De Bangkok à Prachuap Khiri Khan en train
by Wseesw
This discussion is in French, the community’s main language.
Original post
bonjour
je fais le golf de Thaïlande dans 1 mois et je voulais savoir exactement comment aller de kaosan road a prachap kirikan nous serons 2 adultes et 2 ados de 13 et 16 ans
ensuite nous pensons aller a koh phangan
merci pour vos info
Bonjour :
Train Sprinter qui part vers 7H30/8H de la gare de Hualumpong de Bangkok ( reservation obligatoire ) et arrive à Prachuap dans l' apres midi . Voie unique , prévoir une heure de retard en général.
Sinon : bus fréquents depuis la gare routière en banlieue Ouest de Bangkok. Attention demander à aller à Prachuap meme car il y a des bus qui desservent des destinations encore plus au sud et qui risquent de vous deposer en bordure de la Highway qui passe deux kms à l' ouest de Prachuap.
Ensuite vous descendez vers Chumphon ville proche des embarcadères pour les iles .
Train Sprinter qui part vers 7H30/8H de la gare de Hualumpong de Bangkok ( reservation obligatoire ) et arrive à Prachuap dans l' apres midi . Voie unique , prévoir une heure de retard en général.
Sinon : bus fréquents depuis la gare routière en banlieue Ouest de Bangkok. Attention demander à aller à Prachuap meme car il y a des bus qui desservent des destinations encore plus au sud et qui risquent de vous deposer en bordure de la Highway qui passe deux kms à l' ouest de Prachuap.
Ensuite vous descendez vers Chumphon ville proche des embarcadères pour les iles .
En bus pour remonter de Prachuap sur Bangkok il faut 5 heures de route suivant les embouteillages. Puis taxi pour rejoindre l'hotel .
Mais pour descendre dans le sud je prefere y aller en train .
salut
j ai fait en bus bangkok (sai tai, south terminal) prachuap, le bus m a effectivement laissé sur la highway ou il n y avait qu un seul mototaxi qui attendait pas forcément pratique si vous arrivez a 4
si tu arrives a reserver le train c est plus sympa tu arrives a 2 pas a pied de la plage et du coin ou il y a tous les hébergements (toujours tout droit au bout c est la mer) sinon les minibus en général te laisse a la gare routiére de prachuap qui n est pas loin non plus
passez le bonjour aux langurs de ma part 😉
askatasuna
Bonjour,
Oui il y a bien des minivans qui partent de Victory monument pour Prachuap. Je l'ai d'ailleurs personnellement fait comme ça en solo en 2012. Mais dans votre cas, à quatre, j'opterais pour le bus. Il faut alors se rendre au Southern Terminal à Bangkok. C'est un terminal assez excentré, mais pas non plus galère pour s'y rendre. Le bus est finalement plus rapide que le minivan pour aller à Prachuap Khiri Khan. Mais avec les possibles embouteillages sur les routes on ne sait jamais. Le minivan reste une bonne alternative certe, mais il présente parfois 3 inconvénients bien connus: 1. Certains chauffeurs conduisent comme des dingues. Ca peut faire rire au début, mais sur 300km c'est usant voire pénible. 2. Le manque de place pour les bagages. La taille du coffre n'étant pas adaptée au nombre de places du véhicule, vous imaginez la gageure avec 15 passagers et leurs bagages 🏴☠️. Le chauffeur et la compagnie qui l'emploie prennent un maximum de passagers pour la rentabilité du trajet à défaut du confort du client. 3. Certains minivans circulent avec des amortisseurs en fin de vie. Quand on est à l'arrière, il vaut mieux ne pas avoir de problème de dos si vous voyez ce que je veux dire.
A quatre c'est plus prudent de réserver un bus à l'avance. Mais comme il y en a toutes les heures au départ du Southern Terminal, vous pouvez aussi tenter votre chance le jour même.
Sinon, Prachuap est un excellent choix. Le soir les restos de poissons, coquillages et crustacés sur le front de mer sont un régal.
