‘I felt the heat and the burn’: How the deadly Bangkok bar fire unfolded

The devastating blaze at the Rong Beer Na Lat Phrao bar in Bangkok’s Chatuchak district is the deadliest fire in Thailand since 2009.


Asia

‘I felt the heat and the burn’: How the deadly Bangkok bar fire unfolded

The devastating blaze at the Rong Beer Na Lat Phrao bar in Bangkok’s Chatuchak district is the deadliest fire in Thailand since 2009.

'I felt the heat and the burn': How the deadly Bangkok bar fire unfolded

Bangkok Metropolitan Administration officials work outside the Rong Beer Na Lat Phrao bar after a fire in Bangkok on Jul 13, 2026. (Photo: AFP/Chanakarn Laosarakham)

Read a summary of this article on FAST.

Get bite-sized news via a new
cards interface. Give it a try.

Click here to return to FAST
Tap here to return to FAST

FAST

First, the lights went out, followed by the smell of smoke. Moments later, an explosion ripped through a packed live music venue in Thailand and a fire began spreading rapidly, sending panicked patrons scrambling for the exits.

The devastating inferno at the Rong Beer Na Lat Phrao bar in Bangkok that broke out overnight into Monday (Jul 13) claimed at least 27 lives and left dozens more injured, some in critical condition.

It is the deadliest fire in Thailand since a blaze tore through Bangkok’s Santika club during New Year celebrations in 2009, killing 67 people and injuring more than 200.

Footage of the incident shared on social media showed thick smoke billowing out of the single-storey building before an intense horizontal plume of fire jets out of the doorway.

Shoes were lost and scattered as their owners fled, with phones and other belongings left behind and even clumps of hair seen on the pavement. 

“Everybody was running, squeezing into each other,” recalled Athipat “Ice” Wijarn, whose band Tosakan was on stage when the fire started around 11pm local time (12am Singapore time) on Sunday.

After the power went out, the band noticed smoke coming from the electrical circuit on the wall behind them, he told Thai talk show Hone-Krasae on Monday.

“There was an explosion, and I got hit at the back of my head. I felt the heat and the burn,” he said, recounting the moment he crawled towards the exit. 

The band’s bass player, Anan Prasert, said that he was not alarmed when he first smelt smoke while performing, because he thought it was due to electronic equipment overheating.

He only realised that something was wrong when the smell became more like a chemical odour.

“About 10 seconds later, I noticed sparks and a large amount of smoke coming from the ceiling,” the 37-year-old said.

“As soon as I understood the situation, I quickly unplugged the cable from my bass guitar, put the bass over my shoulder and ran outside,” he added.

“SMOKE WAS EVERYWHERE”

Firefighter Chakrit Khongkom, 45, said he arrived on the first fire truck to see the bar alight and many patrons stranded inside, several trying to escape from the back of the venue. The few people coming through the front of the venue were burnt.

“The smoke was everywhere,” he said. “Most of the survivors were choking on smoke.”

Body-camera footage from an emergency worker seen by Reuters showed firefighters in oxygen masks moving through the darkened remains of the beer hall with torches as they searched for survivors and victims.

Several people could be seen lying on the floor near the bar’s toilets while rescue workers brought in stretchers.

“We sent in a rescue and search squad and found that a lot of people were inside the toilet. Most of them were trying to escape to the back because they saw that the flame was at the front,” said Chakrit.

Bangkok city officials said it was about half an hour until firefighters brought the fire under control.

By daylight, the site had been cordoned off as dozens of Thai forensic officers combed through the burned remains for clues about what sparked the blaze. 

The building’s street-facing windows had been blown out and debris littered the sidewalk, including charred television sets, speakers and an electric guitar. 

From outside, the scale of the devastation was visible through the shattered windows, where burned-out tables, some still holding empty beer bottles, stood inside.

A burnt electric guitar lies outside the Rong Beer Na Lat Phrao bar in Bangkok, Thailand on Jul 13, 2026. (Photo: CNA/Jack Board)

Charred debris outside the Beer Na Lat Phrao bar in Bangkok, Thailand on Jul 13, 2026. (Photo: CNA/Jack Board)

The charred exterior of the Rong Beer Na Lat Phrao bar in Bangkok, Thailand on Jul 13, 2026. (Photo: CNA/Jack Board)

The director of the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration’s Department of Disaster Prevention and Mitigation said that an initial assessment points to an electrical short circuit in an air conditioner located in the ceiling.

Based on survivor accounts, officials said the fire is understood to have started at the front stage section of the bar and spread rapidly.

This forced many to run to the back of the venue, which houses the kitchen and the bathrooms.

“The fire spread very quickly, reaching up to the ceiling. Smoke was likely the main cause of death,” Bangkok Governor Chadchart Sittipunt told reporters.

Thai national police chief Kittharath Punpetch said most of the dead were found trapped in windowless bathrooms near one of the rear exits of the bar, where they may have sheltered to escape the flames in the hall.

He said the exit had not been used, and people may have been obstructed from reaching it by a table set up in the hall to sell candy, or because it was too dark to find it.

Access to another exit near the kitchen might also have been narrowed by shelving units and lockers, said Kittharath. There were signs that at least some of the exit doors might have been locked shut, he added.

Members of emergency services work outside a pub where a deadly fire broke out, in Bangkok, Thailand, July 13, 2026. REUTERS/Chalinee Thirasupa

Members of emergency personnel transfer the body of a deceased person at the site of a deadly fire at a pub in Bangkok, Thailand, July 13, 2026. REUTERS/Chalinee Thirasupa

The inside of a pub where a deadly fire broke out, in Bangkok, Thailand, July 13, 2026. REUTERS/Chalinee Thirasupa

“I SAW MANY DEATHS”

Laotian tourist Kan Kutirat, who was in the bar at the time, told AFP he “heard loud screaming from a lot of people inside – chaos happened”.

