Restaurant in Pak Kret, Thailand
One Michelin star, outside Bangkok, worth it.

AKKEE holds a 2024 Michelin Star and a 4.7 Google rating in Pak Kret, making it the most technically ambitious Thai restaurant in the area at the ฿฿฿ tier. Chef-owner Sitthikorn Chantop runs a seasonal, counter-style menu from a no-frills kitchen. Book the set menu with Thai draft beer; reservations are hard to secure and essential in advance.
At the ฿฿฿ price tier, AKKEE earns its cost more convincingly than most restaurants in Nonthaburi Province. A 2024 Michelin Star and a Google rating of 4.7 across 218 reviews confirm that the kitchen is delivering at a level that justifies the spend. If you are already familiar with the accessible Thai cooking at places like Suan Thip or Chang-Wang-Imm and want to understand what a step up in technical ambition looks like on this side of Bangkok, AKKEE is the answer. The question is not whether it is good. The question is whether the format suits you.
AKKEE operates out of a no-frills space in Pak Kret District, and the spatial experience is central to why it works. The setting is deliberately dim, which compresses the room into something more intimate than its address would suggest. This is not the polished, high-ceilinged theatre of a Bangkok fine-dining room. The layout puts you physically close to the kitchen and close to the cooking process, and that proximity is part of the point. At a venue where the chef-owner is executing seasonal, technique-driven Thai dishes, the counter experience translates the kitchen's approach directly to the diner. You are not watching service mediate between the cook and the plate; the production is visible and the atmosphere is built around that directness.
For solo diners or pairs, counter or close-counter seating at AKKEE gives you the leading version of what the venue offers. The intimacy of the room means noise does not scatter the way it does in larger Bangkok restaurants, but it also means the experience feels personal rather than performative. If you are returning for a second visit, ask specifically about counter availability when booking. For groups of four or more, the spatial intimacy that makes AKKEE rewarding for two can start to feel restrictive, and the room dynamic shifts accordingly. See the FAQ below for group guidance.
Chef-owner Sitthikorn Chantop works within the register of classic Thai recipes, updating them with what the awards citation describes as meticulous technique. The kitchen itself is no-frills, and that restraint carries through to the food: the dishes read as rustic in presentation but precise in execution, with distinct regional flavours rather than the smoothed-out, tourist-adjusted Thai cooking that dominates much of the market at this price point. The menu changes with the seasons, which means a second visit will not replicate your first, and which also means the set menu is the more reliable guide to what the kitchen is prioritising on any given night.
The Michelin recognition positions AKKEE within a small category of Thai restaurants outside Bangkok that have received formal international credentials. For context on how that compares within Thailand's fine-dining Thai conversation, Sorn in Bangkok and Samrub Samrub Thai in Bangkok occupy the upper end of that conversation; AKKEE operates in a more accessible register while still drawing on the same commitment to regional authenticity. If you have eaten at Nahm in Bangkok and want to find a similar focus on classical Thai technique in a less formal setting, AKKEE is a reasonable comparison point.
AKKEE opens Tuesday through Friday from 5:30 PM to 11 PM for dinner only. Saturday and Sunday add a lunch service from 12 PM to 3 PM, with dinner running again from 5:30 PM to 11 PM. Monday is closed. If you are travelling specifically for AKKEE, a weekend visit gives you the scheduling flexibility of two service windows in the same day; the Saturday or Sunday lunch slot is worth considering if you want the full counter experience without committing to a late evening in Pak Kret. The dinner service is where the dimly lit room and the set menu format make the most sense atmospherically, but the weekend lunch slot is a practical option for those making the trip from central Bangkok.
Booking difficulty is rated Hard. Given the venue's Michelin status, limited seating, and the intimacy of the space, you should not expect to walk in. Plan ahead, particularly for weekend dinner slots. No booking phone number or website is listed in the Pearl database, so check current booking channels through the Pak Kret restaurants guide or contact the venue directly via their most current listed channel. For the set menu paired with Thai draft beer, reservations are essential and should be secured well in advance.
The awards data is direct on this: the set menu is the recommended format. The seasonal kitchen logic and the counter setting both build toward an experience where the kitchen controls the sequence. À la carte ordering is likely available, but choosing individual dishes without the context of the set progression means you may miss the dishes that leading reflect what Sitthikorn Chantop is working on in the current season. The Thai draft beer pairing noted in the venue record is a practical complement to the set menu and adds to the value proposition at the ฿฿฿ tier. For a returning visitor who has already done the set menu, a more selective à la carte approach is reasonable, but for a first or second visit, trust the kitchen's structure.
AKKEE sits in an interesting position within Thailand's Michelin-recognised dining circuit. It operates outside Bangkok, at a price point below the capital's most expensive starred venues, and with a room that prioritises authenticity over luxury signalling. If you have eaten at PRU in Phuket or are tracking Michelin-recognised Thai cooking across the country, AKKEE fills a specific gap: regional, counter-focused, and grounded in a kitchen that does not trade on hotel backing or Bangkok name recognition. For a broader view of what Pak Kret's dining scene offers across price points, the full Pak Kret restaurants guide covers the complete range. If you are planning a longer visit to the area, the Pak Kret hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide are useful companion resources.
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| AKKEE | ฿฿฿ | — |
| Suan Thip | ฿฿ | — |
| Hong Seng | ฿฿ | — |
| Chuan Kitchen | ฿฿ | — |
| Chang-Wang-Imm | ฿฿ | — |
| Kaithong Original | ฿฿ | — |
How AKKEE stacks up against the competition.
Dinner is the stronger format. AKKEE runs dinner service every night of the week from 5:30 PM, while lunch is only available Saturday and Sunday from 12 PM to 3 PM. The dimly lit, immersive room is calibrated for evening dining, so if you have flexibility, book dinner — the setting does more work after dark.
Yes, and it's the format the kitchen is built around. The awards citation explicitly recommends the set menu for the full experience, and the seasonal, technique-led cooking makes more sense as a progression than as individual à la carte picks. At ฿฿฿ pricing with a 2024 Michelin Star, the set menu represents the clearest value case here.
AKKEE is a reasonable solo choice. The intimate counter setting and dimly lit room suit individual diners without the awkwardness of a table-for-one in a formal dining room. The set menu format also removes the need to curate an order, which makes solo visits lower-friction than at à la carte-focused spots.
Yes, with the right expectations. The no-frills kitchen and rustic edge mean this is not a white-tablecloth celebration venue — it is more about cooking precision than ceremonial service. If the occasion calls for a Michelin-recognised meal with genuine Thai regional character at ฿฿฿, AKKEE delivers. For a more formal setting, look toward Bangkok's starred options instead.
At ฿฿฿ with a 2024 Michelin Star, AKKEE is well-priced relative to Bangkok's starred restaurants operating at the same or higher tier. Chef-owner Sitthikorn Chantop's seasonal updates to classic Thai recipes and the set menu format give you a structured, high-craft meal that justifies the spend. If you are comparing on pure value-per-star, this is one of the more accessible entry points in Thailand's Michelin circuit.
The awards data references Thai draft beer pairings with the set menu, which suggests bar seating or counter service is part of the format, consistent with the intimate counter-style room described. That said, specific bar seating availability is not confirmed in AKKEE's venue record — check the venue's official channels to clarify before visiting.
AKKEE's intimate, dimly lit setting is not configured for large groups. The counter format and no-frills space point toward small parties of two to four as the practical range. For larger group bookings, check directly with the restaurant — no private dining room is documented in the venue record, so availability for six or more is uncertain.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.