Infos complémentaires: 12go.asia/...ap-khiri-khan?z=1332 www.globaltravelmate.com/...rn-bus-terminal.html
Oui il y a bien des minivans qui partent de Victory monument pour Prachuap. Je l'ai d'ailleurs personnellement fait comme ça en solo en 2012. Mais dans votre cas, à quatre, j'opterais pour le bus. Il faut alors se rendre au Southern Terminal à Bangkok. C'est un terminal assez excentré, mais pas non plus galère pour s'y rendre. Le bus est finalement plus rapide que le minivan pour aller à Prachuap Khiri Khan. Mais avec les possibles embouteillages sur les routes on ne sait jamais. Le minivan reste une bonne alternative certe, mais il présente parfois 3 inconvénients bien connus: 1. Certains chauffeurs conduisent comme des dingues. Ca peut faire rire au début, mais sur 300km c'est usant voire pénible. 2. Le manque de place pour les bagages. La taille du coffre n'étant pas adaptée au nombre de places du véhicule, vous imaginez la gageure avec 15 passagers et leurs bagages 🏴☠️. Le chauffeur et la compagnie qui l'emploie prennent un maximum de passagers pour la rentabilité du trajet à défaut du confort du client. 3. Certains minivans circulent avec des amortisseurs en fin de vie. Quand on est à l'arrière, il vaut mieux ne pas avoir de problème de dos si vous voyez ce que je veux dire.
A quatre c'est plus prudent de réserver un bus à l'avance. Mais comme il y en a toutes les heures au départ du Southern Terminal, vous pouvez aussi tenter votre chance le jour même.
Sinon, Prachuap est un excellent choix. Le soir les restos de poissons, coquillages et crustacés sur le front de mer sont un régal.
Infos complémentaires: 12go.asia/...ap-khiri-khan?z=1332 www.globaltravelmate.com/...rn-bus-terminal.html
Pour Prachuap, le bus est la meilleure option . Sécurité , rapidité .
Bonjour, Désolée mais on ne peux pas dire que pour la sécurité la meilleur option soit le bus, mais dédramatisons tout de suite le bus c'est le mieux pour Prachuap. Le train c'est sympa mais très longgggg
Bonjour, Désolée mais on ne peux pas dire que pour la sécurité la meilleur option soit le bus, mais dédramatisons tout de suite le bus c'est le mieux pour Prachuap. Le train c'est sympa mais très longgggg
on partage le même avis 😉🙂
Comme toast75 je ne prends le minivan que si je n'ai pas d'autres solutions (pas de place pour les bagages, chauffeur imprudent...) même si les bus n'offrent pas de garantie de sécurité
Pour pratchuap j'avais pris un bus qui m'avait bien déposé en centre ville, il doit donc y avoir une compagnie qui assure cet arrêt en ville.
ma vie est mon voyage
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Bonjour à tous·tes,
Je prévois un voyage uniquement en train ou transports en commun sur toute l'Italie au mois d'octobre (en espérant qu'il fasse encore beau !).
J'aimerai voir évidemment certaines destinations touristiques, mais aussi sortir un peu des sentiers battus, et j'espère trouver de l'aide ici ? Je ne compte pas m'éterniser dans les villes.
En partant du Nord, j'aimerai faire le lac de Côme ou d'Orta ; passer par les Cinq Terres pour un peu de randonnée, quelques jours à Naples, à Rome, puis descendre en Sicile.
Qu'en pensez-vous ?
Merci pour votre aide ! 🙂
Je prévois un voyage uniquement en train ou transports en commun sur toute l'Italie au mois d'octobre (en espérant qu'il fasse encore beau !).
J'aimerai voir évidemment certaines destinations touristiques, mais aussi sortir un peu des sentiers battus, et j'espère trouver de l'aide ici ? Je ne compte pas m'éterniser dans les villes.
En partant du Nord, j'aimerai faire le lac de Côme ou d'Orta ; passer par les Cinq Terres pour un peu de randonnée, quelques jours à Naples, à Rome, puis descendre en Sicile.
Qu'en pensez-vous ?
Merci pour votre aide ! 🙂
Hi there,
I’ll be traveling to Japan this coming August. We’ve finalized our itinerary and booked our flight tickets. Now I’m at the stage of buying train tickets for the few segments we’ll need to cover:
Tokyo - Hakone
Hakone - Kyoto
Kyoto - Osaka
Osaka - Tokyo
Here are my questions:
a) Is it possible to buy train tickets for these segments from Canada?
b) If so, which website should I use to do this?
c) And if it is possible, will we be able to print our tickets from Canada?
d) If it’s not possible, where in Tokyo should I go to buy these tickets when I arrive?
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Thanks a bunch,
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Hi everyone, I wanted to take the Paris-Berlin overnight train with a sleeper berth, the new service operated by European Sleepers.
