From khao soi to pad see ew, Thai food in LA is unrivaled—here are our 25 favorite spots to get it.
LessIt’s easy to wonder if the highest-rated restaurant on our site—and a place that’s been the subject of national awards, heady think pieces, and reservation waitlists that stretch on for months—is actually worth the hassle of getting in. We’re here to tell you our answer is still an unequivocal yes. Dinner here is an all-out experience highlighted by deep family heritage, dedication to sourcing and sustainability, and dining in the only alleyway in the Valley you’d want to be seen in after 10pm.
When people ask about the best Thai restaurant in LA for any occasion, it’s our natural reflex to blurt out Luv2Eat. This well-rounded Southern Thai spot in Hollywood simply does not miss. Everything about Luv2Eat looks and feels like any other strip mall restaurant in the city, but the food and the warm service stand out. Its greatness lies in the "Chef’s Special" section of the menu, a collection of dishes that showcases the two chefs’ family recipes.
If you’re looking for a quick noodle or curry fix in DTLA, Holy Basil is one of the most dependable spots in the neighborhood—but that’s not why this tiny takeout window landed on this guide. The most exciting thing going on at Holy Basil at the moment is their weekend dinner series, Yum, which series features Bangkok-style street food, natural wines, and sake, and an atmosphere reminiscent of a late-night food market.
This comically small East Hollywood spot (there are five tiny tables at most) is home to some of the most herbaceous, sinus-clearing food you'll ever have from a steam table—and despite the name, you don't even have to pay for a membership. Sure, you might have to eat your food pressed up against a window next to a stack of newspapers, but that’s just part of the fun at this Northern Thai gem. The sweet, vibrantly orange khao soi is among our favorites in LA.
Jitlada isn’t just the heart and soul of LA’s Thai food scene, it’s one of this city’s essential dining experiences, full stop. With over 400 items, the menu is objectively overwhelming, so our tip is to steer away from dishes you can find at any other Thai restaurant, and go all-in on the ones that make Jitlada an LA icon: the crispy catfish salad, coco mango salad, Dungeness crab with garlic, taepo curry, and the secret off-menu Jazz Burger.
Don’t be misled by the name: although Sapp Coffee Shop does serve caffeinated drinks, you’re here for the boat noodles. This magical soup is the stuff of legend, on par with the Loch Ness Monster or finding the perfect work/life balance. The broth is at once funky, sour, spicy, and sweet, bobbing with silky noodles, herbs, chiles, and various beef parts. We also adore their brothless, emerald-colored jade noodles and the sen chan pad pu, tamarind-spiked, stir-fried ride noodles.
Greetings from the most important Thai restaurant you might never have heard of. Located on the outer fringes of North Hollywood, Sri Siam has been around for more than 30 years and is considered royalty among many of the city's veteran Thai cooks. That crispy rice salad that blew your mind over at Night + Market? Sri Siam’s been doing their version since the ’80s. Also, don’t be surprised if your server (i.e., the owner) pulls up a chair next to you and starts chatting.
Long Beach has tons of great Thai spots, from the bare-bones Tasty Food To Go to the more upscale Thai District, but none of them are quite like Chiang Rai, a neon-hued Eastside restaurant that specializes in Northern Thai dishes. Make a beeline for anything in the “Chiang Rai Local Food” section of the menu, including fragrant sai oua sausage with a fiery green chile dip, dry-style khao soi noodles, and a sweet-salty yellow curry that comes with fried chicken and flaky roti bread for dipping.
Though it's been open for over two decades on Melrose, Prael doesn't have quite the same recognition as big-name spots in adjacent Thai Town. But that just makes us love this under-the-radar gem even more. Similar to Jitlada, Prael has a large menu that includes both Thai dishes you'll find everywhere and a bunch of Southern Thai dishes you won't. Among that latter group, go for the gang pah, an herbaceous, clear broth curry packed with bamboo and eggplant, and the kanom jeen num ya.
Now with three locations across the city, Night + Market has grown over the past decade from a scrappy make-shift house party of a restaurant to a household name in LA Thai food. Our favorite things here tend to be the slightly unusual twists, like drunken noodles with thick-cut pastrami or the fried chicken sandwiches topped with papaya salad and ranch. But we’d be just as happy with the fatty grilled pork toro and crispy rice salad, too.
Lacha Somtum is the Baskin-Robbins of Thai papaya salad. The menu at this blink-and-miss-it spot in the heart of Thai Town has over a dozen types of mortar-pounded som tum on the menu, tossed with things like salted crab, duck eggs, or crispy pork belly. The tangy, sometimes-searing papaya salad here is enough reason to visit, but we might love their other Northeastern Thai (Isaan) dishes even more.
When we want a party experience in restaurant form, Farmhouse Kitchen in West Adams is the answer. This colorful, kitschy Thai spot came to LA from the Bay Area, bringing over-the-top cocktails and group-sized entrees to a space decked out with artificial plants and bright pink flowers. The menu is a mix of pumped-up Thai dishes that you won’t find anywhere else in LA. The back patio is filled with people getting "content" while chomping on dishes that are tasty as they are theatrical.
