Learn to cook real Thai food on the Eastern Seaboard: market-tour, half-day and evening classes in Jomtien, Naklua, Central Pattaya and Pratumnak, vegetarian and vegan options, English-speaking chefs, private and family sessions, and what a class really costs in THB.
A Thai cooking class is one of the best things to do in Pattaya, whether you are here for a week or settling in for the long term. The city and its suburbs are full of schools, from relaxed family kitchens in Jomtien to convenient tourist classes on the central beach strip and quieter upmarket experiences up in Naklua and Wongamat, and the best classes start with a walk through a fresh market to choose ingredients and learn what goes into a curry paste before you ever pick up a wok. Whether you want a fun half-day, an evening class after the beach, a vegetarian menu, a family session or a private deep-dive, here is how cooking classes work in Pattaya: where the schools are, the class formats, what it costs, who each one suits, and how to book.
The central beachfront and Second Road area has the most convenient, tourist-friendly cooking classes, within easy reach of the main hotels and with hotel pickup often included. These suit short stays and holidaymakers who want a fun half-day or evening class close to where they are staying. Expect a polished, holiday-oriented experience and slightly higher prices than the quieter suburbs.
Jomtien is Pattaya's long-stay expat heartland, and its cooking schools tend to be relaxed, authentic and better value, often run from family kitchens or small teaching studios near the Jomtien fresh market. Classes here draw a mix of residents and repeat visitors, and many begin with a market walk. This is the default base for a genuine, unhurried class away from the central-Pattaya crowds.
The quieter northern belt around Naklua and Wongamat offers a more upmarket, family-friendly setting, sometimes in villa or garden kitchens, and pairs well with the area's calmer, residential feel. Prices sit a little higher, but private and small-group classes are easy to arrange. Convenient if you are already living in or staying around Wongamat and Naklua.
Pratumnak Hill sits between Jomtien and Central Pattaya and has a handful of boutique cooking experiences aimed at couples and small groups who want something calmer than the beach strip but still central. It is a comfortable middle ground, close to both the Jomtien and Pattaya markets, and popular with longer-stay visitors based on the hill.
Many of the best Pattaya classes begin with a guided tour of a fresh market such as Thepprasit or the Jomtien morning market to choose ingredients and learn to identify herbs, pastes and produce, and a few sit near gardens where you pick vegetables before cooking. These immersive formats are the most memorable way to learn, teaching where Thai flavours come from as well as how to cook them.
The standard Pattaya class is a three-to-four-hour small-group session, usually morning or afternoon, in which you cook three to five dishes and eat what you make. Most include a market tour and a printed or emailed recipe booklet to take home. This is the best all-round choice for first-timers and holidaymakers.
Evening sessions let you spend the day at the beach or working and still cook a full Thai meal after, often finishing with everyone eating together. They are popular with couples, nomads and anyone who prefers not to give up daytime hours, and are widely available across Jomtien and Central Pattaya.
The fullest experience starts at a fresh market with a guided walk to buy ingredients and learn about Thai herbs, curry pastes and produce, then moves to the kitchen to cook. Budget extra time for these, and confirm whether the market visit and ingredients are included in the quoted price.
Private classes are ideal for couples, families, dietary needs or anyone wanting more hands-on attention and a menu built around dishes they actually want to learn. Many schools run family-friendly sessions with simpler dishes and shorter timings for children, so ask about minimum ages and kid-friendly menus when booking.
Most Pattaya schools happily adapt the standard menu for vegetarians and vegans, swapping fish sauce and shrimp paste for plant-based alternatives, and a few specialise in fully plant-based Thai cooking. Flag any dietary needs or allergies when you book so the school can prepare ingredients and adjust pastes in advance.
A standard small-group half-day class in Pattaya typically runs about 1,000-2,000 THB per person, usually including a market tour, all ingredients, the dishes you cook and eat, and a recipe booklet. This is the sweet spot for most visitors and represents good value for three to five dishes plus a meal.
Evening group classes fall in a similar 1,000-2,000 THB range, sometimes a little higher when they include hotel pickup or a market visit. Confirm exactly what is included, as some central-Pattaya classes price the transfer separately.
Private and fully customised classes generally cost about 2,500-4,000 THB or more per person depending on the school, the menu and group size. The premium buys undivided attention, a tailored menu and flexibility around dietary needs, which many couples and families find well worth it.
Children are often charged a reduced rate or join a shortened, simpler session, and some schools offer family packages. Ask about minimum ages, kid-friendly dishes and whether an adult must cook alongside younger children when you enquire.
