Study abroad in Thailand
Visa, costs, healthcare and the best cities for exchange students in Thailand.
Capital
Bangkok
Languages
Tailandés
Academic Year
Semestral: Agosto a Diciembre (Primer semestre) y Enero a Mayo (Segundo semestre). Las universidades tailandesas han alineado su calendario al sistema ASEAN/Internacional.
Population
71,000,000+
Typical Budget
USD 500 - 1,000/month
Overview
The Land of Smiles. An incredibly affordable, warm, and welcoming country with a unique monarchy-centered culture and a massive expat/digital-nomad scene.
Country Overview
What student life feels like in Thailand.
Thailand is one of the easiest Southeast Asian countries for Western students to adapt to, but it is still a fundamentally different world. The monarchy is sacred (lèse-majesté laws carry prison sentences), Buddhist culture permeates daily life, and the Thai concept of 'Mai Pen Rai' (don't worry about it) defines the relaxed pace.
Bangkok is a chaotic, modern megalopolis while Chiang Mai offers a quieter, cultural student experience. English is more widely spoken in tourist areas than in China or Japan, but Thai bureaucracy can be frustratingly slow.
The cost of living is incredibly low, making it a dream destination for budget-conscious students.
Country Framework
What shapes student life in Thailand.
Use this page to understand the legal context, budget baseline, safety feel, and everyday rhythm before comparing cities or universities.
Safety Snapshot
Mínima criminalidad violenta, pero alta incidencia de estafas a extranjeros (scams) en zonas turísticas y muchísimos accidentes de motocicleta.
Before You Land
A few practical setup details students usually sort before arrival
Connectivity, insurance, and secure public WiFi are the boring things you only notice when you need them. Keep them on your checklist, but keep the guide itself front and centre.
Arrival Connectivity
Sort an eSIM before you land
Maps, ride apps, 2FA codes, and WhatsApp are usually the first things students need from the airport.
Coverage Check
Confirm your travel insurance
Even when the university gives guidance, students usually need to double-check what is covered before departure.
Public WiFi
Have a backup for shared networks
Campus halls, airports, and cafés are convenient, but many students prefer an extra privacy layer when they first arrive.
Safety & Cost Indices
Source: Numbeo crowdsourced data. Lower crime = safer. Higher safety = safer.
Crime Index
Low
World avg: 44.7
Safety Index
Moderate
World avg: 55.3
Cost of Living
Very affordable
USD 500 - 1,000/month
Crime factors measured
Big Cities vs Small Towns
Big Cities
- Bangkok is Southeast Asia's most dynamic student city — world-ranked universities (Chulalongkorn, Mahidol), massive international student community, extraordinary food, and a cost of living that makes European cities seem absurd.
- Excellent English-language infrastructure in Bangkok; international students rarely need Thai in academic or commercial settings.
- Traffic and pollution are real challenges; the BTS Skytrain and MRT metro are essential tools for navigating efficiently.
- Bangkok's cultural and social offering is genuinely world-class — art, food, nightlife, and temples all within reach.
Small Towns
- Chiang Mai is Thailand's northern cultural capital — excellent universities (Chiang Mai University), massively popular with digital nomads and language students, cool(er) climate, and lower costs than Bangkok.
- Chiang Mai has the best balance of Thai cultural authenticity and international infrastructure for students.
- Smaller southern towns (Surat Thani, Hat Yai) are genuine Thai cities with minimal tourist infrastructure — Thai language essential.
- Phuket and Koh Samui attract expats and tourists rather than students — expensive and less academically focused.
Culture
Social Norms
- The monarchy is constitutionally protected — lèse-majesté is a criminal offence carrying up to 15 years in prison. Never mock, photograph disrespectfully, or make jokes about the King, royal family, or any image of them, including banknotes on the floor.
- The wai (palms pressed together, slight bow) is used for greetings, thanks, and apologies. Return a wai when received from service workers, elders, or strangers — ignoring it is rude. You don't wai children or staff in a service transaction.
