
A 2-star hotel in the heart of the Old City, a short walk from Chiang Mai Gate and Wat Chedi Luang, with air-conditioned rooms, a leafy garden and free private parking.
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Anodard Hotel Chiang Mai is a long-standing 2-star hotel set right inside the walls of the Old City, on Ratchamankha Road and just a few minutes' walk from Chiang Mai Gate. Its position is the strong suit guests return to most often, scoring an excellent 8.5 for location, with the moat, the ancient gates and the city's great temples all within easy reach on foot.
This is a practical, no-frills address rather than a boutique stay. Rooms are simple and generously sized at 28 m², all air-conditioned and laid with warm parquet floors, each with a private bathroom, a seating area and a satellite TV. A 24-hour front desk, a lift, daily housekeeping and free private parking on site round out the basics.
Beyond the rooms there's a quiet garden to sit out in, a shared lounge and a traditional public bath, while the wide moat and the southern gate market are right on the doorstep. It suits independent travellers, couples and families who want a central, budget-friendly base for exploring Chiang Mai on foot.

Anodard Hotel Chiang Mai offers four room types, all sharing the same roomy 28 m² footprint, so the choice comes down to the bed layout and how many of you are travelling. There are doubles for couples, twins with two single beds for friends or colleagues, a quadruple that sleeps up to four, and one fan-cooled twin for those happy to trade air conditioning for a lower rate.
Every room is finished with parquet floors and comes with a private bathroom with shower and free toiletries, a satellite TV and a wardrobe; most also have a small seating area. The look is simple and functional rather than designer, in keeping with the hotel's budget-friendly character, and all rooms are non-smoking. Families are well catered for, with the quadruple and the twin layouts giving extra flexibility for children.




Anodard Hotel Chiang Mai keeps things practical, focusing on the essentials that matter for a city stay. The front desk is staffed around the clock and backed by luggage storage, a safety deposit box, lockers and daily housekeeping, while a lift serves the upper floors. Free WiFi reaches every corner of the property, and free private parking on site is a genuine bonus inside the walled Old City, where space is tight.
Communal areas give the hotel a bit of character beyond the rooms: a quiet garden, a shared lounge and a traditional Thai public bath. There's a wake-up service, laundry, ironing and a fax and photocopying service for anyone working on the road. Each room is air-conditioned (bar the fan-cooled twin), non-smoking and laid with parquet floors, with a flat-screen satellite TV, a telephone, a wardrobe and a private bathroom stocked with free toiletries and a hairdryer. Safety is well covered too, with 24-hour security, CCTV in common areas, fire extinguishers and key-card access. Please note the outdoor swimming pool is currently closed for renovation.
Anodard Hotel Chiang Mai sits on Ratchamankha Road, well inside the Old City — the roughly 1.6 km square ringed by a moat and the remains of ancient walls, founded in 1296 by King Mangrai as the capital of the Lanna kingdom. The hotel is in the southern half of the square, a few minutes' walk from Chiang Mai Gate (about 460 m), and guests consistently rate the location an excellent 8.5: most of the city's headline sights are within walking distance, with no need for taxis day to day.
The single best reason to be here is Wat Chedi Luang, the towering 14th-century chedi partly toppled by the 1545 earthquake, which is only about a 3-minute walk away and hosts the popular "monk chats". From there it's an easy stroll on to Wat Phra Singh, the city's most revered temple, roughly 1.3 km west along Ratchadamnoen Road. Tha Pae Gate, the eastern gate and the hub of the famous Sunday Walking Street, is around 480 m to the east.
Being by the south gate puts you right next to two big street-food draws. The Chiang Mai Gate market runs daily, roughly 4pm to 10pm, just outside the wall, while the Saturday Walking Street unfolds along Wua Lai Road — the silver-craft street immediately south of the gate — every Saturday from about 4pm to 11pm. To get around you really only need your feet; for longer hops, flag down a songthaew (the shared red pick-up taxis) or use a ride-hailing app.
The best time to visit is November to February, when the weather is cool and dry; November also brings the spectacular Yi Peng and Loy Krathong lantern festivals. It's worth avoiding March and April, when fierce heat and haze from agricultural burning — the "burning season" — settle over the valley. Chiang Mai International Airport is about 2.5 km away, roughly a 10-minute drive, and the railway station is around 2.9 km out.
