
Nakhon Si Thammarat Province
Shadow puppet capital of Thailand. An ancient Srivijaya port city with over 1,000-year-old temples and renowned southern Thai cuisine.
Quick Facts: Nakhon Si Thammarat Province in November
- Cheapest fare
- ฿1,307
- Cheapest month
- June
- Airlines
- 1 carriers
- Flight time
- ~1h 20m
- Non-stop
- Direct flights available
- Avg temperature
- 27°C
- Climate
- Hot
- Distance
- 0 km
Shadow puppet capital of Thailand. An ancient Srivijaya port city with over 1,000-year-old temples and renowned southern Thai cuisine.
Best November Deals
November Price Intelligence
How Nakhon Si Thammarat Province prices compare in November 2026
Best in November
฿1,307
November avg
฿1,398
November median
฿1,322
November p90
฿1,500
Daily Price Trend
Cheapest fares for each day of November 2026
November 2026 Price Calendar
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About Nakhon Si Thammarat Province
Nakhon Si Thammarat, known locally as 'Nakhon,' is one of Thailand's most historically significant yet least-visited cities. Its crown jewel is Wat Phra Mahathat Woramahawihan, a temple complex dating back over 1,000 years that houses a revered Buddha relic and features a towering chedi visible from across the city. The temple's importance to Thai Buddhism cannot be overstated — it predates most temples in Bangkok by centuries. Nearby, the National Museum displays exquisite Srivijaya-era bronzes and Dong Son drums that attest to the city's role as a major trading port linking India, China, and the Malay world. The traditional art of Nang Talung shadow puppetry survives here, with master puppeteers like Suchart Subsin keeping the craft alive in small workshops where you can watch performances and see puppets being made from buffalo hide. Beyond the city, Khao Luang National Park offers cool mountain trails through cloud forest.
Nakhon Si Thammarat is a pilgrimage site for Thai food lovers, producing what many consider the country's most intensely flavored cuisine. Southern Thai food hits harder than its northern and central counterparts — more chili, more turmeric, more fermented fish paste, more everything. The signature dish is khanom jeen, fresh rice noodles served with a choice of fiery curries including gaeng tai pla (a pungent curry made with fermented fish entrails that converts skeptics with its deep umami). Market stalls pile their counters with dozens of southern curries each morning, and locals eat khanom jeen for breakfast, ladling multiple curries over their noodles and adding crispy vegetables. Don't miss the fresh seafood at Khanom beach, where restaurants serve the morning catch grilled over coconut husks. The local coffee culture is strong too, with old-school kopitiam-style cafés serving thick, sweet coffee that fuels the morning market bustle.