- Head and feet have strong symbolic meaning: the head is spiritually high (never touch someone's head, including children's), feet are spiritually low (never point feet at a person, monk, or Buddha image). Remove shoes at temple and home entrances without being asked.
- Thais avoid public confrontation aggressively. Shouting, showing anger, or making a scene causes irreparable loss of face — for both parties. If something goes wrong, stay calm and smile; results come faster that way than through pressure.
- Dress modestly at temples: shoulders and knees covered. Sarongs available at major temples if needed. This is non-negotiable — underdressed tourists are turned away daily at Wat Pho and the Grand Palace.
- Monks occupy the highest social position. Women must never touch a monk or hand anything directly to one — place items on a surface or cloth for him to take. On public transport, give up your seat immediately when a monk boards.
- The concept of 'sanuk' (fun/enjoyment) is central to Thai social culture. Work, socialising, and even serious conversations should feel light. Earnest intensity or over-seriousness is off-putting to most Thais.
Daily Rhythm
Local pace06:00–08:30
Morning
Thailand wakes early, especially outside Bangkok. Street food vendors open at 06:00 — jok (rice congee), khao tom (rice soup), and fresh-cut fruit. Monks do their alms rounds at dawn.
11:30–13:30
Midday
Lunch is simple, fast, and cheap — pad thai, khao man gai, or a noodle soup from a market stall. Most meals under ฿60. Thais eat quickly; 30-minute lunch common.
14:00–18:00
Afternoon
Hot and humid afternoons slow things down. Air-conditioned malls are social spaces as much as shopping centres. Late-afternoon is motorbike-taxi rush hour.
18:00–21:00
Evening
Night markets open at 18:00 and are the social centre. Dinner is eaten early by Southeast Asian standards. Street food stalls at their best 18:00–22:00.
22:00–03:00
Night
Bangkok's Silom and Khao San Road nightlife runs late. Entertainment complexes (RCA, Thonglor) peak 23:00–02:00. Chiang Mai quieter, with a 02:00 curfew on most venues.
Food Culture
Pad Thai
THB 50-80Stir-fried rice noodles with egg, tamarind, peanuts and lime. The default cheap student meal at any street cart or food court — fast, filling, everywhere.
Order it 'jay' (vegetarian) to save a few baht; squeeze the lime and pile on the chilli flakes yourself.
Som Tum (green papaya salad)
THB 40-60Pounded green papaya with lime, chilli, fish sauce and peanuts — fiercely spicy and Isaan-style. Usually eaten with sticky rice and grilled chicken.
Say 'phet nit noi' (a little spicy) unless you really know your tolerance — the default heat is brutal.
Tom Yum Goong
THB 80-150Hot-and-sour prawn soup with lemongrass, galangal, kaffir lime and chilli. Thailand most famous soup — sharp, aromatic, addictive.
Tom Yum 'nam khon' adds evaporated milk for a creamier, less punchy version if the clear one is too sour.
Green Curry (Gaeng Keow Wan)
THB 60-120Coconut-milk curry with green chilli paste, Thai basil, bamboo and chicken. Creamy, sweet-spicy, ladled over rice — a canteen staple.
Cheapest over rice as 'raad khao'; ask for extra rice ('khao phiset') to stretch one curry into a full meal.
Khao Soi
THB 50-90Northern Thai coconut curry noodle soup topped with crispy noodles, lime and pickled mustard greens. The signature dish of Chiang Mai student life.
Best and cheapest at no-name shops near campus in Chiang Mai, not tourist restaurants — follow the local queues.
Mango Sticky Rice (Khao Niew Mamuang)
THB 40-80Sweet sticky rice with ripe mango and coconut cream. Seasonal (best Mar-Jun) and the dessert every exchange student gets hooked on.
Buy from market stalls by weight rather than cafes — same mango, a third of the price.
Cha Yen (Thai Iced Milk Tea)
THB 25-50Bright-orange sweet black tea with condensed and evaporated milk over crushed ice. The default afternoon pick-me-up sold from every cart.
