Family budget at a glance
The all-in range matches the FAQ answer for "How much does a family typically need per month here?" The other cards are single-line benchmarks — they don't add up to that total (school fees and other costs are separate).
All-in / month (family of 4)
~$2,500–$4,000 / month
3-bed family home
~$840 / month
Dinner for 2 (mid-range)
~$14
Nanny
~$4 / hr
Chiang Mai has been Southeast Asia's favourite long-stay destination for families and digital nomads for over a decade. The cost of living is extraordinary — a family of four can live very comfortably for $2,000–$3,000/month including a nanny and good private school. The city has a large expat community, several strong international schools, fast fibre internet, and excellent private hospitals at a fraction of Western prices. The main planning challenge is the visa — Thailand has no permanent residency path, so most families use the DTV or Thailand Privilege Visa.
Explore more family guides in Thailand →
Action checklist
Concrete steps to make this move happen, in order.
Click any step to jump to that section ↓
- 1Choose your visa: DTV (best for most families) or Thailand Privilege Visa (multi-year stability, no income requirement)
- 2Apply for the DTV at a Thai consulate before travelling — bring proof of remote income and ~500,000 THB (~$14,500) in savings per family member
- 3Start with a 1–3 month short-term rental on arrival — use Airbnb or search online for short-term housing while you find a long-term home
- 4Research international schools in Hang Dong (APIS, CMIS) — apply 3–6 months before your intended start date
- 5Buy private health insurance before flying — there is no public healthcare for foreigners in Thailand
- 6On arrival: ask your landlord to file the TM30 address form with immigration within 24 hours of your arrival
- 7Open a Thai bank account (Bangkok Bank or Kasikorn) once you have a non-immigrant visa — needed for rent and school fees
- 8Set a 90-day reminder — all visa holders must report their address to immigration every 90 days
Family fit
Great for
- Families who want to maximise quality of life on a modest budget
- Remote-working parents who need fast internet and a large expat community
- Families drawn to outdoor adventure, Thai food culture, and a relaxed pace
- Those looking for affordable private schooling and nanny support
Watch out for
- Smoke season (February–April) brings severe air pollution — a serious health concern for young children
- No long-term residency path — visa planning and periodic renewals are an ongoing reality
- Road safety is the biggest daily risk — motorbike accidents are the leading cause of expat injury
- Banking and admin can be frustrating without a non-immigrant visa class
Climate & seasons
Monthly normals (2001–2020) · MERRA-2 (NASA POWER)
Rainy-day counts are approximate (from monthly rainfall).
- HottestApr · 37.8°Cmean daily high
- CoolestDec · 9.1°Cmean daily low
- WettestAug · 237.2 mmmonth total
- DriestFeb · 4.5 mmmonth total
- Low
- 9.8°C
- Rain
- 15.2 mm
- Wet days
- ~1
- Low
- 11.7°C
- Rain
- 4.5 mm
- Wet days
- ~1
- Low
- 13.7°C
- Rain
- 22.9 mm
- Wet days
- ~2
- Low
- 17.5°C
- Rain
- 63.3 mm
- Wet days
- ~5
- Low
- 19.3°C
- Rain
- 188.8 mm
- Wet days
- ~16
- Low
- 19.7°C
- Rain
- 141.3 mm
- Wet days
- ~12
- Low
- 19.5°C
- Rain
- 177.9 mm
- Wet days
- ~15
- Low
- 19.5°C
- Rain
- 237.2 mm
- Wet days
- ~20
- Low
- 19.1°C
- Rain
- 221.7 mm
- Wet days
- ~18
- Low
- 16.1°C
- Rain
- 123.4 mm
- Wet days
- ~10
- Low
- 12.5°C
- Rain
- 36.6 mm
- Wet days
- ~3
- Low
- 9.1°C
- Rain
- 13 mm
- Wet days
- ~1
| Month | Typical high | Typical low | Rain (total) | Rainy days (~) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jan | 29°C | 9.8°C | 15.2 mm | 1 |
| Feb | 32.8°C | 11.7°C | 4.5 mm | 1 |
| Mar | 35.8°C | 13.7°C | 22.9 mm | 2 |
| Apr | 37.8°C | 17.5°C | 63.3 mm | 5 |
| May | 35.6°C | 19.3°C | 188.8 mm | 16 |
| Jun | 32.6°C | 19.7°C | 141.3 mm | 12 |
| Jul | 32.1°C | 19.5°C | 177.9 mm | 15 |
| Aug | 30.5°C | 19.5°C | 237.2 mm | 20 |
| Sep | 29.7°C | 19.1°C | 221.7 mm | 18 |
| Oct | 28.9°C | 16.1°C | 123.4 mm | 10 |
| Nov | 28.1°C | 12.5°C | 36.6 mm | 3 |
| Dec | 27.4°C | 9.1°C | 13 mm | 1 |
Family notes
- Warmest month on average: Apr (mean daily high ~38°C); coolest: Dec (mean daily low ~9°C).
