I have been to most of the rooms Bangkok likes to call its best. Sing Sing, Upper House, Baccarat, the polished Thonglor lounges everyone screenshots. So when a friend invited me to House of Savoy on the night it opened, I expected another good-looking club and a familiar evening. I was wrong about the familiar part. I walked up to the second floor, the room opened up in front of me, and I actually stopped for a second. I have not felt a space hit like that in Bangkok in a long time.

This is the early, honest version of a review, written the week it opened. Prices will settle, the crowd will change, the hype will either prove itself or fade. But the thing that matters most about House of Savoy was obvious from the first minute, and it is the one thing a club cannot fake later: the room itself is extraordinary.
Where House of Savoy Is
House of Savoy sits on the second floor at 41 Sukhumvit Soi 24, inside the SILQ Hotel building, a short walk from the new 24BLVD development. That puts it in the Phrom Phong orbit, the EmQuartier and Emporium side of Sukhumvit, which is exactly the part of town where Bangkok’s money goes out at night.
If you know the area, you already know what that means. This is not the Soi Cowboy or Nana end of Sukhumvit. Soi 24 is upscale, walkable, and full of restaurants and hotels, which makes House of Savoy an easy add-on to a dinner nearby rather than a destination you have to plan a whole night around. For how Soi 24 compares to the Thonglor scene one BTS stop over, our Thonglor vs Sukhumvit 24 guide breaks down the difference.

The Space Is the Whole Story
Most Bangkok clubs are built around a dance floor and a wall of LED. House of Savoy is built around volume, in the architectural sense. It is one continuous room on the second floor, not a maze of zones, and the ceiling goes way up. A long, dramatic bar anchors one side, a stage-like area anchors the other, and the walls and windows do a lot of quiet work that most clubs never bother with.
What got me was the sense of space. The interior is designed so cleverly that you feel the height and the openness the moment you step in, even when the room is full of people. That sounds like a small thing. It is not. Bangkok’s hottest rooms right now, the Salons and Upper Houses and Baccarats, are gorgeous, but none of them gave me this feeling of standing inside a genuinely big, well-proportioned space. House of Savoy did, immediately.


The material palette is the opposite of the LED-and-laser megaclub look. Think black marble, brass grid tile, warm amber light, deep red glow, cut-crystal glassware, and brass table lamps on the booths. It reads like an old-money hotel bar that learned how to throw a party. The name fits. Savoy carries that London grand-hotel weight, and the design leans all the way into it without tipping over into theme-park.
If you care about interiors at all, this is reason enough to go once. I have walked through a lot of Bangkok nightlife, and I think this might end up being the best-feeling room in the city.
The Pedigree: Baccarat and Upper House DNA
House of Savoy is reported to come from the same group behind Baccarat Bangkok and Upper House, two of the names that define the current high-end scene here. That lineage tells you most of what you need to set expectations.
It means the service is built around table culture, the crowd skews well-dressed and connected, and the whole operation is aimed at the segment that treats bottle service as normal rather than a splurge. If you have had a good night at Upper House or Baccarat, you already understand the language House of Savoy speaks. It is the same family, with a bigger, more ambitious room. For where this fits in the broader members-and-tables world, our Bangkok member clubs guide maps out how the private and table-driven side of the city works.
The Music and the Night
The sound leans electronic, with the lineups also pulling in hip-hop, R&B, soul, and Afro house depending on the night. This is a dance-and-be-seen room, not a quiet listening bar. Doors open around 9 PM, and like every serious Bangkok club, it does not really come alive until later. Show up too early and you will be admiring the architecture in a half-empty room. Roll in closer to midnight and you will catch it at full tilt.
Opening night was, predictably, wall-to-wall influencers and the Bangkok scene crowd. That is not a knock. It is a signal. The people whose entire job is knowing where to be had all decided to be here on day one. Even just reading the room that night, it was hard not to conclude that this place is on a track to become a genuine hot spot. For a wider map of how the city’s nights are structured, from go-go strips to rooftops to clubs like this one, start with our Bangkok nightlife 101.
What It Will Cost You
Here is where I have to be straight with you: I was a guest that night, so I did not pay, and I cannot give you a verified bill. What I can give you is a realistic frame.
Listings put entry at roughly 500 baht and up per person, which is standard for this tier of Bangkok club. For tables and bottles, set your expectations at Upper House level or a little above. Given the room and the positioning, I would not be surprised if House of Savoy sits at the pricier end of the upscale bracket rather than the friendly end. If you are planning a table, message the venue directly to confirm minimums for your night before you go, because opening-period pricing on a new flagship room tends to run high and tends to move.
To keep the rest of your night from quietly draining your wallet, our Bangkok tipping guide covers what is actually expected at the bill, and the Grab vs Bolt guide helps you get home at 2 AM without overpaying.


How to Go
Getting there. The closest station is BTS Phrom Phong, then a short walk or a quick motorbike taxi down Soi 24. A Grab or Bolt from anywhere on the Sukhumvit line is cheap and easy, and at closing time it is the move. Save your hotel address in Thai on your phone so the 2 AM ride home is painless.
Dress code. This is a sharp room with a sharp crowd. Treat it like Thonglor rules: closed shoes, a proper shirt, nothing you would wear to the beach. Dress like you belong in a marble-and-brass hotel bar and you will be fine.
Reservations. For a new flagship on a weekend, a table is the safe way in, and it is how this kind of venue is designed to be experienced anyway. Check the venue’s Instagram for event nights, DJ lineups, and booking contacts. That is also the fastest way to confirm hours, since a brand-new club’s schedule can shift week to week.
Best nights. Friday and Saturday are the obvious peaks. As the room settles into a rhythm, expect specific event nights to become the ones worth planning around. The Instagram will tell you.
Is It Worth It?
Yes, with one honest caveat. House of Savoy is new, and new clubs are a moving target. The crowd, the pricing, and the consistency all need a few months to prove themselves, and I will only know how it holds up by going back when the opening-night shine has worn off.
But the foundation is the part you cannot retrofit, and the foundation here is exceptional. The room is the most impressive nightlife space I have walked into in Bangkok, the people behind it have already built two of the city’s best clubs, and the opening crowd voted with their feet. If House of Savoy gets the service and the lineups right, it has a real shot at being the best room in the city. On the strength of the space alone, I would tell anyone who cares about Bangkok nightlife to go see it for themselves.
If you want to build a full night around it, pair it with Bangkok’s best rooftop bars for sunset drinks beforehand, or read our RCA and Thonglor clubs guide for where the rest of the city goes out after midnight.