Ask for 'wan nit noi' (less sweet) — the standard version is extremely sugary.
Dos and Don'ts
Do
Dress modestly at temples — shoulders and knees covered
Return a wai greeting when offered
Remove shoes before entering homes and temple interiors
Accept food and drinks offered by hosts — refusal is impolite
Use 'Khun' (Mr/Ms) + first name for respectful address
Keep calm in all disagreements — patience gets better results
Learn a few Thai phrases — locals appreciate the effort enormously
Don't
Never disrespect the monarchy in any form — it is a criminal offence
Don't touch anyone's head or ruffle children's hair
Don't point feet at people, monks, or Buddha images
Don't raise your voice or show frustration publicly
Don't enter a temple in shorts, sleeveless top, or beachwear
Women: never hand anything directly to a monk
Don't step over food or people sitting on the floor — walk around
Lifestyle & Travel
Bangkok Temple Circuit
Visit Wat Pho, Wat Arun, and the Grand Palace in one morning by tuk-tuk or river ferry.
Learn moreChiang Mai Night Bazaar
Street food, crafts, and live music at Chiang Mai Night Bazaar — must-do every evening.
Learn more
Elephant Sanctuary Visit
Ethical elephant sanctuary near Chiang Mai — feed, bathe, and walk with rescued elephants.
Learn moreRailay Beach Rock Climbing
Climb limestone karst towers above turquoise Andaman Sea at Krabi Railay Beach.
Learn more
Thai Cooking Class
Market visit and cooking class for pad thai, green curry, and mango sticky rice.
Learn moreKo Samui Island Hop
Ferry between Ko Samui, Ko Phangan, and Ko Tao for beaches, snorkeling, and diving.
Learn moreDoi Inthanon National Park
Thailand highest peak with cloud forests, waterfalls, and hill tribe villages near Chiang Mai.
Learn more
Chatuchak Weekend Market
Over 15,000 stalls at Bangkok massive weekend market — clothes, antiques, street food.
Learn moreFestival Calendar
Travel Tips
- Respect Temple Dress Code: Cover shoulders and knees at temples. Keep a sarong in your bag or buy one at entry for 20 THB.
- Grab App for Transport: Use Grab (Southeast Asia Uber) for metered rides — avoids tuk-tuk price negotiation entirely.
- Tap Water Not Safe: Never drink tap water. Buy bottled or use filter bottles. Street ice is usually filtered — OK.
- Bargain Respectfully: Haggling is expected at markets. Start at 50-60% of asking price, smile, walk away if too high.
- High Season vs Low: Nov-Feb is cool and dry (best). May-Oct is rainy but 30-50% cheaper. Monsoon varies by region.
Benefits & Scholarships
Personalize this layer
Add where you currently study in your profile to separate incoming support from outgoing scholarships.
Support is clearer once we separate incoming help from outgoing mobility money.
Useful either way
Support and discounts that still matter even if you are not in a strict incoming or outgoing case.
Descuento en BTS (Skytrain)
Las tarjetas Rabbit Card (pase de metro/BTS) tienen tarifa estudiantil presentando el ID de tu universidad (solo hasta cierta edad, revisa los límites).
BTS Skytrain
University cafeterias and campus shuttles
Thai campuses are often self-contained and much cheaper than mall life. Use canteens, university buses, libraries, and sports facilities before defaulting to Grab and cafes.
Host university
Official sourceLow-cost regional travel
Thailand is one of Asia's easiest weekend-travel bases. Students can combine buses, trains, and low-cost flights, but should avoid visa mistakes when leaving and re-entering.
Thai rail, buses, low-cost airlines
Official sourceVisa Requirements
Difficulty: ModerateNon-Immigrant ED Visa (Visa de Estudiante)
No puedes estudiar legalmente a largo plazo con visa de turista. Debes tramitar la visa ED ('Education') en el consulado tailandés de tu país antes de viajar, apoyado con la carta de aceptación de la universidad tailandesa.
