Massage in Silom
Discover the best massage parlors in Silom. Verified reviews, prices, and insider recommendations for every massage type.
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Massage in Silom: Bangkok's Business District Spa Scene
Silom and the adjacent Sathorn corridor form Bangkok's financial heart, and the massage scene here reflects that dual identity. By day, upscale spas and wellness centers serve office workers and business travelers looking for a professional lunch-hour treatment. By evening, the area around Thaniya and Patpong shifts character, with Japanese-oriented venues and nightlife-adjacent parlors opening their doors. BTS Sala Daeng and MRT Silom provide easy access. Silom offers a different flavor from Sukhumvit — more polished, more corporate, and with a strong day-spa culture.
Silom's Two Massage Worlds
Silom essentially runs two parallel massage economies. The first is the daytime wellness circuit: high-end hotel spas at properties like the Banyan Tree and Dusit Thani, independent day spas on Silom Road and its side streets, and traditional Thai massage clinics near Sala Daeng intersection. These cater to a professional crowd and deliver clean, consistent experiences at moderate-to-premium prices. The second is the Thaniya corridor — a block-long stretch of Japanese-oriented bars and venues that includes several massage parlors catering specifically to Japanese clientele. Prices in Thaniya are higher, and the menus often include soapy and nuru options presented in a more discreet, club-like format. Between these two worlds sit a handful of mid-range parlors serving walk-in traffic from the Patpong area.
Prices Across Silom
Silom pricing depends heavily on which world you're in. Hotel spas charge ฿2,000–5,000 for oil or aromatherapy massage. Independent day spas on Silom Road run ฿800–1,800 for oil and ฿400–700 for Thai massage. The Thaniya Japanese-oriented venues price nuru and soapy at ฿4,000–8,000 — comparable to premium Phrom Phong. Street-level Thai massage shops near Sala Daeng BTS offer the cheapest option at ฿300–500. Tips follow the venue tier: ฿200–300 at day spas, ฿500–1,000 at the higher-end parlors. Silom's strength is in oil and traditional massage during business hours — this is not a budget nuru destination.
Getting to Silom
BTS Sala Daeng (Exit 1 or 4) puts you at the Silom–Rama IV intersection, within walking distance of most venues. MRT Silom station is directly below. From either station, the main Silom Road stretch and Thaniya are a 2–5 minute walk. Sathorn spas are slightly further south — a quick Grab ride or a 10-minute walk from the BTS. The area is flat, well-covered by the BTS overhang for shade, and feels distinctly different from Sukhumvit — more vertical, more corporate. Lumphini Park sits just northeast, making it easy to combine a walk in the park with a spa visit. Parking is available at the multiple office towers along Silom.
Who Should Choose Silom
Silom is the right pick if you want a professional day-spa experience, prefer a business-district atmosphere over the Sukhumvit entertainment vibe, or are staying in the Silom/Sathorn hotel corridor. The hotel spas deliver genuinely excellent oil and Thai massage in five-star settings. The independent day spas on the road itself hit a good price-quality balance for lunchtime or afternoon visits. The Thaniya venues suit visitors specifically looking for Japanese-style service with soapy or nuru in a discreet setting. Silom is not the best zone for budget massage or for walk-in nuru at scale — Nana and Phrom Phong handle those better. But for polished, no-fuss wellness, Silom delivers consistently.