Ayutthaya City Park - the province's only large mall - the riverside Hua Ro night market and old-town Chao Phrom day market, the Saturday walking street on Bang Lan Road, and where residents furnish a rental and stock a kitchen.
Ayutthaya shops on a small-town scale compared with Bangkok or the bigger regional hubs, and that is part of its appeal. One large modern mall - Ayutthaya City Park, with a Robinson department store and a Lotus's hypermarket - covers most one-stop shopping needs, while the historic island runs on older rhythms: the riverside Hua Ro night market for cheap evening food, the daytime Chao Phrom fresh market, and a Saturday-evening walking street on Bang Lan Road near Chantharakasem Palace. Here is how shopping breaks down for residents, from the mall to the markets to furnishing a rental.
Ayutthaya's only large modern mall, City Park sits at the junction of Highway 32 and Rojana Road on the edge of town and anchors the province's mainstream shopping - a Robinson department store, a Lotus's hypermarket, an SFX cinema, banks, a food court and several hundred smaller shops covering fashion, mobile phones and electronics. For anyone living in Ayutthaya it is the default one-stop trip for clothing, appliances, a big grocery run or a film, and it is easiest reached by car, motorbike or Grab since it sits outside the walkable old town.
The department-store anchor of City Park, Robinson covers mid-range Thai and international fashion, beauty, shoes and homeware across several floors, with mobile phones and IT accessories concentrated on the upper level. It is the closest Ayutthaya gets to a full department-store experience and is where most residents go for anything not covered by the old town's small independent shops.
Ayutthaya City Park profileAll malls & markets
A long-running evening street-food and produce market by the river near Hua Ro pier, popular with residents for cheap, fast Thai dinners, fresh fruit and household basics. It is more a daily-life market than a tourist stop, running most evenings rather than on a single weekly night.
Ayutthaya's weekend walking street runs along Bang Lan Road in the historic island, near Chantharakasem Palace - closed to traffic on Saturday evenings and filled with food stalls, some handicrafts and live music. It is the closest thing the old town has to Chiang Mai-style walking-street shopping, on a much smaller, more local scale.
The old town's principal fresh market, near the Chao Phrom pier and bus terminal, sells produce, meat, dried goods and prepared Thai food to locals every day. It is the cheapest and most authentic place to shop for everyday food inside the historic island.
A recreated floating market with boat vendors, historical-costume rental and riverside stalls aimed primarily at day-trippers and tourists rather than daily shopping - worth knowing about as a weekend outing, but not where residents do their regular grocery run.
Lotus's inside City Park and a Big C on the edge of town cover the bulk of grocery and household shopping, with 7-Eleven and Family Mart branches throughout the old town and newer neighbourhoods for daily top-ups. Imported and Western items are more limited than in Bangkok, so long-stay expats occasionally combine an Ayutthaya shop with a Bangkok supply run.
HomePro and Global House branches along the roads leading out of town toward Bangkok cover furniture, mattresses, appliances and hardware for anyone furnishing a rental. Selection is smaller than in Bangkok's big-box stores, but delivery is available and covers the main residential areas.
Small shops around the historic park and near Wat Mahathat sell Ayutthaya-themed souvenirs, textiles and religious items aimed mostly at day-trippers; it is a pleasant browse but not a serious furniture or home-goods source.
A quick guide to the best place to shop for each kind of purchase as a resident or long-stay renter.
| Buying | Go to | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Fashion, department-store & mobile shopping | Robinson & City Park mall | The only full department-store experience in Ayutthaya |
| Everyday groceries | Lotus's (City Park), Big C, 7-Eleven | Lotus's and Big C for a proper shop; 7-Eleven for daily basics |
| Furniture & appliances for a rental | HomePro, Global House (Rojana Road) | Smaller range than Bangkok but delivers locally |
| Cheap daily food & fresh produce | Chao Phrom Market, Hua Ro Night Market | Best value and most authentic daily food shopping |
| Weekend browsing & street food | Bang Lan Road Walking Street (Saturday) | Old-town walking street with food, crafts and music |
Yes - Ayutthaya City Park, at the junction of Highway 32 and Rojana Road on the edge of town, is the province's only large modern mall, anchored by a Robinson department store, a Lotus's hypermarket and an SFX cinema. It is the default one-stop shopping trip for residents and is best reached by car, motorbike or Grab.
Chao Phrom Market near the old town's bus terminal is the main daily fresh market for produce, meat and prepared food, while the Hua Ro Night Market by the river is the go-to spot for cheap evening street food. Both are far cheaper than the supermarkets inside City Park.
The Bang Lan Road Walking Street, in the historic island near Chantharakasem Palace, runs on Saturday evenings with food stalls, some handicrafts and live music - a smaller, more local version of the walking streets found in cities like Chiang Mai.
HomePro and Global House branches on the roads leading out of the old town toward Bangkok cover furniture, mattresses, appliances and hardware, with local delivery. Selection is more limited than in Bangkok's big-box stores.
It is a recreated floating market built primarily for day-trippers and tourists - boat vendors, costume rental and riverside stalls - rather than a place residents do their regular shopping. For everyday groceries, Chao Phrom Market or City Park's Lotus's are the practical choices.
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Hero photo by Tony Wu on Pexels. General information only; confirm current opening hours, locations and prices with individual venues.