Thai hybrid cultivar with an elongated, sunset-coloured fruit and refined fragrance; eaten fresh, sliced over rice desserts, or exported to East Asia.
Named after Prince Mahājanaka, the protagonist of a Buddhist Jātaka tale on perseverance — retold in modern Thailand by King Bhumibol in 1996. Bred in the 1990s by Suchart Choowong of Phichit Province from Nang Klangwan × Sunset.
Maha Chanok (มหาชนก) — sometimes Romanised Mahachanok — is a Thai hybrid cultivar selected in the 1990s by Suchart Choowong, a smallholder grower in Phichit Province. The variety is a cross between Nang Klangwan (a local Thai cultivar) and the American Sunset mango; Choowong named his selection after Prince Mahājanaka, the protagonist of one of the most beloved Jātaka tales — a Buddhist parable of perseverance and right effort, retold in modern Thailand by King Bhumibol Adulyadej in his 1996 book of the same name. The royal association gave the cultivar an immediate cultural lift.
Maha Chanok's commercial run started slowly — for the first decade after release it was mostly a curiosity in Phichit and Chai Nat provinces — but the cultivar's looks gradually won export buyers over. A ripe Maha Chanok is one of the most photogenic mangoes commercially grown: long, slender, gently curved, 350–500 g, with a strikingly graduated skin colour that runs from pale yellow at the stem end through orange in the middle to a deep red blush at the apex. The "sunset" lineage is unmistakable. Inside, the flesh is deep yellow-orange, very fibre-free, with a small flat stone and a Brix of 17–22°.
Flavour distinguishes Maha Chanok from its Thai siblings. Where Nam Dok Mai leans floral-sweet and Khiao Sawoei leans crisp-tart, Maha Chanok lands in the middle — sweet with a clear citrus-like acidity that makes it feel more layered. The aroma is rich but not perfumed. Thai pastry chefs and dessert restaurants have gravitated to Maha Chanok over Nam Dok Mai for plated dessert work because the colour graduation reads beautifully on the plate and the slight acidity cuts through sweet rice and cream.
Commercially, Maha Chanok now occupies a growing niche between Nam Dok Mai (the volume export champion) and the smaller specialty cultivars. Export markets — Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong — pay premium prices for graded Maha Chanok with strong colour graduation, and domestic-market high-end fruit boxes increasingly feature the variety alongside Nam Dok Mai Si Thong. The cultivar's growers also benefit from a slightly earlier season than Nam Dok Mai (April–June, with peak in April–May), letting orchards stagger their harvest and labour load.