Since Thailand runs on baht, you’ll also want to pay with a credit card that doesn’t charge foreign transaction fees to avoid the usual 2.5% surcharge on incidentals.
Location
The hotel sits on Charoen Krung Road in Yannawa, on a stretch of working riverfront south of the main tourist corridor.
I’ll be upfront that this isn’t a location for wandering out the front door. The blocks around the estate are local and industrial, and Bangkok’s marquee malls and attractions are a solid drive away.

The saving grace is the water. A complimentary shuttle boat, shared with the neighbouring Capella Bangkok, runs from the estate’s private pier every 30 minutes between 7am and 10pm, reaching Sathorn Pier in five minutes flat.



From Sathorn Pier, you’re steps from Saphan Taksin BTS station, which plugs you straight into the Skytrain network and the rest of the city.
Select sailings continue on to IconSiam, the enormous riverside mall on the opposite bank. It’s worth a trip in its own right, with a full floor of luxury flagships and SookSiam, an air-conditioned indoor take on a Thai floating market where you can eat your way through dishes from all 77 provinces.
Sathorn Pier is also the jumping-off point for the Chao Phraya tourist and express boats, which run up the river to the old town’s headline sights like Wat Arun, Wat Pho, and the Grand Palace.
A couple of practical notes: the shuttle takes a short fuel break in the early afternoon, and morning departures from Sathorn back to the hotel should be reserved through the concierge.

Riding a leather-trimmed, air-conditioned boat past the rush-hour gridlock quickly became one of my favourite things about the stay. If you’re travelling light, it’s easily the best way to come and go, though the adventurous can always hop on a Grab bike instead.
Four Seasons Bangkok – Check-In Experience
I arrived just after midday, well before the official 3pm check-in, and the team happily stored my luggage while I headed to lunch at Yu Ting Yuan on the property.
The lobby sets the tone immediately. Water features, soaring ceilings, and monumental art make it feel more like a contemporary gallery than a hotel entrance.


Off to one side, a sculptural bronze bar handles everything from morning coffee to evening cocktails, while floor-to-ceiling windows frame the river beyond the gardens.



Check-in itself was handled over a welcome iced tea, seated in the lounge rather than standing at a desk. It’s a small difference, though it changes the entire feel of arrival.

Since Four Seasons has no loyalty program, there’s no elite status to recognize. Perks live and die by your booking channel instead, which is exactly why the Preferred Partner benefits above matter.
Four Seasons Bangkok – Deluxe River-View Room
My home for the night was a Deluxe River-View Room with a king bed, positioned a few floors up with a straight-on view of the Chao Phraya.




The design language mirrors the rest of the hotel, with pale timber, textured plaster walls, and floor-to-ceiling glass along the entire river-facing wall.
A chaise lounge by the window ended up being where I spent most of my downtime, watching the barges and long-tail boats work their way up and down the river.


The views deserve their own paragraph. To one side, the river bends toward Sathorn’s towers; below, the pool terrace spreads out like a scale model.


By the time I reached the room, a welcome treat of fresh mango and coconut was waiting alongside a handwritten note, a small gesture that set the tone for the warm service that followed.

The bed itself was excellent, easily among the more comfortable hotel beds I’ve slept in this year.
Soundproofing is good but not absolute. With the pool and the river below, I could pick up faint splashes and boat traffic during the day, though nothing that disturbed my sleep once night fell.


The minibar deserves a mention, with a dedicated drawer for Nespresso and loose-leaf teas, a snack drawer, and a properly stocked fridge complete with Champagne splits.




In the bathroom, a sculptural oval tub sits against black marble, flanked by a double vanity and full-size BYREDO Gypsy Water amenities, a definite step up from the miniature bottles most luxury hotels still get away with.




Housekeeping details run deep, right down to a proper shoe care kit in the wardrobe.

Four Seasons Bangkok – Executive Suite
During my stay, I also had the chance to tour two of the hotel’s suites, starting with the Executive Suite.
This one-bedroom suite pairs a proper living room with a dining area and its own pantry. The living spaces look out over the estate’s garden courtyard, while the bedroom faces the river.
The primary bedroom keeps the same soft, neutral palette as the guest rooms, anchored by a gold-leaf canvas above the bed and full-height windows onto the river.