24/05/2026 17:45 Paris-Nord (actually 16:00 from Paris Bercy Seine) -> 25/05/2026 9:59 (actually 7:30 in Berlin) 05/06/2026 18:31 Berlin (actually 20:00) -> 06/06/2026 10:00 Paris Nord (actually 12:30) Part of the journey was operated by bus instead of the promised overnight train.
For 2 people: 340 € round trip
A total disaster. Never again. I was really looking forward to taking the overnight train, but we faced last-minute changes and truly unpleasant travel conditions. Here are the details:
1) 2 days before departure: email announcing a change of departure station for the outbound trip—Bercy Seine bus station instead of Gare du Nord. 2) Change of schedule: 4:00 PM from Bercy instead of 5:45 PM from Gare du Nord. 3) Change of transport mode!! A bus from Paris to Brussels, then an overnight train from Brussels to Berlin. No functional toilets on the bus. No children under 4 allowed on the bus. 4) On the sleeper train at 9:30 PM: no functional toilets in our carriage, so we had to go to other carriages, even in the middle of the night, to find working ones. 5) The onboard staff, though very friendly, were as lost as we were. In particular, they didn’t know how to handle the lower berths, so people using them had less space (armrests and backrests). Berth numbers weren’t respected, so some passengers had to move. The staff also didn’t know who was supposed to join the compartment during the journey. 6) Arrival at 7:30 AM in Berlin instead of 10:00 AM. No arrival announcement. Passengers had to search for staff to get breakfast and ended up with just a coffee (breakfast = 15 €, not bad for just a coffee). 7) Return trip: drastic schedule change announced by email on 26/05/2026—departure at 7:30 PM instead of 6:30 PM, with arrival between 12:00 PM and 1:00 PM in Paris instead of 10:00 AM. No change in transport mode announced. 8) Change in transport mode announced by email on the same day (05/06/2026)!! Overnight train from Brussels to Berlin, then a bus from Paris to Brussels. No functional toilets on the bus. Children under 4 banned from the bus, and families in this situation were asked to find another way—after being notified the same day. 9) The overnight train arrived at Berlin station with a 30-minute delay on top of its initial delay (scheduled for 6:31 PM, then 7:30 PM, finally arriving at 8:00 PM). The heating was blasting in the compartment with no way to turn it off. No functional toilets in the carriage. From that point on, customer service stopped responding to my messages. 10) Woken up at 5:00 AM with an announcement in all carriages about arrival in Liège. 11) Woken up again at 6:00 AM to be told we’d arrive in Brussels at 7:00 AM. 12) Arrival in Brussels at 7:00 AM and a one-hour wait for the bus to Paris. No functional toilets on the bus. 13) Arrival at Paris Nord at 12:30 PM, so 2.5 hours late compared to the originally scheduled time. 14) The overnight trains used are very old—I recognized the carriages from 20 years ago!! No functional power outlets, no Wi-Fi, no air conditioning. Five people per compartment is a bit cramped, but I consider these conditions expected (especially the air conditioning), so I’m not complaining about that. There’s already plenty to gripe about with the travel conditions.
I have little hope of getting even a partial refund. Customer service emails acknowledge the discomfort but only offer to reimburse the cost of a coffee on board if we send them the receipt... a bit weak.
I’m sharing this experience in the hope it might help others.
24/05/2026 17:45 Paris-Nord (actually 16:00 from Paris Bercy Seine) -> 25/05/2026 9:59 (actually 7:30 in Berlin) 05/06/2026 18:31 Berlin (actually 20:00) -> 06/06/2026 10:00 Paris Nord (actually 12:30) Part of the journey was operated by bus instead of the promised overnight train.
