Chiang Mai: Loi kroh Muay Thai Boxing Stadium

REVIEW · CHIANG MAI

Chiang Mai: Loi kroh Muay Thai Boxing Stadium

  • 4.47 reviews
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Operated by GlobalTix (Thailand) Co., Ltd. · Bookable on GetYourGuide

A pre-fight ritual, then fists fly in Chiang Mai. At Loi Kroh Muay Thai Boxing Stadium on Loi Kroh Road, you get a real-night-out VIP Seat view, plus the traditional Wai Kru Ram Muay ceremony before the action starts. The whole place is built around fast striking, hard kicks, and crowd noise that makes the sport feel immediate and personal.

I also like that you can watch male and female Thai boxers in ring combat, not just one style or one gender. And with 6 competitions scheduled for the evening, the night feels full for the price. The main drawback is timing: shows run late, from 9.00 PM to 11.30 PM, and only on Monday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday.

Key highlights at Loi Kroh Stadium

Chiang Mai: Loi kroh Muay Thai Boxing Stadium - Key highlights at Loi Kroh Stadium

  • Wai Kru Ram Muay ceremony before the bouts, so you get culture right up front
  • VIP Seat ticket included, so you’re not stuck guessing where to stand
  • Male and female Thai boxers in ring fights you can follow even if it’s your first time
  • 6 competitions per show (so it’s not a short, stop-start evening)
  • Worldwide-market ticket option, including Thai support through the ticket platform

Loi Kroh Stadium in Chiang Mai: what you’re walking into

Chiang Mai: Loi kroh Muay Thai Boxing Stadium - Loi Kroh Stadium in Chiang Mai: what you’re walking into
Loi Kroh Muay Thai Boxing Stadium sits in the Loi Kroh Road area of Chiang Mai Province, and the vibe is exactly what you’d want if you’re chasing Muay Thai as a living tradition, not a museum exhibit. This is a stadium built for competition. The atmosphere is focused: people come to watch technique under pressure, then cheer when fighters land clean.

What makes this experience especially interesting is the pairing of old-school ritual with hard sport. You get the Wai Kru Ram Muay ceremony before the fights, which is part of why Muay Thai feels different from other combat sports. It’s not just about punching and kicking. There’s a moment where the fighters honor the craft and the rhythm of the night begins.

Another thing I like for first-timers: you don’t need a perfect understanding of scoring to enjoy the show. The bouts are packed with obvious intensity—fast combinations, powerful kicks, clinch moments where the pacing shifts, and quick bursts that pull the crowd along. If you’ve been waiting to see Muay Thai in its real stadium setting, this is one of the more straightforward ways to do it.

If you’re traveling with someone who wants entertainment but not a “lesson,” this also works. They can enjoy the drama of the ring and the energy of the crowd, while you focus on the style details that Muay Thai does so well.

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Chiang Mai.

VIP seating and your ticket pickup at the counter

Chiang Mai: Loi kroh Muay Thai Boxing Stadium - VIP seating and your ticket pickup at the counter
Your VIP Seat ticket is the one thing you’ll care about most on arrival, and the good news is the plan is simple. The activity starts with you heading directly to the ticket counter for redemption. After that, you head to your seats and the stadium show takes over.

That one-step process matters because it lowers friction. Chiang Mai nights can include multiple stops—night market, dinner, a café for dessert—then you still need to get to the venue without confusion. Here, you’re basically told what to do: go straight to the counter, redeem, and move on.

A practical note: because this show runs late, you’ll want to be ready for a slow evening. Eat earlier, stay loose on timing, and don’t leave your ticket counter redemption for the last moment. You’re not just waiting for the fights—you’re waiting for the full night rhythm, including the ceremony that happens before ring action.

The ticket is available for a Worldwide Market including Thai, which is handy if your booking setup isn’t strictly local. And if you’re traveling with kids, the child rate applies at the same level as the adult rate, so you can budget without surprises.

Wai Kru Ram Muay: the tradition before the fists fly

Chiang Mai: Loi kroh Muay Thai Boxing Stadium - Wai Kru Ram Muay: the tradition before the fists fly
The pre-fight Wai Kru Ram Muay ceremony is one of the biggest reasons this stadium experience is more than just watching fights. It happens before the bouts, and it sets the emotional tone of the whole evening.

In Muay Thai, this kind of ritual signals respect for technique and for the fight discipline itself. You’ll often see fighters go through a focused sequence that feels formal, even when the rest of the night is loud and chaotic. For you, that means you get a cultural moment before things get intense. For your first time in a stadium, that’s a smart way to start because it helps the sport make sense.

Also, it keeps your expectations realistic. If you arrive thinking you’ll only see fights, you may miss the part that gives the night its identity. Make sure you’re in the venue for the ceremony window, not just for the main bouts.

If you’re wondering whether you’ll understand what’s happening: you probably won’t need a full explanation. The feeling is clear. The ceremony marks a shift from waiting to action, and fighters look locked in. That mental reset is part of the show’s drama, even if you’re not tracking each stage like a coach.

Six competitions of Muay Thai: what to watch in the ring

Chiang Mai: Loi kroh Muay Thai Boxing Stadium - Six competitions of Muay Thai: what to watch in the ring
This show runs with 6 competitions from 9.00 PM to 11.30 PM on scheduled nights. That matters for two reasons.

First, six bouts gives you variety. You’ll see different matchups and likely different styles of pressure. Even if your favorite part is the striking, you’ll also notice moments where fighters clinch, change distance, and try to control the pace.

Second, six bouts turn a stadium night into a real event. It’s not a short diversion. You’re there for a block of time, so you can get pulled into the flow: a bout ends, the crowd reacts, and you immediately roll into the next one.

