REVIEW · BANGKOK
Bangkok: Bike and Longtail Boat Tour with Lunch
Book on Viator →Operated by Candbike Bangkok Tours · Bookable on Viator
That bike-and-boat combo hits the sweet spot.
This tour mixes real Bangkok backstreets with a calm cruise through Thonburi’s klongs, so you get the city on two speeds: pedal power, then slow river life. You’ll visit quieter temple areas like Wat Khun Chan and Wat Nakprok, plus neighborhood stops that feel far from the usual tourist route.
Two things I really like: the small group size (up to 8) and the switch from bike to a private longtail boat. Guides such as Guitar and Tommy are praised for friendly, attentive guiding, and you’ll make frequent local stops without feeling rushed. One drawback to plan around: you do need solid bike balance—there are narrow lanes and some raised footpaths over water.
In This Review
- Key Highlights at a Glance
- Two Wheels, Then a Longtail: How the Tour Really Feels
- Price and Timing: Is $43.74 Worth It?
- Meeting at Candbike Bangkok Tours: Your Starting Point
- Talad Phlu: A Real-World Neighborhood Start
- Wat Khun Chan: A Temple Stop Along the Canals of Thonburi
- Bangkok Yai and the Longtail Boat Cruise Through Klongs
- Wat Nakprok: Thai and Chinese Spiritual Traditions in One Place
- Wutthakat: A Quiet Urban Oasis Between Old and New
- The Bike Part: Pace, Route Style, and What You Should Be Ready For
- Lunch at the Floating Market Area: Where the Day Winds Down
- Guides, Group Size, and Personal Attention
- Who Should Book This Bike and Longtail Tour
- Should You Book This Tour?
- FAQ
- FAQ
- How long is the Bangkok bike and longtail boat tour?
- What is the price per person?
- How many people are in each group?
- Is lunch included?
- What kind of boat ride is included?
- What stops are included during the tour?
- Are temple or other entries included?
- Is the bike ride difficult?
- Do you need to know how to ride a bike?
- What is the cancellation policy?
Key Highlights at a Glance

- Up to 8 guests: small-group feel, not a big bus tour.
- Bike + private longtail boat: land views in Thonburi, then calm canal scenery.
- Quiet temple complexes: Wat Khun Chan and Wat Nakprok are the standout spiritual stops.
- Local neighborhoods: Talad Phlu, Bangkok Yai, and Wutthakat bring you into everyday life.
- Lunch included after the ride: you’ll eat at the floating market area as part of the experience.
Two Wheels, Then a Longtail: How the Tour Really Feels

Bangkok can feel crowded fast. This tour changes the rhythm on purpose. You start in Thonburi by bicycle—flat routes, frequent stops, and time to look around—then you switch to a private longtail boat when you’re ready to slow down.
The best part is that you’re not just riding past sights. You’re moving through places that still work for locals: neighborhood lanes, canal-edge areas, and temple zones tucked along the water. Even if you’ve been to Bangkok before, this is the kind of itinerary that helps you see the city’s sides you normally miss.
And the guide matters. The experience is led by people like Guitar and Tommy, who get called out for being friendly and for bringing history and context without turning it into a lecture.
You can also read our reviews of more boat tours in Bangkok
Price and Timing: Is $43.74 Worth It?
At about $43.74 per person for roughly 4 hours, this tour’s value comes from stacking multiple experiences that are hard to coordinate on your own. You’re paying for bike time, a private longtail canal cruise, temple visits, and lunch—plus a guide who helps you navigate the “where do I go next?” moments.
The pricing also makes sense if you’re using the tour as your shortcut to Thonburi’s quieter corners. Getting between canals, temples, and local neighborhoods can take extra time by public transport or taxis. Here, the order is built-in.
One more plus: this tour is commonly booked about 40 days in advance, which usually means it stays in demand. That matters if you want a specific day and don’t want to gamble on last-minute availability.
Meeting at Candbike Bangkok Tours: Your Starting Point

You meet at Candbike Bangkok Tours, 373/1 Soi Somdet Phra Chao Tak Sin 8, Khwaeng Bukkhalo, Khet Thon Buri, Bangkok 10600. The tour notes that it’s near public transportation, which is helpful if you’re already in the area or you want an easy transit plan.
From that meeting point, the day runs like a guided loop: bike segments with small stops, then temple and canal time, then lunch. The tour ends back at the meeting point, so you’re not left figuring out how to get out afterward.
Talad Phlu: A Real-World Neighborhood Start

Before you even hit the temples, you’ll roll through Talad Phlu—one of Bangkok’s more authentic, food-famous neighborhoods. The area is known for its Chinese-Thai heritage, and the vibe here is about street life more than sightseeing.
Why this opening segment matters: it helps you get your bearings before you enter the quieter temple-and-canal zones. You also get a sense of how Thonburi communities shape their daily routines around water access, markets, and local commerce.
A practical tip: expect the route to feel “local.” Narrow lanes and everyday scenes are part of the point, so keep your camera ready but don’t rush the people-watching.
Wat Khun Chan: A Temple Stop Along the Canals of Thonburi

One of the best-known stops on this loop is Wat Khun Chan. You’ll spend about 15 minutes there, and the tour lists admission as free.
This is the kind of temple that works well for short visits. You get the visual impact and the sense of place without turning the whole day into a long sit-down. Since it’s along quieter canal areas in Thonburi, it also feels different from the big, headline temples people usually plan around.
What I’d watch for: look beyond the main buildings and notice the water-adjacent feel of the surroundings. That small shift in perspective helps you understand why these communities developed where they did.
You can also read our reviews of more cycling tours in Bangkok
Bangkok Yai and the Longtail Boat Cruise Through Klongs

