
JW Marriott Hotel Bangkok
When you book JW Marriott Hotel Bangkok in Bangkok, Thailand through our Marriott Luminous partnership, your stay includes daily breakfast, room upgrades and flexible check-in and check-out.
Exclusive Booking Perks
- Welcome amenity
- Complimentary breakfast daily for two guests per room
- Early check-in and late check-out (when available)
- Complimentary upgrade (if available at check-in)
Location
The JW Marriott sits in central Bangkok, where the modernization of a centuries-old capital unfolds in layers. The city began as a modest trading post in the 15th century before becoming the seat of Rattanakosin in 1782, and today that history surfaces between glass towers and traffic-choked thoroughfares. From the Khlong Toei district, the Chao Phraya River curves through the city, its muddy waters still carrying longtail boats past the port facilities that anchor this neighbourhood.
The property lies within reach of the Sukhumvit corridor's energy, where hawker stalls steam with khao mun gai and street-level tailors share blocks with rooftop bars. Chula Flea Market operates 2.3 kilometres north, a sprawl of vintage denim and vinyl records that draws students from nearby Chulalongkorn University. Patpong Night Market glows in neon 2.6 kilometres away, its alleyways thick with counterfeit handbags and tourists.
The air here tastes of exhaust and jasmine, the heat pressing down even after dark. Suvarnabhumi Airport connects the city to the world 22 kilometres east, while Don Mueang serves regional routes 20 kilometres north.
New York Steakhouse anchors the property's dining with Manhattan-style gravitas, dark wood and leather chairs framing prime cuts in a city that takes its beef seriously. Beyond the hotel, Bangkok's Michelin constellation rewards the curious. Sorn, 2.7 kilometres away, holds three stars for chef SupakSorn Jongsiri's self-taught mastery of southern Thai cuisine, each dish a study in fermentation, spice layering, and ingredients rarely seen outside the peninsula. Book a table at Sühring, 3.5 kilometres distant, where German twin chefs translate childhood memories into three-starred refinement through pickling, curing, and seasonal European produce.
The Historic City of Ayutthaya sits 67 kilometres north, its crumbled prangs and headless Buddhas testament to the 1767 Burmese sack of Siam's second capital. Float through the ruins at dawn before the tour buses arrive. Closer in, Yunomori offers onsen-style bathing 2.9 kilometres from the property, Japanese hot spring culture adapted for Bangkok's heat. Flow House Bangkok 2.0, at the same distance, lets you attempt wave riding on an artificial surf break without leaving the city.
Bangkok's heat never truly relents, but the rhythm shifts with the monsoon. November through February brings the so-called cool season, when temperatures dip to 21°C at night and the air clears enough to walk comfortably between temples. March and April scorch, the thermometer climbing past 34°C before the rains break in May. The monsoon arrives with afternoon downpours that flood low-lying streets and send motorbikes skittering, June through October the wettest stretch, with September seeing over 250 millimetres.
The city slows during these months, locals retreating to covered markets and air-conditioned shopping centres. The light turns silvery between storms, the Chao Phraya swelling brown and fast. December offers the driest, mildest conditions, though Bangkok's baseline hovers around 30°C year-round.
Visit between November and February when the city breathes easiest.
Frequently Asked Questions
Free service · No obligation
Request a Quote










