REVIEW · BANGKOK
Bangkok: Bubble in the Forest Cafe Photography Journey
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by THAILAND SKYDIVING · Bookable on GetYourGuide
That mini Maldives feeling hits fast.
Bubble in the Forest Cafe is a popular floating-cafe photo stop in Nakhon Pathom Province that people associate with Bangkok, thanks to its wide water views and dreamlike design. I like the way the cafe blends an open-air setup with that resort-style look, and I also like how the food and drinks are part of the experience once you’re there. The main drawback to plan around: you might feel rushed by closing time, especially if you book later in the evening.
This is best thought of as a light “hang out and shoot photos” moment rather than a long tour of Bangkok highlights. You get time to relax, eat, and take pictures in one place, but it’s not built for people who need careful diet control—food allergies aren’t a good fit here.
In This Review
- Key Points You’ll Actually Care About
- Bangkok’s Mini Maldives Moment: What This Floating Cafe Really Feels Like
- Location Reality Check: Nakhon Pathom vs Bangkok Expectations
- Price and Value: Is $21 Worth It?
- What’s Included in Your 2 Hours (and What Isn’t)
- Your Timing Plan: Booking for Day Views vs Night Romance
- Step-by-Step Flow: How the Experience Plays Out
- 1) Arrival at Bubble in the Forest Cafe
- 2) Photo Stop + Food Tasting Time
- 3) The Big Picture: Chill, Eat, and Work the Angles
- Food and Drinks: What to Expect When Meals Aren’t Included
- Service and Communication: What I’d Prepare For
- Practical Tips to Make Your Photos Look Like You Planned It
- Who This Works Best For
- Quick FAQ for Bubble in the Forest Cafe
- FAQ
- How long is Bubble in the Forest Cafe?
- Is the price ($21) for a full meal?
- What’s included in the booking?
- What should I bring?
- Is there a no-smoking rule?
- When does the bridge-shaped area open?
- Is this good for people with food allergies?
- Should You Book This? My Honest Take
Key Points You’ll Actually Care About

- Maldives-style floating design with a big water-and-sky view that’s made for photos
- 2-hour experience that blends photo time and food ordering (not a full meal package)
- Bridge-shaped area opens after 5pm, so timing affects what you see
- Cash may be safest, since card payment isn’t consistently reliable at the counter
- English support can be limited, so a translate app helps
- Not a match if you have food allergies
Bangkok’s Mini Maldives Moment: What This Floating Cafe Really Feels Like

If you like your travel photos to look like you planned a movie set, Bubble in the Forest Cafe delivers. The core idea is simple: you’re sitting around a water feature in an airy, open setting with a sky-and-water view that feels more vacation than city stop.
The cafe design takes cues from Maldives floating houses, so the vibe leans into that dreamy “floating café” look. Instead of a cramped photo corner, you get a broader scene—water in the foreground, sky above, and a built environment that’s photogenic from lots of angles.
The best part is also the easiest to forget when you’re planning: this place is mostly about the moment you’re in. You’ll spend your time relaxing, eating what you order on-site, and taking photos of the unusual architecture and bright view.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Bangkok.
Location Reality Check: Nakhon Pathom vs Bangkok Expectations

The listing style can make this sound like it’s inside Bangkok proper. The location is in Nakhon Pathom Province, so I treat it like a Bangkok-area outing: you’re going to a signature photo spot outside the city grid.
Why this matters for you: it changes your timing. When you’re traveling for a single “wow” location, you want daylight or late-evening light, and you want enough time buffer so you’re not sprinting to catch the best views.
Price and Value: Is $21 Worth It?

At $21 per person for a 2-hour experience, the value depends on your expectations. The booking fee is included, and the activity time is centered on photo time plus food tasting, but meals are not packaged in a way you can treat as a guaranteed full meal deal.
Here’s the practical value logic: you’re paying for the setup—access to the most popular look of the cafe, plus time to enjoy the view and order food at the restaurant. You also get a built-in photo stop, which is often where you’re really spending money in Thailand—paying for the ability to have those “postcard” angles without hunting around for them yourself.
The tradeoff: because the cafe meals aren’t included in the package, you’ll need to budget your own order. The upside is that after booking, you can order your own meals and deduct 300 Thai baht per person at checkout.
What’s Included in Your 2 Hours (and What Isn’t)

You’re scheduled for 2 hours total, with the focus on one place: Bubble in the Forest Cafe. You’ll also get the booking fee covered as part of what you pay.
Not included:
- Meals are not included as part of the package.
- Tips and insurance are not included.
So think of it like this: you’re buying time in a photogenic setting and the chance to eat there without complicated planning. Then you handle your actual meal order directly at the restaurant.
Your Timing Plan: Booking for Day Views vs Night Romance