Confirm visa exemption/tourist entry vs ED visa with host university
Some short programmes may not require a Non-Immigrant ED visa, but credit-bearing study and longer stays usually do. Ask the Thai host university for the exact route before travel.
Application Checklist
3 steps-
1
La visa inicial de estudiante solo dura 90 días. Tu universidad debe ayudarte a extenderla a 1 año en las oficinas de Inmigración en Tailandia (Chaeng Watthana en Bangkok).
-
2
Tienes que hacer el reporte obligatorio de domicilio a Inmigración ('90-day report') cada 90 días.
-
3
Si tienes la ED Visa y quieres viajar a Vietnam o Bali un fin de semana, DEBES comprar un 'Re-Entry Permit' antes de salir de Tailandia. Si sales sin él, tu visa de estudiante se cancelará automáticamente y no podrás regresar.
Health & Healthcare
How It Works
Thailand has a dual public and private healthcare system. Public hospitals (โรงพยาบาลรัฐบาล) are affordable but crowded and slow. Private hospitals — Bumrungrad International (Bangkok), Bangkok Hospital, and Samitivej — are world-class, fast, and English-friendly but expensive without insurance. International students are required to hold valid health insurance for Non-Immigrant ED visa purposes. Comprehensive private international health insurance costs THB 15,000–50,000 per year (USD 400–1,400). Thailand is a global leader in medical tourism; quality at private facilities is genuinely high by international standards.
Student Needs
Arrive with comprehensive private health insurance that covers hospitalization and emergency repatriation. Your Thai university may offer a basic local plan but coverage is often limited — verify what is and is not included before arrival. For ongoing care, register with a private clinic near campus for routine visits (THB 500–1,500 per consultation). Campus clinics (คลินิกมหาวิทยาลัย) provide free or very cheap basic care for enrolled students — use these first for minor issues. Top-up private cover from Luma Health, Cigna Thailand, or Aetna is available locally if your home policy has gaps.
Emergency vs Clinic
Call 1669 for medical emergencies (ambulance and paramedics). For non-life-threatening situations, private hospital emergency departments provide fast, English-friendly service — typical admission fee THB 500–1,500 plus treatment costs. For routine care, a private clinic (คลินิก) near campus is far cheaper than a hospital OPD. Bumrungrad International Hospital in Bangkok has 24/7 international patient services for English-speaking students. Call 191 for police.
Public Coverage Notes
International students are NOT covered by Thailand's 30 Baht Universal Coverage Scheme — that is reserved for Thai citizens and permanent residents.
Private health insurance is mandatory for Non-Immigrant ED (student) visa holders.
Budget THB 15,000–50,000/year for comprehensive cover including hospitalization. Compare Luma Health, Cigna Thailand, and Aetna for student-friendly plans.
Campus health clinics typically provide free basic consultations and medicine to enrolled students — the cheapest entry point for minor illness.
Emergency
191 (Policía), 1669 (Emergencias Médicas), 1155 (Policía Turística - Hablan Inglés)EXTRA: Culture Shock & Apps
Moderate Culture Shock Expected
This destination may feel different from Western campus routines. The apps and advice below are high-impact setup items for everyday student life.
Southeast Asia's Uber. For taxis, motorbike taxis, and food delivery. Essential in Bangkok.
Thailand's main messaging app (same as Japan). All social coordination happens on LINE, not WhatsApp.
Cheaper alternative to Grab for rides in Bangkok.
Works perfectly in Thailand with excellent transit routing for BTS/MRT.
Popular food delivery alongside Grab Food. Good promos for new users.
Cities to Explore
Bangkok
Organized chaos. A sprawling, steamy megalopolis where golden temples, rooftop bars, and street food carts coexist in beautiful contradiction.
Open City Guide
Chiang Mai
Northern Thailand's calmer student base: cheaper and more cultural than Bangkok, strong around CMU and Nimman, but the scooter question and burning…
Open City Guide