- Most rainfall on average: Aug (~237 mm total); driest: Feb (~4 mm).
- Mean daily highs reach about 32°C or more in Feb, Mar, Apr, May, Jun, Jul — plan air-conditioning, shade, and limited midday outdoor time for babies and young children.
- Peak months can average above 35°C for daily highs — schedule playgrounds, walks, and errands for mornings or evenings when possible.
- Very wet months mean waterproofs, covered waiting at school pickup, and extra room to dry uniforms and shoes.
These values are long-term monthly climatologies from NASA POWER (MERRA-2 reanalysis) for the nearest model grid cell to these coordinates — not a single city-centre weather station. Spatial resolution is about 50 km; coastal belts, hills, and dense urban cores can differ. Precipitation is corrected MERRA-2 rainfall; rainy-day counts are approximated from monthly totals.
Grid cell used: 18.790°, 98.985° (WGS84)
Visa options
Reviewed Jan 2026
Reviewed Jan 2026
Thailand has no EU-style permanent residency for foreigners. Short visits use a visa exemption on arrival or a consular tourist visa. For families staying long-term, the two practical routes are the DTV (Destination Thailand Visa, launched July 2024) — 180 days per entry on a 5-year multiple-entry visa — and the Thailand Privilege Visa (formerly Thailand Elite, rebranded October 2023) — a 5-to-20-year membership for families who want stable stays without periodic visa runs.
Tap the ? next to a term for a quick definition.
Tourist Visa / Visa Exemption
Good for an initial scouting trip. Not suitable for long-term stays or remote work.
DTV — Destination Thailand Visa
Thailand's long-stay visa for remote workers, launched July 2024. The best option for most expat families.
Thailand Privilege Visa (formerly Thailand Elite)
Government-backed long-stay residency operated by Thailand Privilege Card Co. (Ministry of Tourism and Sports). Rebranded from Thailand Elite in October 2023 with restructured tiers and prices.
Tourist Visa / Visa Exemption — what it allows
- Visa exemption on arrival: 54 countries (US, UK, EU, Canada, Australia, Japan, Singapore, UAE and others) currently get 30 days on arrival. This was 60 days from July 2024 until a Thai Cabinet decision on 19 May 2026 reduced it back to 30 — older travel advice may still cite the 60-day rule, so always verify on the Thai MFA site before booking.
- Extension at any Thai immigration office: +30 days for ~1,900 THB (about $55), at the immigration officer's discretion — not guaranteed, so plan around 30 days rather than counting on the extension.
- TR (Tourist Visa) applied at a Thai consulate before travelling: 60 days on arrival, plus one 30-day extension at immigration. This is the safer route if you want a longer scouting trip.
- Visa on Arrival (the paid 15-day visa) is available to only 4 nationalities (India, Belarus, Serbia, Azerbaijan) — most travellers cannot use this route.
- You cannot legally work on a tourist visa — this includes remote work for a foreign employer.
- Do not attempt to live in Thailand on back-to-back tourist entries — Thai immigration actively monitors this pattern and may deny re-entry.
- Best use: an initial 2–8 week scouting trip to view neighbourhoods, visit schools, and apply for a long-stay visa from back home or in a neighbouring country.
DTV (Destination Thailand Visa) — how to apply
- Stay: 180 days per entry, extendable once inside Thailand for another 180 days — up to ~360 days per entry cycle. Valid for multiple entries for 5 years from issue.