The bathroom steps things up with a freestanding tub, a double vanity with a courtyard view, and a walk-in wardrobe that borders on gratuitous.



Four Seasons Bangkok – Riverfront Penthouse
Then there’s the Riverfront Penthouse, the hotel’s 4,844-square-foot flagship, and one of the more remarkable hotel suites I’ve ever walked through.




Spread across three bedrooms that sleep up to nine, it comes with a double-height great room, a dedicated study, a ten-seat dining room, and its own catering kitchen for private events.



Wherever you stand, the Chao Phraya dominates the windows.

The primary bedroom sits beneath soaring double-height ceilings, hung with gallery-scale art.
The primary bathroom is essentially a private spa. A walk-in dressing room leads through to a sunken tub flanked by daybeds, with a Dyson dryer and full-size Byredo amenities on the black marble vanity.
Two further bedrooms, one with a king and one set with twins, round out the sleeping quarters, each with its own marble bathroom.
There’s even a private gym tucked away, plus a media room for movie nights, because apparently walking to the hotel’s excellent fitness centre would be too much to ask of a penthouse guest. 😉




The showstopper is the rooftop terrace. A covered loggia opens onto open-air dining, a sunken lounge, and a private plunge pool with an uninterrupted sweep of the river.
Four Seasons Bangkok – Food and Drink
The estate takes dining seriously, with venues spanning Cantonese, Italian, French, and Thai, plus BKK Social Club, a bar that regularly lands on Asia’s 50 Best list.


With only one night, I focused on the Michelin-starred lunch, the famous breakfast, and an afternoon pastry stop, leaving Palmier by Guillaume Galliot, riverside Thai at Chao Phraya Terrace, and the bar for a future visit.


Yu Ting Yuan
Yu Ting Yuan, the hotel’s Michelin-starred Cantonese restaurant, was my first stop, and the dim sum set lunch at 1,950 THB (~$80 CAD) per person turned out to be one of the better-value Michelin meals I’ve had.


Lunch opens with a welcome pour of cold-brewed osmanthus and jasmine tea, presented tableside like a fine wine. It was jaw-droppingly good, and my friend and I could happily have spent the afternoon ordering nothing else.


After an amuse-bouche, the set works through seven courses, starting with a steamed dim sum selection crowned with caviar.


The deep-fried course pairs a crab roe puff wrapped in impossibly fine radish shreds with a scallion and wild mushroom spring roll finished with foie gras mousse.

A double-boiled yellow fungus mushroom soup with Chinese cabbage, cordyceps flowers, and dried scallops follows, all clean, deep flavour.

The dish of the meal for me was the steamed crab claw dumpling with cuttlefish and morel mushroom, and I’d order it again without hesitation.

Fried rice with shrimp, scallops, and crispy garlic brings the savoury courses home.

Dessert, a chilled mango and sago cream with pomelo, was the ideal finish in the Bangkok heat, chased by petit fours and warm egg tarts.


Café Madeleine
Café Madeleine, the estate’s patisserie, is worth an afternoon stop even if you’re staying elsewhere in the city.

The counters are stacked with laminated pastries and entremets almost too pretty to eat. The signature iced coffee arrives with a madeleine on the side, best enjoyed on the terrace near the café’s much-photographed pink bicycle.
Four Seasons Bangkok – Breakfast
Breakfast is served at Riva del Fiume, the Italian restaurant beside the pool, from 6:30am, and it’s included for two when you book through Preferred Partner or Prince Collection.

The space is a looker in its own right, with arched corridors hung with line art, a wall of wine, and a buffet that seems to stretch the length of the building.



Most of the seating is in the dining room, where marble tables line leather banquettes beneath high ceilings.



There’s also a garden terrace and a handful of riverside tables that go first, so arrive early if you want the water.


I’ve eaten a lot of hotel breakfasts, and this spread is comfortably in my top tier. It’s less a buffet than a food hall.
The centrepiece is a gold-tiled, wood-fired oven turning out mini pizzas crowned with soft eggs and za’atar flatbreads all morning.



