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    Restaurant in Bangkok, Thailand

    Jhol

    390Pearl Points

    Coastal Indian worth booking in Bangkok.

    Jhol, Restaurant in Bangkok

    About Jhol

    Jhol is one of the strongest cases for coastal Indian cuisine in Bangkok, earning back-to-back Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) and a 4.7 Google rating across nearly 700 reviews. At the ฿฿฿ tier, it delivers technical precision — ghee-roast crab, coastal curries, southern Indian flavour profiles — at a price point below most of the city's recognised fine-dining competition. Book a week ahead for weekdays, two weeks for weekends.

    A 4.7-rated Indian restaurant in Bangkok that has earned back-to-back Michelin Plates — Jhol deserves your attention

    With a Google rating of 4.7 across nearly 700 reviews and Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025, Jhol sits at the sharper end of Bangkok's Indian dining scene. That scene is genuinely competitive — this city has a depth of Indian restaurants that surprises most visitors , so the fact that Jhol draws consistent critical and public praise signals something is being done right at a technical level. At the ฿฿฿ price tier, it also positions itself a notch below the ฿฿฿฿ restaurants that dominate Bangkok's fine-dining conversation, which makes it an easier yes if you're weighing value alongside quality.

    What the kitchen is doing differently

    The editorial angle here is cuisine mastery, and Jhol earns that framing. Most Indian restaurants in Bangkok, and across Southeast Asia for that matter, default to the North Indian canon: butter chicken, dal makhani, naan. Jhol does not. The menu maps India's southern and coastal regions , think ghee-roast crab, coastal-style curries, and street food reinterpreted with kitchen precision rather than novelty for its own sake. This is a specific culinary tradition that demands different technique: tamarind-based sourness, coconut-forward broths, spice profiles built around mustard seed and curry leaf rather than cumin and coriander. Getting those flavours right at a restaurant level in Bangkok, where sourcing the right ingredients is its own challenge, is a meaningful technical achievement.

    The à la carte menu runs alongside a tasting menu format, giving you genuine choice in how you engage with the food. Vegetarian options are available on request, which is worth knowing in advance if you're planning around dietary needs. The cocktail programme is worth noting separately: the bar draws on both Indian and Thai influences, which in lesser hands would be a gimmick, but by all accounts functions as a considered extension of the food's flavour logic rather than a distraction from it.

    The room and the mood

    Space is described as vintage refinement meeting contemporary elegance , which in practical terms means this is a dressed-up room, not a casual curry house. The energy skews towards occasion dining rather than a quick weeknight meal. If you're arriving expecting the informal bustle of a local Indian restaurant, recalibrate. The atmosphere is composed, the service is attentive by design, and the overall register sits comfortably alongside Bangkok's broader fine-dining environment. It is not, however, a stiff or intimidating room , the Indian and Thai cocktail programme and the street-food-adjacent parts of the menu keep things grounded.

    On Sukhumvit Soi 18 in Khlong Toei, the address puts Jhol in a central, accessible part of Bangkok. The Soi 18 area is walkable from BTS Asok and MRT Sukhumvit, so logistics are direct from most central hotels.

    How to book and when to go

    Booking difficulty is rated as easy, which at a Michelin-recognised restaurant in a competitive dining city is worth treating as a window rather than a guarantee. The ฿฿฿ pricing and the venue's reputation mean demand is steady, particularly on weekends. Book at least a week ahead for weekend evenings to be safe; weekday tables are more available. There is no published booking method in our current data, so check the restaurant directly for reservations. Hours are not confirmed in our current data , contact the venue before visiting to confirm service times.

    For comparison within the Indian dining category in Bangkok, Haoma offers a farm-to-table Indian approach with strong sustainability credentials. INDDEE and Ms.Maria & Mr.Singh are worth knowing about if your group spans different price sensitivities. Indus and Punjab Grill represent the more traditional North Indian end of the Bangkok spectrum , useful reference points for understanding how specifically Jhol has chosen its own lane.

    If you're interested in what coastal Indian cuisine looks like at the highest international level, Trèsind Studio in Dubai and Opheem in Birmingham are points of comparison worth knowing , both operate at Michelin star level and demonstrate how far the broader modern Indian tradition extends beyond the subcontinent.

    Elsewhere in Thailand, if you are building a broader trip itinerary, our guides cover PRU in Phuket, Aeeen in Chiang Mai, and AKKEE in Pak Kret alongside AKKEE Thai Delicacies & Tasting Counter in Nonthaburi. For Bangkok specifically, our full Bangkok restaurants guide, Bangkok hotels guide, Bangkok bars guide, Bangkok wineries guide, and Bangkok experiences guide are all available. You can also find listings for The Spa in Lamai Beach and Agave in Ubon Ratchathani if your Thailand trip extends beyond Bangkok.

