Thailand Cost of Living: The Real Numbers
Thailand is consistently ranked as one of the world's best value destinations for expats and digital nomads. But what does life actually cost? Here's a detailed breakdown based on current 2025 data.
Bangkok Monthly Budget Breakdown
| Expense | Budget | Mid-range | Comfortable |
|---|---|---|---|
| Studio apartment | $350 | $600 | $1,200 |
| Food (cooking + street food) | $200 | $350 | $600 |
| Transport (BTS + taxi) | $60 | $100 | $200 |
| Co-working space | $0 | $80 | $150 |
| Health insurance | $50 | $80 | $150 |
| Entertainment & lifestyle | $100 | $300 | $600 |
| TOTAL | $760 | $1,510 | $2,900 |
Chiang Mai: Even More Affordable
Chiang Mai runs about 25–35% cheaper than Bangkok. A comfortable one-bedroom in the Nimman area goes for $300–450/month. Street food meals cost $1–2. A monthly co-working pass at CAMP or MANA is around $50.
Visa Options for Thailand 2025
Tourist Visa (free on arrival): 30 days, extendable once for 30 more days at immigration. Total: 60 days per entry.
TR60 Tourist Visa: Apply at a Thai consulate, get 60 days + 30-day extension = 90 days.
LTR Visa: 10-year visa for those earning $80k+/year or with $250k in savings. Best long-term option.
Education Visa: Study Thai language = 1-year visa, widely used by long-term residents.
Is Thailand Right for You?
Use our free quiz to find out if Thailand matches your budget, visa situation, and lifestyle preferences — compared to 21 other destinations.