Timing changes what you feel when you arrive.
One detail that matters a lot: there’s a bridge-shaped area, and it’s open after 5pm. That means a later booking may show more of the full scene, not just the main water-view areas.
Also, don’t ignore closing pressure. One experience you may want to avoid is getting squeezed near the end of service. If you book an 8pm slot, you could end up paying the bill as staff prepare to close, which cuts into your ability to order anything additional. If you want the most relaxed pace, plan for earlier in the evening.
My simple rule: if you can, book so you can experience some daylight first, then ease into night. That tends to give you more to work with for photos and leaves you less stressed about what you might miss.
Step-by-Step Flow: How the Experience Plays Out
1) Arrival at Bubble in the Forest Cafe
Your starting point is Bubble in the Forest Cafe, and the whole experience is built around being there. You’re not jumping between multiple sights. It’s a single-location plan, which is great if you want an efficient, low-brain-day outing.
2) Photo Stop + Food Tasting Time
This is the heart of the experience: photo time plus a chance to enjoy food. The atmosphere is what makes it work—an open-air setup with that floating-cafe look and a wide view of water and sky.
I’d treat the photos like you’re capturing scenes, not just selfies. The design has a strong “set piece” quality, with angles that show the water and the structures in a way that reads as Maldives-like even though you’re in Thailand.
For food: the package wording can be a little confusing because meals aren’t included. In practice, you order your own food and drinks at the restaurant, and your booking includes a 300 Thai baht per person deduction at checkout. That’s a nice way to keep costs predictable, but you still have to pick what you want.
3) The Big Picture: Chill, Eat, and Work the Angles
This place is popular for a reason: it’s one of those environments where photos look good fast. The cafe design makes it easier to find pleasing frames without a lot of walking.
That said, the biggest practical risk is time. If the cafe closes earlier than you expect for your booking window, you might not have time for more rounds of ordering. I’d go in with a plan for what you want to eat so you’re not stuck deciding late.
Food and Drinks: What to Expect When Meals Aren’t Included

You’ll be ordering from the restaurant on-site, not from a set menu included in your purchase. The upside is freedom: you can pick what looks good to you in the moment.
Also, you can still feel good about value. The food is described as lovely, and portions are often big. That matters because a lot of photo-spot cafés elsewhere can feel overpriced for what you get. Here, the vibe is tourist-friendly, and the food experience seems to land for most people who come for the setting.
One more practical tip: the cafe can be busy, and language support may be limited. If you don’t speak Thai well, I recommend using a translate app before you arrive so ordering is smoother.
Service and Communication: What I’d Prepare For

This is the part that can make or break the night.
One issue I’d plan around: staff may not speak English well, which means you could need a translate app. That’s not rare in Thailand, but it’s extra noticeable at a photo hotspot where expectations tend to be international.
Another practical point: payment convenience can be tricky. One account I’ve seen explicitly warns that card payment wasn’t available, so you should plan your budget assuming cash might be needed.
Don’t let that scare you off—just prepare. Carry some Thai baht and be ready to use translation for menu questions.
Practical Tips to Make Your Photos Look Like You Planned It

You don’t need complicated gear. But you do need comfort.
Bring:
- Comfortable shoes (you’ll be moving around to find angles)
- Sun hat
- Sunscreen
And remember the one rule that’s listed clearly: no smoking.
If you care about photos, arrive with an idea of what lighting you want:
- earlier = more natural light and easier shooting
- after 5pm = bridge area opens, plus more evening atmosphere
Also, keep your time flexible. If you want extra ordering, don’t book right on top of closing. In a place like this, being “almost done” can feel like the whole place is done too.
Who This Works Best For
This is a strong match if:
- you want a single-location experience with big visual payoff
- you’re doing a short Bangkok-area itinerary and want one memorable stop
- you’re happy to order food on-site and enjoy a relaxed pace
It’s less suitable if:
- you have food allergies
- you need a fully included meal package
- you’re counting on smooth English service without using translation tools
- you’re sensitive to time limits or late-night closures
Quick FAQ for Bubble in the Forest Cafe
FAQ
How long is Bubble in the Forest Cafe?
The experience runs for 2 hours.
Is the price ($21) for a full meal?
No. Meals aren’t included in the package. You can order your own food and drinks at the restaurant, and you get a 300 Thai baht per person deduction at checkout after you book.
What’s included in the booking?
The booking includes a booking fee. The rest of your time is focused on enjoying the cafe with photo time and food tasting.
What should I bring?
Bring comfortable shoes, a sun hat, and sunscreen.
Is there a no-smoking rule?
Yes. Smoking isn’t allowed.
When does the bridge-shaped area open?
The bridge-shaped area opens after 5pm.
Is this good for people with food allergies?
No. It’s listed as not suitable for people with food allergies.
Should You Book This? My Honest Take
If your goal is one Thailand photo spot that genuinely looks like a vacation, I think this is worth booking. The combination of the floating-cafe design, the big water-and-sky view, and the overall romantic setting is exactly what you want when you’re chasing that Maldives-like look without leaving Thailand.
But book smart. Because meals aren’t included as a full package and the timing can feel tight around closing, I’d pick a slot that gives you breathing room—especially if you want the bridge area after 5pm. If you’re fine ordering your own food, bringing some sun protection, and planning for cash/translation needs, Bubble in the Forest Cafe can be a very satisfying use of a couple of hours.
























