3 PM sharp from our Sukhumvit hotel. The driver waited the whole evening — we ate, we walked twice, we stayed for the lit-up village photos. Sent him a WhatsApp at 9:15 PM and he was at the gate in three minutes. The honesty on the ฿150 entry fee was refreshing — he explained the ฿100 voucher before we even paid. Easy, no surprises, the photographs are still the best ones from our Bangkok trip."
— Sarah & James, Sydney, Australia (May 2026)
"Booked the Safari World + Chocolate Ville combo for the kids. Honestly the best day of our Bangkok holiday. Safari World until 4:30 PM, then the same driver took us to Chocolate Ville for dinner — kids ran around the village for two hours while we ate. The fairy lights at 7 PM were magic. One driver, one vehicle, full day handled."
— The Khanna Family, Mumbai, India (April 2026)
How to Book — Trip Thai Tour Chocolate Ville Private Transfer
We are a TAT Licensed Tour Operator — Licence No. 14/04232, independently verifiable at the Tourism Authority of Thailand's official registry. Learn more about who we are and how we operate on our About page.
Our Chocolate Ville Private Evening Transfer
- ฿2,500 per vehicle — SUV (up to 4 pax) or van (up to 9 pax), assigned by group size, same flat price
- 3:00 PM hotel pickup from any Bangkok hotel — Sukhumvit, Silom, Siam, Pratunam, Ratchadamri, Riverside, Bangkok Old City
- 6 to 8 hours of driver waiting on-site at Chocolate Ville
- Return to your hotel any time before midnight via WhatsApp
- Door-to-door private service — no shared minivan, no other guests
- Open every day — no closure days, no minimum group size
What you pay separately
- ฿150 entry per person at the Chocolate Ville gate (฿100 redeemable inside)
- Restaurant food and drinks at your table — typical spend ฿400–800/pax
How to book
The fastest path is WhatsApp. Message +66 89 949 6235 with your hotel name, date, and group size. We confirm within one hour during business hours (08:00–21:00 Bangkok time) and send your driver and vehicle details by WhatsApp the evening before your tour.
Book the Chocolate Ville evening transfer here →
For more on Chocolate Ville itself — including its Facebook page with daily event updates — check the venue's own social channels. For everything else about Bangkok evenings, Safari World combos, and Trip Thai Tour's full range of services, see our Bangkok tour packages.
Frequently Asked Questions
Chocolate Ville is an open-air dining village in Bangkok's Khan Na Yao district, built like a European town with cobbled streets, a lake, a lighthouse, and dozens of independent restaurants under fairy lights. It is not a theme park and there are no rides — it is a dinner destination designed for photography and atmosphere, located approximately 18 kilometres northeast of central Bangkok on Prasert-Manukitch Road. It is most famous for its lit-up evening environment from around 6:30 PM onwards.
The Chocolate Ville entrance fee in 2026 is ฿150 per person on standard days, paid at the gate. ฿100 of that ฿150 is redeemable inside as a voucher — usable during the same visit for food at a restaurant, drinks at a kiosk, ice cream, popcorn, or one of the venue's small activities. Your real out-of-pocket entry cost is ฿50 per person. Peak days (some public holidays and special event nights) charge ฿180 to ฿200 per person with the same ฿100 redeemable structure.
When you pay the ฿150 entry fee at the gate, you receive a ticket with a ฿100 voucher attached. The voucher is redeemable during the same visit at any restaurant, drinks kiosk, ice cream stand, or activity station inside the village. At a restaurant, hand the voucher to your server when you ask for the cheque — they apply ฿100 to your bill. At a kiosk, present the voucher when ordering. The voucher is per person and cannot be combined across a table. It expires at the end of the same visit.
Chocolate Ville is open every day of the year. Weekday opening hours (Monday to Friday) are 3:00 PM to midnight. Weekend opening hours (Saturday, Sunday, and Thai public holidays) are 2:00 PM to midnight. The first scheduled shows — including the LED boat show, the snow show at the lighthouse square, and the daily birthday surprise — begin running from approximately 4:00 PM. The best arrival time is 4:00 PM.
Chocolate Ville is approximately 18 kilometres from central Bangkok in the Khan Na Yao district — outside the BTS and MRT network. The two practical options are a private transfer or Grab. Our private transfer includes door-to-door pickup at 3:00 PM, a 30 to 45-minute drive, 6 to 8 hours of driver waiting time on-site, and return to your hotel before midnight — all for ฿2,500 per vehicle (SUV up to 4 or van up to 9). The advantage over Grab is the return journey: Grab coverage at Chocolate Ville after 9 PM is very limited.
No — restaurant seating at Chocolate Ville is first-come, first-served across all of the village's restaurants, and we do not pre-book tables on your behalf. The village holds thousands of diners across more than twenty venues, so early-evening seating on weekdays is almost always immediate. On Friday, Saturday, and Sunday evenings after 7:00 PM, the most popular restaurants may have a 15 to 30-minute wait. Sitting down before 6:30 PM avoids this completely.