The griddle station stamps pancakes with the Four Seasons tree and turns out a pandan and coconut French toast that I’m still thinking about.



The bakery corner alone would justify the trip downstairs. Almond croissants, pain au chocolat, babka, brioche, and muffins line up next to loaves cut to order.
House-made jams and spreads sit in stone mortars beside the toast station.

The cold section runs from a full cheese board and hand-folded mortadella to cured fish, tomato carpaccio, and a salad bar with labneh and guacamole.
Fruit gets the full treatment too, with mango, dragon fruit, and pineapple sliced to order, plus fresh-pressed juices in every colour.
Then comes the part that won me over completely, a full Thai and Chinese line-up. Har gow, siu mai, and bao steam away next to patongko, sticky rice parcels in pandan leaves, pork skewers, and a cast-iron pot of pad thai.
My favourite discovery, though, was the pad thai. A cast-iron pot of it first thing in the morning, with a river view, is a breakfast habit I could get used to.
The hot line covers the Western classics, with bacon, sausages, glazed salmon, and a made-to-order egg counter.



There’s also a full à la carte menu on top of the buffet, and the eggs benedict held its own against the spread behind it.

On departure morning, the team sent out a personalized fruit plate wishing me a safe flight, complete with a hand-drawn elephant. It’s the kind of small, unprompted touch that separates good service from memorable service.


Four Seasons Bangkok – Other Facilities
Beyond the restaurants, the estate packs in a full day’s worth of facilities, from the riverfront pool to a fitness centre that puts most gyms to shame.
The Pool
The main pool is a stunner, descending in tiers toward the river with in-water loungers and an infinity edge that seems to pour straight into the Chao Phraya.



Mature rain trees shade parts of the deck, and cabanas line the far end.


Now for my main critique of the stay. By around 2pm, the pool deck was properly packed, which isn’t the serene scene you picture when booking a hotel at this level.
A number of sunbeds also sit in full sun with no umbrellas, which feels like an easy fix. Some shade, or even a simple reservation system for peak hours, would go a long way.
Serious swimmers are better served at the separate lap pool beside the fitness centre, which stayed quiet throughout my visit.

Fitness Centre
The fitness centre is superb, a long, light-filled hall of Technogym equipment where the treadmills face the lap pool through floor-to-ceiling glass.



There’s a dedicated stretching corner with yoga mats, Hyperice recovery tools on hand, and even an ice bath, which I’ll admit I wasn’t brave enough to test.


Thai Cultural Activities
The hotel runs complimentary daily Thai cultural activities, and I joined the garland-making class. I was the only adult male in the room, but threading jasmine and roses into a phuang malai, I felt like a kid again. That was a great feeling, honestly, even if the garland turned out far harder to make than it looks.




Kids’ Club
Families are well looked after too, with a whimsical kids’ club styled like a miniature Thai village.



Urban Wellness Centre
The Urban Wellness Centre rounds out the estate, with a full spa, a salon, and marble changing rooms. I didn’t manage to fit in a treatment on this trip, but it’s near the top of my list for next time.


Conclusion
The Four Seasons Hotel Bangkok at Chao Phraya River earns its reputation. The design is extraordinary, the service was personal and thoughtful from the welcome iced tea to the hand-drawn elephant at breakfast, and the shuttle boat turns the location’s biggest weakness into something close to a feature.
My gripes are real but fixable. The afternoon pool crowds and the shadeless sunbeds are operational issues rather than flaws in the hotel itself, and they weren’t enough to keep this stay from a perfect 5 out of 5.
If there’s one thing this stay drove home, it’s that Thailand’s hospitality really is in a class of its own. The warmth here is effortless and everywhere you turn, and honestly, it’s almost a problem now, because my bar for every hotel I check into next has been quietly raised far too high. 😅
Would I return? In a heartbeat, though Bangkok’s luxury hotel scene is so strong that the temptation to try somewhere new always looms. If you value design, riverside calm, and a breakfast worth waking up for over shopping-mall proximity, this is the Bangkok hotel to book, ideally through a Preferred Partner booking so breakfast and the property credit come along for the ride.
This story originally appeared on princeoftravel
