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HomeTopicsMoney and Payments

Bangkok

Money and Payments

Banking, transfer, and payment setup basics for newcomers.

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AI summary · assistance only

You'll find that managing money in Bangkok can be challenging, especially with high ATM fees for foreign cards, which cost 220 THB per withdrawal. Most newcomers are surprised by these fees and the limited options for exchanging currency, but using bank-counter currency exchange, such as SuperRich Orange or Kasikorn Exchange kiosks, can give you rates 1.5-3% better than airport or hotel kiosks. Watch out for the Thai tax system, which applies to foreigners who stay over 180 days, and consider opening a local bank account, such as KBank or SCB, to handle daily transactions and avoid high fees. To get started, download the K PLUS app or SCB Easy app to explore their services and features. Today, you can take a concrete step by visiting a bank branch, such as KBank or SCB, to inquire about opening a bank account and learning more about their services.

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The Thai tax system applies to foreigners who stay over 180 days

Trust L3Updated Apr 16, 2026

Revenue Department (Phahon Yothin Road) · Experience date Apr 1, 2026

Thailand taxes residents (defined as 180+ days in the tax year) on income remitted into Thailand. Since a 2024 rule change, all foreign-source income brought into Thailand is potentially taxable — not just income from the same year. Register for a Thai tax ID (TIN) at the Revenue Department if you have taxable income. Digital nomads and remote workers should consult a local tax adviser (fees around 3,000–8,000 THB for a consultation).

Contributor: Sara

KBank K PLUS is essential for daily life in Thailand

Trust L3Updated Apr 16, 2026

City-wide · Experience date Apr 5, 2026

Once you have a KBank account, the K PLUS app handles everything: PromptPay transfers to Thai bank numbers, QR code payments at markets and restaurants, bill payments, and international transfers. PromptPay is Thailand's instant payment system linked to your phone number or national ID — once registered, receiving money from any Thai bank account is instant and free.

Contributor: Amira

Wise and Revolut are the cheapest ways to bring money to Thailand

Trust L3Updated Apr 16, 2026

City-wide · Experience date Apr 7, 2026

ATM withdrawals with foreign cards in Thailand cost 220 THB flat fee per withdrawal at almost every bank. Over a month that's 2,200+ THB in fees if you withdraw daily. Use Wise or Revolut — both convert at the mid-market rate with minimal markup. Revolut gives 2 free ATM withdrawals/month up to 5,000 THB; Wise charges a small fixed fee but still beats Thai bank ATM charges by 80%.

Contributor: Sample User

Latest from the community

Expense tracking in Bangkok — useful apps

May 7, 2026

Phrom Phong · Experience date Feb 18, 2026

Thai banking apps (KBank K PLUS, SCB Easy) both show categorized spending with Thai translations. For comprehensive tracking: Money Lover app (Thai baht supported, popular in SEA), YNAB (international, works well with THB), or Spendee. For daily reference: Google Sheets with THB budget columns works well for expats tracking in both THB and home currency. Bangkok's mix of cash (street food, markets) and digital payments means some manual entry is unavoidable — budget 30 minutes/week for expense reconciliation.

Contributor: Ivan Petrov

Thai baht volatility — budgeting in USD/THB

Apr 23, 2026

Sathorn · Experience date Jan 17, 2026

The Thai baht is relatively stable compared to currencies like TRY or BRL — it typically ranges 33–38 THB/USD over multi-year periods, with occasional spikes to 40+. For salary planning: a 35 THB/USD reference is reasonable. If earning in foreign currency: you benefit when the baht weakens (more baht for your dollars). Avoid large baht savings — hold savings in USD, EUR, or GBP accounts (Wise is perfect) and transfer to THB as needed for living expenses.

Contributor: Anna Kowalski

Tax situation for expats in Bangkok — when you owe Thai taxes

Apr 10, 2026

Sathorn · Experience date Mar 2, 2026

Thailand taxes income earned in or remitted to Thailand in the same calendar year by tax residents (180+ days). Remote workers earning from foreign sources: if you remit the money to Thailand in the same tax year you earned it, it's technically taxable. Practical reality: Thailand's Revenue Department enforcement on individual foreign remote workers is minimal. Thailand introduced LTR Visa tax exemptions in 2022 for qualifying high-income foreigners. For employment income from a Thai employer: standard withholding tax applies at 5–35% progressive rates.

Contributor: Sophie Martin

Always use bank-counter currency exchange, not airport or hotel kiosks

Apr 10, 2026

Siam Square / Asok · Experience date Apr 3, 2026

Bank exchange counters (SuperRich Orange, SuperRich Green, Kasikorn Exchange kiosks) give rates 1.5–3% better than airport money-changers and 5–8% better than hotel rates. SuperRich kiosks around Siam Square and Asok offer consistently excellent rates. For large amounts, bring USD or EUR cash — you'll get a meaningfully better rate than card withdrawal for amounts over 10,000 THB equivalent.

Contributor: Liam

Bangkok Bank New York — for US-based transfers to Thailand

Apr 9, 2026

Sukhumvit · Experience date Mar 29, 2026

Bangkok Bank has a New York branch that allows domestic US wire transfers to Thailand at US domestic rates (ACH or US domestic wire, no SWIFT fees). If you receive USD payments from US clients: have them send to Bangkok Bank New York routing number, which then credits your Bangkok Bank Thailand account in THB (or keeps it in USD). Saves 25–30 USD per transfer compared to international SWIFT wire. Register through Bangkok Bank Thailand with a simple form — essential for US-based freelancers working from Bangkok.

Contributor: James Wilson

Bitkub — Thailand's main crypto exchange for THB-to-crypto

Apr 3, 2026

Phrom Phong · Experience date Mar 27, 2026

Bitkub is Thailand's largest cryptocurrency exchange, regulated by the Thai SEC. For converting THB to crypto or vice versa: open a Bitkub account with Thai bank account and Thai ID/passport. Thai baht deposits/withdrawals: instant via PromptPay. Bitkub supports BTC, ETH, USDT, and 50+ altcoins. Useful for: international transfers using USDT as rails, crypto investment, and Thai tech workers receiving salary in crypto. KYC requires selfie and document upload — verification takes 1–5 business days.

Contributor: Kenji Nakamura

SCB (Siam Commercial Bank) — good app, widely accepted

Mar 28, 2026

Sathorn · Experience date Jan 25, 2026

SCB (purple and white logo) is Thailand's oldest bank and has an excellent mobile app (SCB Easy). Good for: PromptPay, QR payments, and bill payments. SCB Easy app is available in English. Account opening requirements are similar to other Thai banks — Non-Immigrant visa preferred. SCB has a large ATM network. The 'SCB Easy' and 'SCB NEXT' app distinction confuses newcomers — SCB Easy is for personal banking, SCB NEXT for investing. Start with SCB Easy for daily banking.

Contributor: David Okonkwo
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