If you live in the Valley, we're preaching to the choir when we tell you that tremendous Thai doesn't only exist in East Hollywood. Case in point: Lum-Ka-Naad in Northridge. The menu is big here, but you’re can narrow it down to two sections: “Northern Cuisine” and “Southern Cuisine.” These are filled with dishes from the two regions of Thailand the owners call home, and even if you closed your eyes and ordered at random, you'd end up with something unexpected and incredible on your table.
Ayara Thai is a neighborhood spot in Westchester that happens to be home to some of the best traditional Thai cooking outside of Thai Town. The family-run institution has been cranking out tremendous versions of classics like khao soi and pad see ew for years, and they even sell their own curry kits in case you want to make their recipes at home. It’s nearly impossible to order wrong here (get the plump kai jeaw omelet and Ayara’s toast), but the muay thai wings in particular are a sleeper hit.
Yes, Hoy Ka in Thai Town serves killer Thai food. The Sneaky Pork looks like any other pile of meat but bonks you over the head with char, lime, and fish sauce. The herbaceous noodle soups could stop any tantrum in its tracks. And the classic curries and wok-fried noodle dishes are the better versions of what you’ll find everywhere else. But the best thing about this place might be the fact that the vibe is so neutral it doesn’t even exist.
We appreciate a restaurant that calls it like it is, and at Spicy BBQ, you’re going to eat Thai-style barbecue and it’s going to be spicy. But this six-table strip mall spot on the corner Normandie and Santa Monica does a lot more than spareribs and satay—it's also one of our favorite spots for bliss-inducing Northern Thai food. We rarely place an order here without getting the fiery jackfruit salad, savory fried larb patties, delicious chili dips, and a bowl of khao soi.
Besides nepotism, Otus Thai Kitchen remains one of Hollywood’s best-kept secrets. The star of the show at this quaint, light-filled cafe on La Brea is the kai-kata, a breakfast set that comes with grilled baguette, fresh orange juice or Thai-style coffee, and a little metal tin layered with ground pork, sweet sausages, and two runny eggs—the perfect midday treat when you’re reminded of your outstanding parking tickets.
Eating at Wat Thai’s weekend food court feels like strolling through a busy street fair, except instead of kettle corn and churros you’re here for a wide range of fantastic Thai dishes. Every weekend, the Buddhist temple hosts foods vendors in its parking lot right on the border of Sun Valley and North Hollywood. On the menu is everything from mango sticky rice and BBQ beef skewers to spicy som tum and duck noodle soup, and the most popular stalls tend to sell out by noon.
You could probably drive past this tiny spot in Thai Town 100 times and miss it, but if you did, it would be a tragedy on par with the ending of Titanic. The star of the show here is undoubtedly their khao soi, which is ultra-creamy, slightly sweet, and filled with bright punches of flavor that will wow you even before you squeeze the lime over the top. Along with those signature curried noodles, we gravitate toward their fragrant Northern Thai sausage and sauce-covered spicy shrimp balls.
This long-running Thai Town haunt no longer stays open until 4am (they close at 11pm), but we still highly recommend coming here during non-witching hours when you’ve got one friend in the mood for drunken noodles, and another in the mood for a salted turnip omelet. Ruen Pair's menu spans from takeout classics to more obscure Thai-Chinese dishes and there's rarely a miss among them. Get the sauteed morning glory stems, the crispy catfish, and an order of their sweet-spicy fried egg salad.
LA has lots of great street vendors, but few of them put on a show like Rad Na Silom. Every day from 6pm to midnight, this curbside stir-fry station outside Silom Supermarket in Thai Town turns into a half-block of folding tables and string lights, sizzling woks, and speakers blasting melodramatic Sam Smith covers (they also make an appearance at Smorgasburg on Sundays). The stir-fried noodles you’ll find here are among the best in LA.
Siam Sunset is attached to a motel that’s seen better days and is usually filled with senior citizens and the occasional Buddhist monk enjoying a bowl of noodles. It’s the Thai Town diner that time forgot—and we mean that in the most affectionate way possible. Your priority here should be the incredibly comforting Thai-Chinese breakfast dishes, which Siam Sunset does better than any place in town: fresh-fried stick doughnuts dipped in condensed milk, tofu pudding with ginger syrup, and jok.
Pa Ord has two locations, both within only a few blocks of each other in East Hollywood. To make matters more complicated, the menus are slightly different at each. So we’ll help narrow things down: go to the original location at Sunset and Hobart, because that’s where you’ll find their legendary soup menu in its full glory. This is the best tom yum in town, brimming with both BBQ'd and ground pork, pork ball, liver, dried shrimp, and your choice of noodles.
Sweet Rice in Gardena from the same people behind Bowl Thai Grill and the original Bowl Thai. These spots make up a Charlie’s Angels-esque power trio that serves some of the best Thai food in the South Bay, and out of the bunch, Sweet Rice is our favorite. You’ll find noodle soups, stews, rice porridges, and a few curries on their all-day menu and puffy, Thai-style pan-fried omelets that are a must-order, either as a side or as their own meal.
Dating back to 1969, Chao Krung is one of the city's oldest Thai restaurants. But it wasn’t until a recent-ish revamp of both the menu and the space itself that this family-run spot on Fairfax became one of our go-to Thai restaurants. Chao Krung’s menu is littered with great options, but the strength of the place lies in its curries. The kaeng ped yang has the right balance of sweet and savory, and the kaeng hung-ley with sweet, aromatic braised pork belly is one of our favorite dishes.