The best time to arrive at Chocolate Ville is approximately 4:00 PM — late enough that the afternoon heat has eased, early enough to walk the village in daylight before any seating queue starts, and timed for the transition from daylight to the lit-up evening from 6:30 PM. The 6:15 to 6:45 PM window is the village's photographic peak — the sky darkens, lanterns and fairy lights intensify, and the LED boat show begins its evening loops on the lake.
Typical spend for a full dinner with drinks at Chocolate Ville is ฿400 to ฿800 per person — closer to ฿400 at the casual Thai restaurants and food courts, closer to ฿800 at the steak houses, seafood specialists, and dessert restaurants. Drinks add approximately ฿80 for non-alcoholic and ฿180 upwards for alcoholic. Most restaurants accept Visa, Mastercard, and Thai QR payment. Your ฿100 entry voucher applies to your restaurant bill.
Yes — Chocolate Ville is suitable for all ages including infants and young children. Strollers can be used on the main cobbled streets, which are flat with no steps. Children are entertained by the daily snow show at the lighthouse square, the bubble parade, the LED boat show on the lake, and the open space to walk freely. Restaurant menus across the village include child-friendly options. Entry for children of all ages is the same ฿150 with the same ฿100 redeemable voucher.
Chocolate Ville runs four signature daily shows: the LED boat show on the lake (Chocolate Ville's signature evening performance), the snow show at the lighthouse square (artificial snow falling several times an hour after dark), the bubble parade with balloon giveaway for children, and the daily birthday surprise where a live band sings Happy Birthday to celebrating guests. Shows do not run to a strict published schedule — each one runs multiple times through the evening from around 4:00 PM onwards.
Yes — photography is free anywhere in the village. There are no photo-prohibited areas in the public spaces and no commercial photo packages required. Bring your own camera or phone. The best photographic spots are the lighthouse square at dusk, the lake with the lit-up LED boat after dark, and the cobbled lanes lit by warm fairy lights between 6:15 and 6:45 PM as the sky darkens and the lights intensify. Many visitors take more photos in the 90 minutes after sunset than the entire afternoon combined.
Yes — this is one of our most popular combinations. Safari World finishes around 4:30 to 5:00 PM, and Chocolate Ville is approximately 15 minutes away by car in the same northeast Bangkok area. For an additional ฿600 per vehicle on top of your Safari World private package, the same driver and vehicle take you from Safari World directly to Chocolate Ville for dinner, wait while you eat, and return you to your Bangkok hotel before midnight. One driver, one vehicle, full day from 8:00 AM to 10:00 PM. ฿150 Chocolate Ville entry is paid at the gate.
There is no formal dress code at Chocolate Ville — smart casual is the norm. Light clothing works best for the open-air village environment, where temperatures stay 28 to 32°C even after dark from March to October. A light cover-up or shawl is useful if you move between the air-conditioned vehicle and outdoor seating. Comfortable shoes are recommended for the cobblestone streets, though all surfaces are flat. A small umbrella is useful in rainy season (May to October).
Yes — Chocolate Ville is open every day of the year with no scheduled closure days. Weekday hours are 3:00 PM to midnight. Weekend and Thai public holiday hours are 2:00 PM to midnight. The village stays open through Songkran (Thai New Year, April 13–15), Loy Krathong, and Christmas/New Year. Our private transfer service runs 365 days a year alongside the village's opening schedule.
A cancellation fee of 100% applies if booking is cancelled 2 days (48 hours) or less before the tour date. For cancellations made more than 2 days in advance, please contact us via WhatsApp to arrange a refund or reschedule. Unlike OTA join tours, we do not cancel confirmed bookings due to low numbers — your private transfer runs as confirmed. You book the vehicle, the vehicle is yours for the evening.
Check Availability & Book
Send us your details to get an instant quote and secure your date.
Related Guides

SEA LIFE Bangkok Ocean World & Madame Tussauds Combo Ticket: The Complete 2026 Guide
SEA LIFE Bangkok + Madame Tussauds combo guide 2026. Verified feeding times, Glowing Ocean exhibit, 11 aquarium zones, insider tips. From ฿1,200/person.

Thailand DMC for UAE & Gulf Travel Agents: Bangkok Ground Operator for Dubai, Abu Dhabi & GCC 2026
Bangkok-based Thailand DMC and ground operator for UAE, Dubai, Abu Dhabi, and GCC travel agents. Halal-friendly itineraries, B2B net rates, TAT-licensed. WhatsApp proposal within 24 hours.

Bangkok to Pattaya One Day Trip 2026: Private Van Tour with All Top Attractions
Plan the perfect [Bangkok to Pattaya one day trip](/Packages/Pattaya). Private van, hotel pickup at 7 AM, experienced driver, optional English guide. [Coral Island](/Pattaya/Coral-Island), [Sanctuary of Truth](/Pattaya/Sanctuaryoftruth), [Nong Nooch](/Pattaya/Nongnooch-Garden) & more.