13–15 April 2026

Songkran in the UK
Thai New Year 2026

Where to celebrate Songkran across the UK — temple water ceremonies, food festivals, restaurant specials, and what to expect at your first Thai New Year.

What is Songkran?

Songkran (สงกรานต์) is the Thai New Year — the most important festival in Thai culture. Traditionally celebrated April 13–15, it marks the sun's transition into Aries and the end of the dry season. It's famous worldwide for its water fights, but in the UK, celebrations are more traditional: water pouring ceremonies over Buddha images and elders' hands (rod nam dum hua), merit-making at temples, sand pagoda building, and massive Thai food gatherings.

In the UK, Songkran is the single biggest annual gathering of the Thai community — over 5,000 people attend Wat Buddhapadipa in Wimbledon alone. For restaurants, it's the peak marketing opportunity of the year.

💡 For restaurant owners

Songkran is your biggest promotional window. Major chains (Rosa's Thai, Chaophraya, Thaikhun) run dedicated Songkran menus and events. If you're not planning your Songkran promotion by February, you're leaving money on the table. Check our menu pricing guide to plan a profitable Songkran special.

Where to Celebrate in 2026

London
Wat Buddhapadipa
Songkran at Wat Buddhapadipa
The UK's largest Songkran celebration. Traditional alms-giving to monks, water blessing ceremony, Thai food stalls, cultural performances, and the famous sand pagoda building. 5,000+ attendees. Family-friendly.
Runcorn
Wat Phra Singh UK
Songkran at Wat Phra Singh UK
Northern England's main Songkran event. Water pouring ceremony, Thai dance, traditional music, and authentic Thai food prepared by the temple community. Ample parking.
Manchester
Wat Charoenbhavana
Songkran at Wat Charoenbhavana (Manchester)
Manchester's Thai community gathers for traditional New Year ceremonies. Merit-making, food offerings to monks, and water blessing. Indoor and outdoor activities.
Kings Bromley
Wat Mahathat UK
Songkran at Wat Mahathat UK
Midlands Thai community Songkran. Traditional ceremonies, Thai street food, cultural shows. Set in peaceful countryside grounds near Birmingham.
Swansea
Wat Sanghapadipa
Songkran at Wat Sanghapadipa (Swansea)
Wales' only Thai temple celebrates Songkran with water ceremonies, Thai food, and cultural activities. The Welsh Thai community's biggest annual gathering.
Helensburgh
Wat Phra Dhammakaya Scotland
Songkran in Scotland
Scotland's Thai Buddhist centre in Helensburgh. Water ceremonies, meditation, and community food. Smaller than the English events but the only dedicated Songkran in Scotland.

Songkran Traditions You'll See

Rod Nam Dum Hua (รดน้ำดำหัว) — The water pouring ceremony. Younger people pour scented water over the hands of elders and monks to ask for blessings. This is the spiritual heart of Songkran — not the water fights you see in Thailand tourism videos.

Sand Pagoda Building (ก่อเจดีย์ทราย) — Families build intricate sand pagodas at temple grounds, decorated with flowers and flags. It's believed to return the sand carried away on your shoes during the year. Wat Buddhapadipa's sand pagodas are particularly elaborate.

Making Merit (ทำบุญ) — Offering food to monks at dawn, releasing birds or fish, and donating to the temple. Most UK temples hold an early morning alms round — arrive by 7am if you want to participate.

Song Nam Phra (สรงน้ำพระ) — Pouring scented water over Buddha images. A purification ritual. Every UK temple sets up a Buddha statue for this purpose during Songkran.

Songkran at Restaurants

Major Thai restaurant chains run Songkran promotions throughout April. These tend to be more commercial but are more accessible if you can't make it to a temple:

See the full 2026 calendar

Songkran is just the start. Browse every Thai festival and event across the UK.

Full Festival Calendar