What you should watch, even as a beginner:

  • How fighters enter and exit range. Muay Thai isn’t only about landing heavy shots. It’s about choosing when to be close, when to kick, and when to reset.
  • Clinch battles. These are where momentum can flip. Even if you don’t know the exact rules, you can feel when someone is gaining control.
  • Timing and rhythm. Look for patterns. Fighters often show a plan, then adapt when it stops working.

If you’re the kind of traveler who likes structure, this is a good pick. The night is scheduled and complete. You don’t have to invent your own itinerary inside the venue.

One consideration: because the schedule is fixed to specific days, you may miss it if your Chiang Mai dates don’t line up. If you’re planning around Muay Thai, check the calendar before you lock in dinner plans for that week.

Male and female Thai boxers plus international matchups

Chiang Mai: Loi kroh Muay Thai Boxing Stadium - Male and female Thai boxers plus international matchups
Loi Kroh Stadium is set up to show Muay Thai as a broad sport, not a narrow local routine. You can watch male and female Thai boxers in ring combat, and the evening is described as featuring fighters from around the world.

That mix is valuable for you because it reduces “repetition fatigue.” If you’ve watched one style of Muay Thai before, the matchups can still surprise you. Different fighters bring different timing, stance, and strategies for how they manage distance.

It’s also a meaningful choice if you care about seeing the sport as it exists today. Female fighters bring a full competitive presence, not a side attraction. You’ll be watching the same core disciplines—kicks, strikes, clinch pressure—played at real fight intensity.

If you want the experience to feel authentic, don’t treat it like a casual spectacle. These are competitions, not choreographed exhibitions. Your best enjoyment will come from watching the fighters as athletes: focus on decision-making, not just impacts.

Timing tips for a 9:00 PM to 11:30 PM show

The show schedule is every Monday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday, running 9.00 PM to 11.30 PM. That puts this firmly in the “night out” category.

Here’s how I’d plan your evening so you don’t feel rushed:

  • Eat before you go. If you wait too long, the late start can make dinner feel like a chore.
  • Build in a buffer for getting seated. Even though your ticket redemption is straightforward, you still want time to settle in before the ceremony.
  • Treat 9.00 PM as the start of the experience, not the start of your arrival. You want to be there when the pre-fight sequence begins.

Late-night shows also change your comfort level. Expect it to be more crowded than a daytime attraction, and plan to stay awake through the final bout. If you’re someone who likes early bedtimes, this might not be your favorite format. But if you’re in Chiang Mai for nightlife and want one event that feels distinctly local, this time window makes sense.

A small practical plus: the activity ends back at the meeting point after the show. That means you’re not left juggling complicated drop-offs or a transfer plan that somehow turns into a second mini-adventure.

Price and value: why $18 can feel like a win

At $18 per person with a VIP Seat included, the value is hard to ignore—especially because you’re getting a full stretch of fight action plus the Wai Kru Ram Muay ceremony. The ticket isn’t just buying access to a couple of short bouts. You’re buying an organized evening with 6 competitions.

The value math is simple:

  • You get a defined event length (9.00 PM to 11.30 PM).
  • You get a clear included item (VIP seating).
  • You get cultural context before the fights start (Wai Kru Ram Muay).

That’s the difference between paying for a “thing to do” and paying for an actual night of entertainment that flows.

It also helps that the experience is rated 4.4 with 7 reviews. That rating isn’t a guarantee, but it suggests the stadium format works for people who want the real show.

Who this price fits best:

  • Budget-minded travelers who still want a comfortable seat
  • Couples or solo travelers looking for a one-ticket night plan
  • Visitors who want something more authentic than a stage performance

Who should book this Muay Thai night (and who should skip)

Chiang Mai: Loi kroh Muay Thai Boxing Stadium - Who should book this Muay Thai night (and who should skip)
You’ll probably love this if you want:

  • A staged stadium night with structure: ceremony, then multiple competitions
  • The chance to see Thai boxers with both male and female fighters on the card
  • A straightforward plan centered on one venue, one ticket, and one consistent time window

You might skip it if:

  • You can’t handle late evenings (the show runs until 11.30 PM)
  • Your schedule doesn’t match Monday, Wednesday, Friday, or Saturday
  • You’re not interested in combat sport at all and would rather do a lighter cultural activity that doesn’t involve watching intense physical competition

If your goal is to taste Chiang Mai’s nightlife in a way that still feels tied to Thai culture, a Muay Thai stadium night is one of the clearest choices. It’s not just entertainment. It’s a live tradition with competitive stakes.

Should you book Loi Kroh Stadium tonight?

If you’re in Chiang Mai on Monday, Wednesday, Friday, or Saturday, I’d book it. The combination of VIP seating, a Wai Kru Ram Muay ceremony, and six competitions turns your ticket into a full evening, not a quick detour. At $18, it’s also one of those rare travel purchases where you can justify it even if you’re not a die-hard fan yet.

Just be honest with yourself about timing. If 9.00 PM to 11.30 PM doesn’t fit your energy level, wait for the right day—or choose a different evening activity.

FAQ

Where is Loi Kroh Muay Thai Boxing Stadium?

It’s in Chiang Mai Province, Thailand, in the Loi Kroh Road area.

What days and times does the show run?

The show runs every Monday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday from 9.00 PM to 11.30 PM.

What’s included with the ticket?

Your ticket includes one VIP seat.

What happens before the fights begin?

There’s a pre-fight ceremony called Wai Kru Ram Muay.

Do the fights include both men and women?

Yes, the show includes Thai boxers in ring combat, including both male and female fighters.

How many competitions are there per show?

Each scheduled show includes 6 competitions.

Is there a child rate, and can I cancel?

Child rates apply at the same rate as adults. You can also cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

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