    Quick reference: Jhol, Sukhumvit Soi 18, Khlong Toei, Bangkok. Price tier: ฿฿฿. Michelin Plate 2024 and 2025. Google: 4.7 (697 reviews). Booking difficulty: easy. Cuisine: coastal and southern Indian. Vegetarian options available on request.

    Ratings

    • Food: Coastal Indian technique executed with precision , a distinct step beyond the Bangkok Indian mainstream
    • Value: Strong at ฿฿฿, especially relative to the ฿฿฿฿ competition in the city's fine-dining tier
    • Atmosphere: Composed, occasion-ready, not stiff , the cocktail programme and street food references keep it accessible
    • Recognition: Michelin Plate (2024, 2025); Google 4.7 across 697 reviews

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does Jhol handle dietary restrictions?

    Vegetarian options are available upon request, so flag your requirements when booking. The menu centres on coastal Indian cuisine with seafood and meat prominent, so vegetarians should mention their needs in advance rather than assuming flexibility on the night.

    What should a first-timer know about Jhol?

    Jhol is not a standard Indian restaurant. The menu maps India's southern coastline with dishes like ghee-roast crab and coastal-style curries — butter chicken is not the point here. Come expecting bold, layered flavours and a dressed-up room that suits a proper dinner out rather than a casual catch-up.

    How far ahead should I book Jhol?

    Booking difficulty is rated easy, which at a Michelin Plate restaurant in a competitive dining city is a window worth using. A few days to a week should be sufficient for most visits, but for weekend evenings or special occasions, book at least two weeks out to be safe.

    Is Jhol worth the price?

    At ฿฿฿ pricing with back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025, Jhol sits at the sharper end of Bangkok's Indian dining options but delivers cooking that justifies the step up. If you're comparing it to cheaper curry houses on Sukhumvit, the gap in ambition and execution is significant.

    What are alternatives to Jhol in Bangkok?

    For Thai fine dining at a comparable or higher level, Sorn and Baan Tepa both hold stronger Michelin credentials and focus on regional Thai cuisine. Gaa and Sühring offer international tasting-menu formats if the Indian focus is not your priority. Jhol is the go-to in Bangkok specifically for coastal Indian cooking done with precision.

    Is Jhol good for a special occasion?

    Yes. The room is described as vintage refinement meeting contemporary elegance, the cocktail programme includes Indian and Thai-influenced drinks, and the tasting menu format gives the meal a clear arc. It reads well as a birthday or anniversary dinner, particularly for guests who want something beyond standard Thai or European fine dining.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Jhol?

    If coastal Indian cuisine is the draw, the tasting menu is the better format here: it lets the kitchen show the range of southern Indian regional cooking rather than a single dish. The à la carte is available if you want flexibility, but the tasting menu is the stronger case for a first visit at ฿฿฿ pricing.

    Location

    7 2 Sukhumvit Soi 18, Khwaeng Khlong Toei, Khlong Toei, Bangkok 10110, Thailand

    Bangkok, Thailand

    Compare Jhol

    Comparing Jhol to Alternatives
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking Difficulty
    JholIndian฿฿฿Easy
    SornSouthern Thai฿฿฿฿Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Baan TepaThai contemporary฿฿฿฿Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Côte by Mauro ColagrecoMediterranean, Modern Cuisine฿฿฿฿Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    GaaModern Indian, Indian฿฿฿฿Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    SühringGerman฿฿฿฿Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown

    What to weigh when choosing between Jhol and alternatives.

    Also Consider

    Jhol's closest peer for occasion-worthy Indian dining in Bangkok is Gaa, which operates at ฿฿฿฿ and positions itself at the most technically ambitious end of Bangkok's modern Indian scene. Gaa is the right choice if you want maximum creative ambition and are comfortable with the higher price tag. Jhol, at ฿฿฿, makes the stronger value case and is easier to book, the Michelin Plate recognition means you are not sacrificing quality for the saving.

    Against Bangkok's Thai fine-dining tier, Sorn and Baan Tepa both operate at ฿฿฿฿ and represent the city's most decorated Thai restaurants. If your evening is about experiencing Thai cuisine at its most considered, either of those is the right call. But if you want to eat well and specifically want coastal Indian cuisine done with precision, Jhol is the better option, and the lower price tier makes the decision easier. Sühring and Côte by Mauro Colagreco are both at ฿฿฿฿ and represent European fine dining in Bangkok, relevant if your group is split on cuisine, but not direct competition for what Jhol is doing.

    The practical summary: if value relative to quality matters, Jhol is the call over its ฿฿฿฿ peers. If you want the most technically ambitious Indian experience Bangkok offers and price is secondary, consider Gaa instead. For a first visit to Bangkok's Indian dining scene, Jhol is the lower-risk, higher-value starting point.

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