For 2 people: 340 € round trip
A total disaster. Never again. I was really looking forward to taking the overnight train, but we faced last-minute changes and truly unpleasant travel conditions. Here are the details:
1) 2 days before departure: email announcing a change of departure station for the outbound trip—Bercy Seine bus station instead of Gare du Nord. 2) Change of schedule: 4:00 PM from Bercy instead of 5:45 PM from Gare du Nord. 3) Change of transport mode!! A bus from Paris to Brussels, then an overnight train from Brussels to Berlin. No functional toilets on the bus. No children under 4 allowed on the bus. 4) On the sleeper train at 9:30 PM: no functional toilets in our carriage, so we had to go to other carriages, even in the middle of the night, to find working ones. 5) The onboard staff, though very friendly, were as lost as we were. In particular, they didn’t know how to handle the lower berths, so people using them had less space (armrests and backrests). Berth numbers weren’t respected, so some passengers had to move. The staff also didn’t know who was supposed to join the compartment during the journey. 6) Arrival at 7:30 AM in Berlin instead of 10:00 AM. No arrival announcement. Passengers had to search for staff to get breakfast and ended up with just a coffee (breakfast = 15 €, not bad for just a coffee). 7) Return trip: drastic schedule change announced by email on 26/05/2026—departure at 7:30 PM instead of 6:30 PM, with arrival between 12:00 PM and 1:00 PM in Paris instead of 10:00 AM. No change in transport mode announced. 8) Change in transport mode announced by email on the same day (05/06/2026)!! Overnight train from Brussels to Berlin, then a bus from Paris to Brussels. No functional toilets on the bus. Children under 4 banned from the bus, and families in this situation were asked to find another way—after being notified the same day. 9) The overnight train arrived at Berlin station with a 30-minute delay on top of its initial delay (scheduled for 6:31 PM, then 7:30 PM, finally arriving at 8:00 PM). The heating was blasting in the compartment with no way to turn it off. No functional toilets in the carriage. From that point on, customer service stopped responding to my messages. 10) Woken up at 5:00 AM with an announcement in all carriages about arrival in Liège. 11) Woken up again at 6:00 AM to be told we’d arrive in Brussels at 7:00 AM. 12) Arrival in Brussels at 7:00 AM and a one-hour wait for the bus to Paris. No functional toilets on the bus. 13) Arrival at Paris Nord at 12:30 PM, so 2.5 hours late compared to the originally scheduled time. 14) The overnight trains used are very old—I recognized the carriages from 20 years ago!! No functional power outlets, no Wi-Fi, no air conditioning. Five people per compartment is a bit cramped, but I consider these conditions expected (especially the air conditioning), so I’m not complaining about that. There’s already plenty to gripe about with the travel conditions.
I have little hope of getting even a partial refund. Customer service emails acknowledge the discomfort but only offer to reimburse the cost of a coffee on board if we send them the receipt... a bit weak.
I’m sharing this experience in the hope it might help others.
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Thanks!
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Next, since I’ll be arriving at dawn in Bangkok, I’ve planned to spend 2 days in Kanchanaburi. What’s the most convenient way to get there—bus or train? And if you know any companies or websites, that’d be great.
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Hi there,
I’d love to know if any of you have recently eaten on the overnight train from Bangkok to Chiang Mai.
We’ve always ordered food on the train, and it was really good (and super convenient). But in 2022, we ended up feeling like total idiots (with our 4-year-old daughter...) when we boarded the train only to find out that this service was no longer available... (It was the first time we’d traveled right after COVID.)
That’s also when we saw once again how kind Thai people are—they all offered to share their food with us, even though we were mortified. In the end, we managed to buy some instant noodles, which was better than nothing. Anyway, that’s the little story behind it.
In the following years, we’ve always brought our own meals.
I’ve read online that meal trays are back in service (could you confirm this, please?), but that the quality is really poor. I’ve also seen multiple reports that, even though you can eat well everywhere in Thailand, the train meal was the worst food travelers had during their trip...
Could you give me a recent opinion on this? We’ll be departing from Krung Thep Aphiwat Central Station—do you know if there’s anywhere to buy a meal there before boarding the train?
Thanks so much for your help, and have a great Sunday!
I’d love to know if any of you have recently eaten on the overnight train from Bangkok to Chiang Mai.
We’ve always ordered food on the train, and it was really good (and super convenient). But in 2022, we ended up feeling like total idiots (with our 4-year-old daughter...) when we boarded the train only to find out that this service was no longer available... (It was the first time we’d traveled right after COVID.)
That’s also when we saw once again how kind Thai people are—they all offered to share their food with us, even though we were mortified. In the end, we managed to buy some instant noodles, which was better than nothing. Anyway, that’s the little story behind it.
In the following years, we’ve always brought our own meals.
I’ve read online that meal trays are back in service (could you confirm this, please?), but that the quality is really poor. I’ve also seen multiple reports that, even though you can eat well everywhere in Thailand, the train meal was the worst food travelers had during their trip...
Could you give me a recent opinion on this? We’ll be departing from Krung Thep Aphiwat Central Station—do you know if there’s anywhere to buy a meal there before boarding the train?
Thanks so much for your help, and have a great Sunday!
Hi there,
We’re heading to Thailand in February 2026 and we’d like to take the overnight train from Bangkok to Chiang Mai. Can we book two first-class tickets? I’m only seeing second-class options.