“I never experienced anything like this before,” he told AFP. “The images are still stuck in my mind.”

Motorbike taxi driver Surin Jaiharn said he saw the fire burst into the street from the bar door.

He helped about five people fleeing with burnt and blistering skin, while another driver carried a victim away from the danger.

“I feel depressed. I saw many deaths and I do not know the fate of the people I helped,” Surin, 45, told AFP.

A survivor said the fire spread so rapidly that there was no way to get out at all.

“The people who managed to get out were already outside and they ran to the outer zone. The people who were inside couldn’t get out, because we didn’t know where the fire exit was,” Usa Tadsree, 40, told Reuters.

“I went out with friends, there were about five of us. Two died and two survived, along with me, because we went out to smoke a cigarette. Right after we went out to smoke, within a second, we looked at the wall and saw there was smoke … Before we could even get anywhere, it was like something was pushed out, and there was a boom – a very fast boom. We didn’t have time to think, didn’t have time to do anything at all.”

VICTIMS UNACCOUNTED FOR

Ten of the victims have been identified so far, nine of them Thai nationals and one from Laos.

However, identifying all the victims was proving to be a challenge as many were either not carrying identification or were still unconscious in hospital.

Relatives and friends, anxious to learn the fates of their loved ones, earlier gathered around a table set up by officials to collect information regarding the victims.

Others headed to the Police Hospital morgue to identify bodies.

In the hours after the fire, Sukanya Wongwongwai waited outside the bar, looking for a missing friend. Survivors had told her about the chaos that had ensued inside.

“My friend, who was singing on stage, said at first they noticed the smell of something burning, then a little after they saw the ceiling was on fire,” said the 32-year-old.

“Some people were injured because of the (debris) from the ceiling because it seems that the ceiling was made out of foam material to absorb sound.”

A relative reacts after identifying his sister’s body at the Police Hospital morgue, following a deadly fire at a pub in Bangkok, Thailand, Jul 13, 2026. (Photo: Reuters/Arnun Chonmahatrakool)

A relative of one of the victims of the fire cries during an interview at the Institute of Forensic Police hospital in Bangkok, Thailand on Jul 13, 2026. (Photo: AP/Sakchai Lalit)

Nuttakarn Sevoy, a friend of a victim, reacts after identifying their body at the Police hospital morgue in Bangkok, Thailand on Jul 13, 2026. (Photo: Reuters/Athit Perawongmetha)

Athipat wrote on Tosakan’s Facebook page to urge the public not to share unverified information as “a miracle might happen”.

The band’s keyboardist, Kwang, and its singer, Breeze, both died.

Athipat said Breeze, his girlfriend, “did not suffer any burn wounds. It looked like she was just sleeping”.

Tosakan’s drummer, Bew, is in critical condition at the hospital while the band’s other singer, Din, remains missing.

His mother was seen at the Police Hospital morgue earlier on Monday. However, he had not been identified as one of the deceased yet, Khaosod reported.

A flower garland is left on a burnt keyboard in the aftermath of a fire at the Rong Beer Na Lat Phrao bar in Bangkok on Jul 13, 2026. (Photo: AFP/Lillian Suwanrumpha)

A woman shows a photo of her son, who is missing, while talking to the members of the media at the Police Hospital morgue, following a deadly fire at a bar, in Bangkok, Thailand on Jul 13, 2026. (Photo: Reuters/Athit Perawongmetha)

INVESTIGATIONS CONTINUE

As Thai police officers and forensic investigators continue to work to determine the exact cause behind the incident, family and friends are still grappling with loss and searching for answers.

Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul has pledged that victims and their families will “receive the best possible care”.

Senior justice ministry official Triyarith Temahivong pledged 300,000 baht (US$9,000) for the family of each deceased victim and up to 80,000 baht for actual medical costs for each injured person.

The Chatuchak District Office of the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration is also working to provide financial relief for those affected by the bar fire.

Anutin told reporters at City Hall that initial inquiries suggest there were “blind spots” without a visible fire escape route.

Thai police are looking into whether the fire safety exits and the rear exit of the bar were locked, and if there were unauthorised or illegal renovations that had occurred inside the building.

This includes the construction of a possible extension to the performance stage, which may have also obstructed people who were trying to get out as the fire spread rapidly.

Anutin urged everyone to wait for the investigators’ report, but added: “There will be no leniency if any laws have been broken.”

Additional reporting by Jack Board. 



Source: Agencies/nh(zl)

Sign up for our newsletters

Get our pick of top stories and thought-provoking articles in your inbox

Inbox

Get the CNA app

Stay updated with notifications for breaking news and our best stories

Get WhatsApp alerts

Join our channel for the top reads for the day on your preferred chat app

Whatsapp

Get bite-sized news via a new
cards interface. Give it a try.

Click here to return to FAST
Tap here to return to FAST

FAST

About The Author

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

About the Author

Easy WordPress Websites Builder: Versatile Demos for Blogs, News, eCommerce and More – One-Click Import, No Coding! 1000+ Ready-made Templates for Stunning Newspaper, Magazine, Blog, and Publishing Websites.

BlockSpare — News, Magazine and Blog Addons for (Gutenberg) Block Editor

Search the Archives

Access over the years of investigative journalism and breaking reports