Boots and Watsons pharmacies in Bangkok — complete English-language service
May 7, 2026On Nut · Experience date May 1, 2026
Boots Thailand (ubiquitous in Bangkok malls and BTS corridor) operates essentially the same as UK Boots — familiar product range, English labels, trained pharmacists. Watsons is the Hong Kong equivalent, also excellent. Both carry: Western medicines (paracetamol, ibuprofen, antihistamines), skincare, vitamins, and international branded toiletries. Prices: slightly higher than local pharmacies but worth it for familiarity and certainty about what you're buying. Boots Bumrungrad area and Terminal 21 branches are the most comprehensively stocked.
Contributor: Amira Hassan Medical tourism in Bangkok — the best private hospitals
May 1, 2026Phrom Phong · Experience date Jan 14, 2026
Bangkok's elite private hospitals are world-class — genuinely better equipped than most European hospitals for certain specialties. Top three: Bumrungrad International (Sukhumvit 3, most international-oriented, 50+ nationalities daily), Samitivej (Sukhumvit 49, excellent obstetrics and pediatrics), BNH Hospital (near Sala Daeng BTS, smaller and more personal, good for expat families). General consultation: 1,500–3,000 THB. Specialist: 3,000–6,000 THB. Dental work in Bangkok: implants at 40,000–60,000 THB versus 200,000+ THB in Europe — dental tourism is a real industry here.
Contributor: Sophie Martin Lazada and Shopee deliver next day — cheaper than mall prices for most things
Apr 10, 2026City-wide · Experience date Apr 3, 2026
Lazada and Shopee are Thailand's main e-commerce platforms. Almost everything is available for next-day delivery in Bangkok. Electronics, kitchen items, and furniture are 20–40% cheaper than mall prices. Use Cash on Delivery for first orders from new sellers until you trust the platform. Flash sales on Shopee (11.11, etc.) have genuinely good discounts on major brands.
Expat health insurance comparison for Bangkok — SafetyWing vs Pacific Cross
Apr 8, 2026Phrom Phong · Experience date Dec 2, 2025
SafetyWing Nomad Insurance ($45/month): good for emergency coverage, includes hospitalization, limited outpatient coverage. Accepted at most Bangkok private hospitals. Not suitable as primary long-term insurance. Pacific Cross Health Insurance (1,800–3,500 USD/year for comprehensive): full outpatient and inpatient, dental riders available, Bangkok-based insurer with local customer service in English. For corporate expats: employer typically provides AIA, Cigna, or Allianz group policies. For the dental work alone (Bangkok is globally competitive on dental): some expats pay for a standalone dental plan through Pacific Cross.
Contributor: David Okonkwo Finding English-language doctors in Bangkok
Apr 7, 2026On Nut · Experience date Apr 19, 2026
English-speaking doctors in Bangkok: Bumrungrad International Hospital has 200+ doctors who speak English — largest international-oriented hospital in SEA. Samitivej Hospital: most senior doctors have trained internationally and speak English. BNH Hospital: smaller, more personal, excellent English. For general medicine/GP: International Medical Center at Bumrungrad, Thongdy International Clinic (Thong Lo area). For specific expat health needs: Bangkok's LGBTQ+ health clinics (PULSE clinic, M-Clinic) have English-speaking staff. Family planning clinics: Bangkok Women's Health Clinic on Sukhumvit 49.
Contributor: Anna Kowalski Thai language basics — essential phrases for Bangkok daily life
Apr 7, 2026On Nut · Experience date Jan 6, 2026
English is widely spoken in Bangkok's tourist and expat areas. Still, knowing these phrases transforms your daily experience: 'khob khun' (thank you), 'mai ao' (I don't want it / no thank you), 'phet nit noi' (a little spicy), 'mai phet' (not spicy), 'ao ni' (I'll take this), 'tao rai' (how much?), 'lot noi dai mai' (can you reduce the price a little?), and 'pai nai' followed by a destination name for taxis. Thai is tonal and learning pronunciation takes time — Google Translate voice function is invaluable for communicating written Thai back verbally.
Contributor: Chloe Bennett Tops Market vs Big C vs Gourmet Market — choosing your Bangkok supermarket
Mar 20, 2026Ari · Experience date Jan 16, 2026
Bangkok supermarket tiers: Gourmet Market (Emporium, Central Embassy): premium imported goods, Australian beef, European cheese — expensive but best selection for Western products. Tops Market (moderate, widespread): good balance of Thai and imported products, fresh produce. Big C and Tesco Lotus's (Lotus's): budget-friendly, large format, best for bulk buying staples. Villa Market (Sukhumvit area): specialist in imported goods, popular with Japanese and Korean expats. For daily basics: Tops or Big C. For specific imports: Gourmet Market or Villa Market. Online: Tops Online delivers same day.