Influencer cost-of-living posts about Bangkok always seem to forget half the line items. Here's a real budget across four nomad-popular neighbourhoods in 2026, based on the budgets of actual DTV holders Good Yield works with.
The baseline monthly budget
A digital nomad on a DTV who's neither cutting corners nor living luxuriously can expect to spend:
| Category | Monthly THB | USD ~ |
|---|---|---|
| Rent (furnished 1BR) | 18,000 – 35,000 | $525 – $1,020 |
| Utilities + internet | 1,800 – 3,500 | $50 – $100 |
| Co-working | 5,000 – 9,000 | $145 – $260 |
| Food (mix street/cafés) | 12,000 – 22,000 | $350 – $640 |
| Transit + Grab | 2,500 – 5,000 | $72 – $145 |
| Gym / fitness | 1,500 – 4,500 | $45 – $130 |
| Health insurance | 2,500 – 6,000 | $72 – $175 |
| Total | 43,300 – 85,000 | $1,260 – $2,470 |
Most nomads we talk to land around 55,000–65,000 THB/month ($1,600–$1,900) once they settle in.
Neighbourhood A: Asok / Phrom Phong
Vibe: Dense, glossy, international. Highest density of coworking, cafés, and expat-friendly services.
Rent range: 25,000–35,000 THB for a furnished 1BR.
Best for: Nomads who want maximum convenience and don't mind paying for it. Easy to find your tribe.
Neighbourhood B: Ari / Saphan Khwai
Vibe: Local-meets-cool, Tokyo-Brooklyn-but-Thai energy. Bangkok's best café scene per square kilometre.
Rent range: 18,000–28,000 THB for a furnished 1BR.
Best for: Nomads who've already done a Bangkok stint and want quieter, more local, but still well-connected.
Neighbourhood C: On Nut / Phra Khanong
Vibe: Newer-build condos, mid-range. 15 minutes to Asok by BTS. Lots of younger expats.
Rent range: 15,000–22,000 THB for a furnished 1BR.
Best for: Yield-focused nomads who want maximum savings rate while still being on the BTS line.
Neighbourhood D: Rama 9 / Ratchada
Vibe: Emerging CBD, MRT access, strong Chinese expat community, lower prices than central Sukhumvit.
Rent range: 17,000–28,000 THB for a furnished 1BR.
Best for: Nomads who like a quieter base than Sukhumvit but don't want the slower pace of Ari.
Things nobody mentions in cost-of-living posts
- Visa runs: If you stay longer than 180 days on a single entry, factor in a border run or extension every six months.
- Air quality: February–April hits PM2.5 levels that are genuinely unpleasant. Many nomads escape to Chiang Mai (or beach destinations) during those months. Budget accordingly.
- Insurance gaps: The DTV doesn't include health coverage. Get private cover before you arrive.
What to do next
If you're already on a DTV (or just got approved), we run a free 15-minute orientation call for new nomads — what zones suit your work pattern, what budget actually buys you, and which buildings have decent internet (a non-trivial filter). Reach out via the contact form or LINE.
If you haven't applied for the DTV yet, start with our DTV visa guide.
