Air conditioning costs in Bangkok — factor this into rent budget
Apr 30, 2026Phra Khanong · Experience date Apr 7, 2026
Bangkok is hot year-round (28–38°C). Air conditioning runs 8–16 hours daily for most expats. Electricity cost: 5–8 THB/kWh on typical Thai condo tariffs. For a 1-bedroom running AC most of the day: budget 2,000–4,000 THB/month electricity. This is on top of rent. Condos with energy-efficient inverter AC units are significantly cheaper to run — ask about AC unit age and type before signing. Older split AC units can cost double to run compared to modern inverter units.
Contributor: Tom Fletcher Water in Bangkok condos — separate meter, separate bill
Apr 24, 2026Phra Khanong · Experience date Mar 15, 2026
Water bills in Bangkok condos are billed separately from electricity. Some buildings use PEA (Provincial Electricity Authority) rates passed directly to tenants; others markup the rate. Water: typically 300–600 THB/month for a 1-bedroom. If your condo charges significantly more than 18 THB/unit for water, they're applying a condo surcharge — legal but worth checking. Always ask for the electricity rate per unit when viewing a condo — rates vary from 4 THB/unit (MEA direct) to 8 THB/unit (condo surcharge).
Contributor: Tom Fletcher best condition
Apr 24, 2026Downtown · Experience date Apr 24, 2026
it was very good and you should be aware about that and the condition help people..
Condos built before 2010 often have weak WiFi infrastructure
Apr 10, 2026City-wide · Experience date Apr 3, 2026
Many older Bangkok condos have one common router per floor and individual unit CAT5 drops that cap at 30–50Mbps. For remote workers this is a dealbreaker. Always test the internet speed during your viewing — not just 'yes there is WiFi' but an actual Ookla Speedtest. Newer condos (post-2015) typically have fibre-to-the-unit with True or AIS at 200–1000Mbps.
Agent fees in Bangkok — one month's rent is standard
Mar 28, 2026On Nut · Experience date Jan 9, 2026
Real estate agent commission in Bangkok: 1 month's rent paid by tenant, sometimes split 50/50 with landlord. Some agents in the Sukhumvit corridor now charge half-month commission for budget apartments. For condos above 20,000 THB: full one-month commission is standard. Worth it for the time saved — Bangkok's fragmented rental market makes finding good units without an agent difficult. Best agencies with English service: Plus Property, Fazwaz, HipFlat. Always get the agent's license number — licensed by AREA (Agency for Real Estate Affairs).
Contributor: Priya Sharma Deposit rules in Bangkok — typically 2 months, sometimes 3
Mar 22, 2026Ari · Experience date Nov 15, 2025
Standard Bangkok rental deposit is 2 months rent. Some higher-end condos in Sukhumvit ask for 3 months. Get a receipt and include deposit terms in your lease contract. Thai law requires return within 30 days of checkout. In practice: deductions for cleaning and minor damage are common but often exaggerated. Document every scratch, stain, and broken item with photos before moving in. Send photos to landlord via Line (Thai preferred messaging app) — creates timestamped record.
Contributor: Carlos Rivera Bangkok air quality — choose apartments with air purifier option
Mar 18, 2026Ekkamai · Experience date Jan 7, 2026
Bangkok has serious air quality issues, particularly February–April when haze from agricultural burning combines with traffic pollution. PM2.5 levels frequently hit 'unhealthy' range. An air purifier is essential for long-term Bangkok residents — good quality purifier (Xiaomi Mi Air Purifier 3H or Dyson) costs 4,000–15,000 THB. Many premium condos now include air purifiers. Check air quality daily: IQAir Bangkok or Air4Thai app from the Pollution Control Department.
Contributor: Tom Fletcher