


Night
Life Recommend Place |
Original Content From: WikiTravel
Nightlife
Pattaya is renowned for its nightlife, which caters primarily to foreigners. While some of this is unrelated to prostitution, the central Pattaya Beach Area is known as a destination for sex tourism (alongside several districts in Bangkok and Phuket). While prostitution is technically illegal in Thailand, it is widely tolerated.
The city has literally hundreds of beer bars, go go bars, and night clubs/discotheques. Virtually all of these are venues for meeting working girls. The nature of commercial sex varies widely; the standard system of "bar fines" is the most common, but there are many exceptions. Most notably, discos and nightclubs are venues for freelancers (independant sex workers unafilliated with a commercial establishment. There are also several large massage parlors.
Since the "social order" crackdown of 2004, there are very few sex shows (such as the ping pong shows) although they can sometimes still be found. Depending on the enforcement climate, go go dancers may be seen fully nude, topless or in bikinis on different days or weeks.
Muay Thai (Thai boxing) matches aimed
at tourists can be seen at many of the open air beer bar complexes.
Another important, but understated aspect of Pattaya are the foreign restaurants. Often run by expats, most offer quality food at prices far below those found in Bangkok, Samui or Phuket.
The Boyztown, Sunee Plaza, and the Jomtien
Complex areas are famous for their many gay nightclubs, cabarets and go-go clubs.
Pattaya probably has the largest concentration of establishments catering to
the gay community in Thailand. There are literally hundreds of "host"
and go-go bars. Many specialize in certain types of hosts (slim, muscular, effeminate),
while others have a broad range of men available.
Pattaya is known for its cabaret revues
featuring kathoeys (male-to-female transsexuals), with Alcazar
and Tiffany's being the largest and most elaborate. There are
a few kathoey bars around Walking St. and nearby (e.g. Jenny Star Bar)
Pattaya is especially famous for its beer bars (also called bar-beer), staffed by "bar girls" who are "for hire" to the tourists and ex-pats who drink there. Popular beer bar pastimes include pool, connect-four and shut-the-box.
Open-air beer bars can be found all over
Pattaya, with the biggest and best known concentrations being along and around
Pattaya Soi 7 /Pattaya Soi 8 and Pattaya Walking Street, at numerous points
on Pattaya second Road, Pattaya Beach Road, Soi Buakhao, and in smaller numbers
just about everywhere else, including along the southern end of Naklua Road
and at Jomtien. Although the staff of a typical beer bar will usually all be
prostitutes, customers who have no intention of paying a "bar fine"
(money paid to the bar so that the girl can leave with the customer) are generally
very welcome and indeed make up the majority of the clientele.
Indoor beer bars can also be found all
over Pattaya, the most notorious areas of Pattaya being Soi Yodsak (Soi 6) and
parts of Soi Post Office (Soi 13/2). While some of these bars are much more
"bar fine" oriented, in most cases customers who simply want to buy
drinks are still welcome.
The official closing time in "entertainment zones"
is 01:00 (in practice usually somewhere between 01:00 and 02:00, depending on
the location) and 00:00 elsewhere - however "closing" is defined as
switching off the music and non-essential lighting, and numerous beer bars remain
open 24/7.
Go-go bars
Also called a-go-go bars, the main concentrations are along Walking Street and the three Pattayaland streets, with more dotted around the most popular beer bar areas; most come to life at around 20:00 and close between 01:00 and 02:00.
Sight-seeing tourists are welcome in go-go bars, however cameras are not. Signs prohibiting photography are widespread, and a minority of venues require patrons to deposit their cameras with security staff as they enter.
Walking Street
Should have been named "Walking, Shopping, Eating, Drinking, Dancing and
Ogling Street" as there's plenty of almost everything here - including
around 100 beer bars and at least 30 go-go bars, plus many more in the side-sois
that lead east towards Pratamnak Road. Worth a look in the daytime, but best
visited in the evening, and has loads of restaurants if you're bridging the
gap between the two. Gets really packed in places when the discos empty, so
watch your pockets. If you're going to visit just one go-go, you could try "Super
Baby" in Soi Diamond, whose reputation for having the most attractive girls
(not a stretch mark as far as the eye could see) in its heyday a year or two
back made it a mandatory stop for countless busloads of Asian tourists. While
that's no longer quite the case, it's still a good bet as a hassle-free "middle
of the road" place to see.
Pattayaland
Soi Pattayaland 2
(Soi 13/4) features on many a Pattaya postcard - when lit up at night, the go-go
bar signs are a memorable and photogenic sight, although there are in fact only
eight go-go bars here (two of which feature guys, not girls), plus a half-dozen
bars and the Penthouse Hotel. Worth a look in the evening (it's almost a ghost
town the rest of the time), but get there before 01:00 as that's when the lights
go out.
Soi Pattayaland 3 ("Boyz Town"
- no direct access from Beach Road, runs from the middle of Soi 13/4 to Second
Road) features only male dancers and bars that cater for the gay crowd; Soi
Pattayaland 1 (Soi 13/3) has even more all-male go-gos (eight), but does have
a couple of girlie-go-gos too. There is also a small lesbian scene in Pattaya,
with local butch girls called "tom" girls and femme girls called "dee".
Soi 7 & Soi 8
There's always something going on here - in the evening and early hours, there
are about 120 well-staffed beer bars to choose from, plus a handful of go-go
bars; in the morning there are several places that serve breakfast; in the afternoon
it's a popular place for those who like to get started early; and at Songkran
(New Year) it's unmitigated mayhem. The "Night Out" complex (10 large
outdoor bars, on a side-soi that connects Soi 7 and Pattaya Central Road) is
about as family-orientated as these places ever get, and has live music from
20:00-01:00. There are several large hotels (light sleepers beware), and Soi
8 also has a few travel agencies, convenience stores, etc.
Soi Yodsak (Soi 6)
Imagine a kerb-crawlers paradise - and then pedestrianise it. Arguably Pattaya's
most colourful street (as well as most notorious), Soi 6 has about 50 bars (mostly
"short time" bars, with names such as "Butterfly", "Love
Club", "Route 69" and "The Eager Beaver") which all
get going at 13:00 and close pretty much on the dot at 01:00. It's not really
a pedestrian-only street (but it is one-way), however walking - preferably in
broad daylight - is undoubtedly the best and most popular way to experience
it. Go in the middle of the afternoon and just wander from one end to the other
(if coming from the south, walk from the Second Road end down to the Beach Road
end if you want to get there and back by songthaew). It's much, much more "sex-tourist"
than "tourism" oriented, but anyone and everyone is welcome everywhere
provided they're buying a drink or three. The curiously named "Hi Boss!
2002 Pub" is where the ladyboys hang out, there's one go-go - "Mandarin"
(dancing from 17:00 till 01:00), plus a couple of "pub" food possibilities;
and neighbouring Soi 6/1 has a handful of "ordinary" outdoor beer
bars.
Second Road - around the Soi 2 & Soi 3 junctions
On the west side of Second Road opposite the Central Festival Centre is a collection
of about 35 very popular beer bars, which start to fill up from about 16:00,
and several of which remain open long after the lights go out around 01:00-02:00.
"Atlantic Bar", at the far end of the five-bar strip to the south
of Soi 2, always draws a substantial crowd. The only go-go ("Classroom
2", 19:30-02:00) is a lively one, and while there's not much in the way
of food in amongst the bars themselves, there are numerous eating options extremely
nearby (including outlets for most of the major fast-food chains directly opposite
on the other side of Second Road)