Thailand’s reputation as a budget destination is well-earned, but costs have risen since the ฿200/night dorm days. Here’s an honest breakdown of what things actually cost in 2026, based on prices I’ve tracked across multiple trips.
The Three Budget Tiers
Backpacker: ฿800–1,200/day ($23–34)
Dorm beds, street food, public transport, free temples.
Mid-Range: ฿2,000–4,000/day ($57–114)
Private rooms with AC, mix of street food and restaurants, occasional taxi, paid activities.
Comfort: ฿5,000–10,000/day ($143–286)
Nice hotels, restaurants for every meal, private tours, spa visits.
Accommodation: Where the Real Savings Are
| Type | Bangkok | Chiang Mai | Islands |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dorm bed | ฿250–400 ($7–11) | ฿200–300 ($6–9) | ฿300–500 ($9–14) |
| Budget private | ฿600–1,000 ($17–29) | ฿400–800 ($11–23) | ฿500–1,200 ($14–34) |
| Mid-range hotel | ฿1,500–3,000 ($43–86) | ฿1,000–2,000 ($29–57) | ฿1,500–3,500 ($43–100) |
| Nice hotel | ฿3,000–6,000 ($86–171) | ฿2,000–4,000 ($57–114) | ฿3,000–8,000 ($86–229) |
Money-saving tip: Booking.com and Agoda often have different prices for the same hotel. Always check both. Agoda frequently wins in Thailand.
Food: ฿150–300/Day is Entirely Possible
Street food and local restaurants are where Thailand’s budget magic lives.
Street Food Prices (2026)
- Pad thai: ฿50–80 ($1.43–2.29)
- Rice with one topping (khao rad kaeng): ฿40–60 ($1.14–1.71)
- Grilled meat skewers: ฿10–20 each ($0.29–0.57)
- Fresh fruit smoothie: ฿35–50 ($1–1.43)
- Mango sticky rice: ฿60–100 ($1.71–2.86)
- Fried rice or noodles: ฿50–80 ($1.43–2.29)
- Thai iced tea: ฿25–40 ($0.71–1.14)
Restaurant Prices
- Local Thai restaurant: ฿80–150/dish ($2.29–4.29)
- Tourist-area restaurant: ฿150–350/dish ($4.29–10)
- Western food: ฿200–500/dish ($5.71–14.29) — avoid if budget is tight
- Fancy restaurant: ฿500–1,500/dish ($14.29–42.86)
Daily Food Budget Examples
- Ultra-budget: 3 street food meals = ฿150–200/day ($4.29–5.71)
- Comfortable budget: Street food breakfast, local restaurant lunch, nicer dinner = ฿300–500/day ($8.57–14.29)
- Mid-range: Mix of restaurants and street food = ฿500–1,000/day ($14.29–28.57)
Transport: The Hidden Budget Lever
Within Cities
- BTS/MRT (Bangkok): ฿16–59 per trip ($0.46–1.69)
- Songthaew (Chiang Mai): ฿30–40 ($0.86–1.14)
- Grab (ride-hailing): ฿50–200 for most city trips ($1.43–5.71)
- Tuk-tuk: ฿100–300 ($2.86–8.57) — always agree on price first
- Motorbike taxi: ฿20–60 ($0.57–1.71)
Between Cities
- Overnight train Bangkok → Chiang Mai: ฿800–1,300 ($22.86–37.14) — saves a hotel night
- Green Bus VIP Chiang Mai → Chiang Rai: ฿200 ($5.71)
- Budget flights (AirAsia, Nok Air): ฿990–3,000 ($28.29–85.71) — book 2+ weeks ahead
- Minibus to Pai: ฿150 ($4.29)
Between Islands
- Lomprayah ferry (Koh Samui ↔ Koh Tao): ฿600–800 ($17.14–22.86)
- Longtail boat (Ao Nang → Railay): ฿150 ($4.29)
- Speedboat tours: ฿1,000–3,000 ($28.57–85.71)
Activities: Where to Splurge and Where to Save
Free or Nearly Free
- Temple visits — most are free, major ones ฿30–500
- Beach time — all Thai beaches are public
- Night markets — window shopping and cheap eats
- Hiking — national parks ฿100–400 ($2.86–11.43) entry
- Sunrise/sunset viewpoints
Worth the Money
- Cooking class: ฿1,000–1,500 ($28.57–42.86) — one of the best ฿1,000 you’ll spend
- PADI Open Water diving (Koh Tao): ฿9,800 ($280) — cheapest in the world
- Ethical elephant experience: ฿2,500 ($71.43) — avoid riding, support sanctuaries
- Thai massage: ฿300–500/hr ($8.57–14.29) — at least once a trip
Tourist Traps to Skip
- Overpriced tiger temples and photo ops
- ฿2,000+ “luxury” island tours that hit the same spots as ฿1,200 tours
- Bangkok river dinner cruises (฿1,500+ for average food)
- Any “special price just for you” followed by a tuk-tuk ride to a gem shop
Money Management
ATM Strategy
Every Thai ATM charges ฿220 ($6.29) per withdrawal. Minimize this:
- Withdraw ฿20,000–30,000 at once
- Use a bank card with no foreign ATM fee rebates (Charles Schwab, Wise)
- Kasikorn Bank (green) ATMs are the most widely available and reliable
Cash vs. Card
- Street food, markets, tuk-tuks, ferries: Cash only
- Hotels, nice restaurants, malls: Cards accepted (Visa/Mastercard)
- 7-Eleven: Cards accepted for purchases over ฿300
Exchange Rates
- Airport exchange booths: Worst rates (5–8% markup)
- SuperRich exchange in Bangkok: Best rates in the country — orange booth, not green
- ATMs: Decent rates but ฿220 fee
- Always decline “convert to your currency” at ATMs — it’s a 4–5% ripoff
Sample Daily Budgets
The ฿1,000/Day Backpacker
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| Dorm bed | ฿300 |
| Breakfast (street food) | ฿50 |
| Lunch (street food) | ฿60 |
| Dinner (local restaurant) | ฿100 |
| Drinks/snacks | ฿80 |
| Local transport | ฿60 |
| Temple entry or activity | ฿100 |
| Miscellaneous | ฿50 |
| Total | ฿800 |
Achievable in Chiang Mai, Pai, and smaller towns. Bangkok and islands add ฿200–400.
The ฿3,000/Day Comfortable Traveler
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| Mid-range hotel | ฿1,500 |
| Breakfast (hotel or cafe) | ฿150 |
| Lunch (restaurant) | ฿200 |
| Dinner (nice restaurant) | ฿400 |
| Drinks | ฿200 |
| Grab rides | ฿200 |
| Activity or tour | ฿400 |
| Total | ฿3,050 |
This is the sweet spot — comfortable without feeling like you’re overspending.
Scott’s Pro Tips
- Chiang Mai and Pai are budget heaven. Your money stretches 40–50% further than Bangkok or the islands.
- Eat where the Thais eat. If a restaurant has an English menu and no Thai customers, you’re paying a tourist premium.
- The ฿220 ATM fee hurts less when you withdraw ฿30,000 (0.7% fee) than ฿3,000 (7.3% fee). Big withdrawals, less often.
- Don’t exchange money at the airport unless you need ฿500–1,000 for the taxi. Wait for SuperRich in Bangkok.
- 7-Eleven is your budget friend: ฿35 sandwiches, ฿15 water, ฿25 iced coffee, ฿60 microwave meals. Not gourmet, but it works.
- Negotiate respectfully at markets, but don’t haggle for ฿10. The difference means more to the vendor than to you.