Sabai Jai Thai Cuisine has been at 1707 Hewitt Ave since April 2022, and it is quietly one of the best Thai restaurants in Snohomish County. The name means “comfortable heart” in Thai, and the concept follows through: a family-owned kitchen, authentic regional recipes, and a dining room on the Hewitt walking street with a little patio out front. It’s the kind of place that rewards the people who actually pay attention to Everett’s food scene instead of defaulting to the chains out on Broadway.
We’ve covered a lot of Hewitt Avenue over the past few months — Heritage African Restaurant, Luca Italian, The New Mexicans, Vintage Cafe, Obsidian Beer Hall. But this is the first time we’re giving Sabai Jai Thai the full treatment it deserves. Here’s the guide.
The Kitchen: Bangkok Street Food Meets Thai Regional Cooking
Sabai Jai Thai is owned by a couple with more than a decade in the Thai food industry. They built the menu around two ideas: dishes from specific Thai regions, and Bangkok street food — both treated as the real thing, not approximations for Western tastes.
The seasonal menu rotates based on ingredient availability and keeps things interesting for regulars. The kitchen also uses house organic beverages and homemade desserts from a family recipe — the kind of touches that separate a restaurant that’s going through the motions from one that’s genuinely trying to do the food justice.
What to Order
Pineapple Fried Rice — one of the most-ordered dishes here. Made properly, with actual pineapple, cashews, egg, and protein in a wok, it’s a completely different thing than the stir-fried slop that passes for fried rice at most Thai-adjacent spots. Sabai Jai does it right.
Avocado Curry — this is a standout. Not a traditional Thai curry you’d find everywhere, but a house development that works: the richness of avocado against a curry base is a combination that earns its place on the menu. Order it.
Mushroom Pop — listed as an appetizer, and it functions as one, but don’t let it be an afterthought. The crispy mushroom preparation is one of those dishes that turns mushroom skeptics into believers.
Gang Kha (Galangal Coconut Curry) — the traditional Thai coconut milk curry with galangal (a relative of ginger), lemongrass, and kaffir lime leaves. This is one of the dishes that tells you whether a kitchen understands Thai flavor architecture. Here, they do.
Crab Fried Rice — for the protein upgrade. Real crab meat, seasoned properly, in fried rice that doesn’t resort to soy sauce overload as a crutch.
Vegan, Vegetarian, and Gluten-Free
This is one of the strongest aspects of Sabai Jai Thai’s menu: nearly every dish can be ordered vegan or vegetarian, with the protein either omitted or replaced. The kitchen doesn’t treat plant-based orders as an afterthought — the dishes are built so the vegetables and aromatics carry the flavor even without meat. Gluten-free diners are accommodated as well. If you’ve been burned before by Thai restaurants that claim “easily modified” and then deliver something disappointing, give Sabai Jai a real chance.
The Space: Hewitt Walking Street Patio
The restaurant is at 1707 Hewitt Ave, inside the Hewitt walking street corridor — the 4-block stretch of downtown Everett that has been quietly building into a legitimate dining destination over the past few years. Sabai Jai has indoor seating for a proper sit-down dinner and a small patio out front for good-weather evenings.
The atmosphere is warm and cozy — not fancy, but considered. Tables with good lighting, a space that feels lived-in rather than branded. It’s a neighborhood restaurant in the best sense of the term. Parking: street parking on Hewitt or the nearby city lots on Hoyt or Norton.
Hours
Monday through Thursday: 11:00 AM – 9:30 PM
Friday: 11:00 AM – 10:00 PM
Saturday – Sunday: 12:00 PM – 10:00 PM
Phone: (425) 259-6365. Online ordering available through DoorDash and their own site at sabaijaithaieverett.com.
Awards and Recognition
Sabai Jai Thai earned Restaurant Guru recognition as one of the top Thai restaurants in Everett and Marysville in both 2024 and 2025. That’s a third-party signal, not just local boosterism — the food earns it. With 164 Yelp reviews (updated April 2026) and a consistent rating, this isn’t a hidden gem in the way of something no one knows about. But it’s underrated relative to how good it actually is, and it’s never had a full guide written about it. Now it does.
The Hewitt Corridor Context
Sabai Jai Thai is one of the anchors of the Hewitt food corridor — the stretch we’ve been documenting that now includes a Gambian-Senegalese kitchen at Heritage African, real Florentine Italian at Luca, Hatch green chile and posole at The New Mexicans, 50-year diner anchor Vintage Cafe, and a curated PNW beer hall at Obsidian. Authentic Thai from a family kitchen belongs on that list. Walk the street, eat well, end at Obsidian for a beer.
Frequently Asked Questions
Where is Sabai Jai Thai in Everett?
1707 Hewitt Ave, Everett, WA 98201 — on the Hewitt walking street in downtown Everett. Hours: Mon–Thu 11 AM–9:30 PM, Fri 11 AM–10 PM, Sat–Sun 12–10 PM.
Is Sabai Jai Thai vegan-friendly?
Yes — almost every dish on the menu can be ordered vegan or vegetarian with simple modifications. The kitchen accommodates plant-based orders without the food suffering for it.
What are the best dishes at Sabai Jai Thai?
Pineapple Fried Rice, Avocado Curry, Mushroom Pop appetizer, Gang Kha (galangal coconut curry), and Crab Fried Rice are standouts. The seasonal menu rotates, so ask the server what’s current.
How long has Sabai Jai Thai been open?
Since April 2022. The owners have over 10 years of Thai food industry experience. Restaurant Guru named it one of the top Thai restaurants in Everett and Marysville in 2024 and 2025.
Can I order Sabai Jai Thai online?
Yes — through DoorDash delivery or their own online ordering at sabaijaithaieverett.com.
Is there parking near Sabai Jai Thai on Hewitt?
Street parking on Hewitt Ave and in nearby city parking lots on Hoyt or Norton Ave. The Hewitt walking street area is walkable from downtown parking structures.
Is Sabai Jai Thai authentic Thai food?
Yes — the owners draw on Thai regional recipes and Bangkok street food traditions, using organic house beverages and homemade desserts from family recipes. It’s not a generic Americanized Thai menu.

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