Thanks
We’re heading to Thailand in February 2026 and we’d like to take the overnight train from Bangkok to Chiang Mai. Can we book two first-class tickets? I’m only seeing second-class options.
Thanks
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Thanks in advance! 😊
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There are four of us, and we've already planned stops in HANOI / DONG HOI / HUE.
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Mounette74
Hi everyone,
I’m heading to Japan for the second time with my 20-year-old son. During our first trip, we spent two weeks in Tokyo and Kyoto (plus the surrounding areas). This time, we’re planning to stay in Tokyo for at least 4-5 days and then head to the island of Naoshima. I’m looking for suggestions and advice: Is getting to Naoshima from Tokyo complicated? If so, do you have any recommendations for a stopover somewhere? Given that we’d prefer not to move every day, we’d rather settle in one place and then explore on day trips... Do you think it’s possible to do something like this: 5 nights in Tokyo (Shinjuku) 3 nights in Kyoto 2 nights in Naoshima (or is one night enough??) and if one night is enough, where could I spend a second night on the way back to Tokyo? 2 nights in Tokyo (I’d love your advice on staying in a different neighborhood—last time we stayed near Ueno Park)—keeping in mind we’re flying out of Narita.
I’m considering maybe skipping Kyoto, which I love but has apparently become *very* touristy... Not really keen on Osaka... since we’ll already have done Tokyo as our "big city." I’d prefer towns where nature is present... (a bit like Kyoto, which offers all that...)
For info, we’ll be traveling by train. Thanks in advance for all your suggestions and help!
I have one last little question: Is cash still widely used in Japan, or not at all anymore?
Thanks so much,
Karine
I’m heading to Japan for the second time with my 20-year-old son. During our first trip, we spent two weeks in Tokyo and Kyoto (plus the surrounding areas). This time, we’re planning to stay in Tokyo for at least 4-5 days and then head to the island of Naoshima. I’m looking for suggestions and advice: Is getting to Naoshima from Tokyo complicated? If so, do you have any recommendations for a stopover somewhere? Given that we’d prefer not to move every day, we’d rather settle in one place and then explore on day trips... Do you think it’s possible to do something like this: 5 nights in Tokyo (Shinjuku) 3 nights in Kyoto 2 nights in Naoshima (or is one night enough??) and if one night is enough, where could I spend a second night on the way back to Tokyo? 2 nights in Tokyo (I’d love your advice on staying in a different neighborhood—last time we stayed near Ueno Park)—keeping in mind we’re flying out of Narita.
I’m considering maybe skipping Kyoto, which I love but has apparently become *very* touristy... Not really keen on Osaka... since we’ll already have done Tokyo as our "big city." I’d prefer towns where nature is present... (a bit like Kyoto, which offers all that...)
For info, we’ll be traveling by train. Thanks in advance for all your suggestions and help!
I have one last little question: Is cash still widely used in Japan, or not at all anymore?
Thanks so much,
Karine
Hi everyone,
We’re planning this *very* last-minute—I know! But we’d love to spend 4 days soon (within the next 10–12 days) on a city getaway with our young adult kids. Ideally by train, and for this short trip, we’d prefer not to spend more than 4–6 hours in transit, leaving from Lausanne (Switzerland). We’ve been considering Milan, Strasbourg, or Freiburg im Breisgau, but I’ll admit I’m feeling a bit lost...
Venice was our original plan, but the connection changes in Domodossola or Milan are making the travel time longer this year.
It’s peak summer, so there’ll be tourists and it’ll likely be hot, but oh well...
Any suggestions? We love wandering around, taking photos, exploring cities on foot, trying out restaurants, and keeping things low-key.
Thanks to anyone who wants to chime in! :o)
We’re planning this *very* last-minute—I know! But we’d love to spend 4 days soon (within the next 10–12 days) on a city getaway with our young adult kids. Ideally by train, and for this short trip, we’d prefer not to spend more than 4–6 hours in transit, leaving from Lausanne (Switzerland). We’ve been considering Milan, Strasbourg, or Freiburg im Breisgau, but I’ll admit I’m feeling a bit lost...
Venice was our original plan, but the connection changes in Domodossola or Milan are making the travel time longer this year.
It’s peak summer, so there’ll be tourists and it’ll likely be hot, but oh well...
Any suggestions? We love wandering around, taking photos, exploring cities on foot, trying out restaurants, and keeping things low-key.
Thanks to anyone who wants to chime in! :o)