A few schools run two-to-five-day courses covering more dishes, curry-paste making from scratch and regional Thai cuisines, priced per day at rates similar to or above single classes. These suit food enthusiasts and aspiring cooks who want to go well beyond the tourist favourites.
A cooking class is one of Pattaya's most rewarding half-days: hands-on, social and something you take home in the form of recipes and skills. Evening and market-tour classes are especially popular with couples wanting a memorable shared experience away from the beach and nightlife.
For anyone settling in Pattaya or Jomtien, a class or short course is the fastest way to learn to shop a Thai market and cook everyday dishes at home, which saves money and eats better than constant delivery. Many long-stayers take a class early in their move to demystify local ingredients.
Pattaya's growing wellness and long-stay scene is increasingly well set up for plant-based Thai cooking, with schools that swap out fish sauce and shrimp paste and teach vegan versions of classics. Flag dietary needs when booking so the school prepares the right ingredients.
Family and kids' classes make Thai cooking an engaging, screen-free activity for relocating or holidaying families, with simpler dishes and shorter sessions. Confirm minimum ages, supervision requirements and whether a parent needs to cook alongside younger children.
Serious cooks can go beyond the standard menu with private tuition, multi-day courses, curry-paste making and regional specialities. Look for schools that make pastes from scratch, teach ingredient sourcing at the market, and offer intensive or certificate-style programmes.
Most Pattaya cooking schools teach in English and welcome visitors, but small-group classes, private sessions and market-tour formats fill up, especially in high season. Book ahead through the school's website, LINE or a booking platform, and confirm the start time, meeting point and whether hotel pickup is included.
A typical class covers all ingredients, equipment, aprons, the dishes you cook and eat, and a recipe booklet, and often a market tour. Check whether transfers, drinks and the market visit are included in the quoted price, and how many dishes you will actually cook, so there are no surprises.
Thai cooking leans heavily on fish sauce, shrimp paste, peanuts, shellfish and chilli, so flag vegetarian, vegan, halal, allergy or spice-tolerance needs when you book, not on the day. Good schools will adapt pastes, sauces and menus in advance if given notice.
Come hungry and wear light, comfortable clothing and closed or comfortable shoes for the kitchen. Aprons and all equipment are provided. Bring water and sun protection for the market portion, a phone or notebook for extra notes, and a container if you might have leftovers to take away.
Arrive on time, follow the chef's food-safety and knife guidance, and be mindful in the market by asking before photographing vendors. Tipping is not expected but is appreciated for a private teacher or an outstanding class, and a good review helps small family-run schools more than anything.
A standard small-group half-day or evening class typically costs about 1,000-2,000 THB per person, usually including a market tour, all ingredients, the dishes you cook and eat, and a recipe booklet. Private or fully customised classes generally run about 2,500-4,000 THB or more per person, and children are often charged a reduced rate. Multi-day courses are priced per day at similar or higher rates.
Jomtien and Na Jomtien have the most relaxed, best-value schools, often family-run and starting with a fresh-market tour, and are the long-stay expat base. Central Pattaya and Beach Road offer convenient, tourist-friendly classes near the hotels, Naklua and Wongamat have quieter, more upscale family-friendly experiences to the north, and Pratumnak Hill sits as a calm middle ground between the two.
Many do. The fullest classes begin with a guided walk through a fresh market such as Thepprasit or the Jomtien morning market to choose ingredients and learn to identify herbs, curry pastes and produce before moving to the kitchen. Not every class includes this, so check when booking whether the market visit and its ingredients are part of the quoted price.
Yes. Most schools happily adapt the standard menu for vegetarians and vegans by swapping fish sauce and shrimp paste for plant-based alternatives, and a few specialise in fully plant-based Thai cooking. Flag any dietary needs or allergies when you book so the school can prepare the right ingredients and adjust pastes in advance.
Yes. Many schools run family-friendly and kids' classes with simpler dishes and shorter sessions, and some offer family packages or discounted children's rates. Ask about minimum ages, kid-friendly menus and whether a parent needs to cook alongside younger children when you enquire.
No. The great majority of Pattaya cooking schools teach in English and are used to international visitors, and you leave with a printed or emailed recipe booklet. Book ahead in high season, confirm the meeting point and whether hotel pickup is included, and tell the school about any dietary needs before the day.
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Browse Pattaya areas and homes near Jomtien, Naklua and Pratumnak - close to the city's best markets, restaurants and cooking schools.
Hero photo by Miguel Cuenca on Pexels. General information only; confirm current classes, prices and dietary options with schools directly. Prices in Thai baht (THB) and are indicative.