After the bike segment, you hop aboard a private traditional longtail boat for a cruise through Thonburi’s klongs. The stop focuses on serene canal life, gliding past everyday waterfront scenes.
This is often where the tour “clicks” for people who were worried Bangkok would feel too fast or too chaotic. On the water, the city gets quieter. You can look longer. You don’t have to balance and pedal at the same time.
The cruise is described as about 1 hour, and the tour lists the canal cruise admission as free. During this part of the day, you’ll see wooden stilt houses, riverside shrines, and the kind of floating-related structures that make Thonburi feel like a living canal system—not just a backdrop.
Quick practical note: longtail boats can be a bit “active” underfoot. Bring confidence on steps and plan to stand or shift your position calmly while the boat moves.
Wat Nakprok: Thai and Chinese Spiritual Traditions in One Place

Next you’ll bike past Wat Nakprok, described as a lesser-known temple that blends Thai and Chinese spiritual traditions. This stop is valuable because it adds depth without demanding a huge time commitment.
Even when you’ve seen a lot of temples in Bangkok, mixed cultural styles can be a useful way to avoid “temple overload.” Here, the point is variety in religious expression—seen in the architecture and atmosphere—while still staying in the Thonburi side of the city.
If you like photos: you’ll probably want a little extra time here, even if the overall stop is brief. Don’t be afraid to ask your guide for a good angle or a quick explanation of what you’re seeing.
Wutthakat: A Quiet Urban Oasis Between Old and New

Between temple stops, you ride through Wutthakat, a neighborhood that’s often overlooked but offers a mix of local life and the city’s transition between older and newer Bangkok.
This segment matters because it’s the “in-between” that makes the tour feel like a journey, not a checklist. Wutthakat helps you understand how Thonburi’s character survives in smaller streets, even as Bangkok continues to expand.
If you’re sensitive to crowds, this kind of stop can feel like a relief. You’re not constantly dodging tour groups. You’re moving at a pace that lets local scenes register.
The Bike Part: Pace, Route Style, and What You Should Be Ready For
The tour runs at a leisurely pace with frequent stops at local, interesting destinations. There’s also a note that there are no hills and a flat ride is mentioned in reviews, which is great news if you’re thinking about trying this but hate steep climbs.
That said, you do need bike comfort. The route goes through narrow alleyways and includes raised footpaths over water, so balance matters. The tour also states that this activity isn’t suitable if you can’t ride a bike, and it notes limits for people with mobility impairments.
So I’d frame it like this: it’s not a hardcore cycling challenge, but it is an active walking-and-biking experience. If you’re steady on a bike and comfortable in tight spaces, you’ll be fine. If not, you’ll spend the day worrying instead of enjoying.
Lunch at the Floating Market Area: Where the Day Winds Down
Lunch is built into the experience. One highlight is that it happens around the floating market area afterward, and the food gets praised as amazing.
Why lunch fits this tour: it’s the payoff for all the small stops you’ve been doing. You’ve seen how local life works—markets, waterways, and neighborhood rhythms—and then you eat in the same general “real Bangkok” spirit.
Practical idea: go hungry, and don’t over-plan your next meal. This tour’s timing is designed so lunch lands while you’re still in the rhythm of the day.
Guides, Group Size, and Personal Attention
This isn’t a huge group operation. The tour caps at 8 travelers, which changes everything in a city where traffic and crowds can swallow your attention.
You’ll get time to ask questions and actually hear the explanations. Guides like Guitar and Tommy are specifically called out in feedback for being friendly and for paying attention, including sharing photos.
If you value conversation over “look-and-go,” small groups are a big deal. You’ll also feel less rushed during photos and stops.
Who Should Book This Bike and Longtail Tour
You should strongly consider this tour if:
- you want to see Bangkok from the Thonburi canal side, not just the main tourist arteries
- you can ride a bike comfortably and handle narrow lanes
- you like a guided mix of temples, neighborhoods, and local life
- you want a private longtail boat segment without the hassle of arranging it yourself
You should think twice if:
- you can’t ride a bike, or you’re not confident with balance on uneven or raised footpaths over water
- mobility limitations make bike travel tough
- you only want big, famous landmarks and long sightseeing stops
Should You Book This Tour?
I’d book it if you want an easy win: culture + canals + local neighborhoods in about four hours, with a small group and a guide who keeps things friendly rather than formal. The price is reasonable for what’s bundled, and the format (bike on land, longtail boat on water, lunch after) is the kind of plan that saves time and effort.
But if biking sounds stressful for you, don’t force it. This tour succeeds when you feel comfortable on the bicycle and can enjoy the narrow-street feel. Choose wisely, then go with the flow—because when you’re on the water, Bangkok gets calmer fast.
FAQ
FAQ
How long is the Bangkok bike and longtail boat tour?
It runs for about 4 hours (approx.).
What is the price per person?
The price is listed as $43.74 per person.
How many people are in each group?
The tour has a maximum of 8 travelers.
Is lunch included?
Yes, lunch is included as part of the experience.
What kind of boat ride is included?
You’ll take a private traditional longtail boat cruise through the canals (klongs).
What stops are included during the tour?
The tour includes Wat Khun Chan, a Bangkok Yai longtail boat canal cruise segment, Wat Nakprok, and a ride through neighborhoods including Talad Phlu and Wutthakat.
Are temple or other entries included?
Wat Khun Chan is listed as free for admission. The canal cruise stop is also listed as free. Other stops do not show specific admission details in the provided information.
Is the bike ride difficult?
The pace is described as leisurely. The route includes narrow alleyways and raised footpaths over water, so balance and bike comfort are needed.
Do you need to know how to ride a bike?
Yes. The tour notes that people who can’t ride a bike are not suitable for this activity.
What is the cancellation policy?
Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. If you cancel less than 24 hours before the start time, the amount paid is not refunded.


