- Savings requirement: 500,000 THB (~$14,500 USD) in liquid personal savings, shown via 3–6 months of consistent bank statements. Stocks, crypto, retirement accounts, and business accounts are not accepted.
- Per dependent: most Thai embassies require another 500,000 THB (~$14,500) per dependent (spouse and each child). A family of three typically needs to show ~1,500,000 THB (~$43,000) total — confirm the exact figure with the consulate you apply through.
- Apply only from outside Thailand via the official e-Visa system (thaievisa.go.th) or at a Thai consulate — you cannot switch to a DTV from inside Thailand on a tourist entry.
- Cost: 10,000 THB (~$275–$500 depending on consulate) one-time fee for the full 5-year multi-entry visa. The 180-day in-Thailand extension costs another ~10,000 THB (~$275).
- No work permit included — you cannot legally work for a Thai employer or client. Remote work for foreign employers is the intended use.
- Tax residency warning: if you spend 180+ days in a calendar year in Thailand you become a Thai tax resident. Foreign income remitted into Thailand can be taxable since 1 January 2024 — talk to a Thai tax advisor before remitting large sums.
- After arrival, ask your landlord to file the TM30 (the landlord's address notification to immigration) within 24 hours, and file a 90-day report every 90 days (online at imm.immigration.go.th or in person at your local immigration office).
Thailand Privilege Visa — long-stay membership
- Five tiers (all one-time fees; no savings, income, or age requirements):
- Bronze — 650,000 THB (~$18,000–$20,000) for 5 years. The cheapest entry point; dependents not included.
- Gold — 900,000 THB (~$25,000–$28,000) for 5 years. Includes 20 service points/year; dependents not included.
- Platinum — 1,500,000 THB (~$42,000–$47,000) for 10 years. Dependents can be added for ~1,000,000 THB each.
- Diamond — 2,500,000 THB (~$70,000–$78,000) for 15 years. Dependents can be added for ~1,500,000 THB each.
- Reserve — 5,000,000 THB (~$140,000+) for 20 years. Invitation only.
- Not a work permit — but widely used by remote workers because there are no in-Thailand reporting periods to manage and no DTV-style savings paperwork.
- Best for families wanting maximum stability without periodic visa runs, savings proof, or consulate appointments. Bronze (~$3,700/year over 5 years) is roughly comparable to DTV renewal costs but with much less paperwork. For families needing dependents covered, Platinum or Diamond is usually the cheapest route per person.
Apply for the DTV at least 4–6 weeks before your travel date — Thai consulates in major cities can get backed up. Always verify your nationality's current visa-exemption length on the Thai Ministry of Foreign Affairs website before booking — Thailand has revised the rules multiple times in recent years.
Registration & 90-day report
Reviewed Jan 2026
Reviewed Jan 2026
- Thailand has no residency permit or local ID system for foreigners. Your passport and current visa stamp are your only official documents here.
- Your landlord is legally required to file a TM30 form (address registration with Thai immigration) within 24 hours of your arrival at the property — ask them to do this or they may face a fine.
- All visa holders must report their address to immigration every 90 days — this is called the 90-day report. File online at imm.immigration.go.th or in person at the Chiang Mai Immigration Office on Airport Road.
- Keep a copy of every visa stamp, extension approval, and 90-day receipt — immigration officers ask for these when processing renewals.
- No certificate of residence or local ID card is issued. For school enrolment, banking, and admin your passport plus current visa stamp serves as your complete ID.
Do your 90-day report online at imm.immigration.go.th — it takes 5 minutes and saves a trip to the immigration office.
Banking
- Bangkok Bank and Kasikorn Bank (KBank) are the most expat-friendly banks — both have English-language apps and accept non-immigrant visa holders.
- To open an account you generally need: passport, current non-immigrant visa (DTV or Thailand Privilege Visa), and a rental contract or utility bill as proof of address.
- Some Bangkok Bank branches accept tourist visa holders — worth asking, but not guaranteed.
- Use Wise or Revolut for receiving international income and converting to Thai Baht — fees are much lower than traditional bank wire transfers.
- KBank's K Plus app and Bangkok Bank Mobile both support English and handle QR payments, transfers, and bill pay well.
- Cash is still widely used at markets, small restaurants, and local shops — keep 500–2,000 THB (about $15–$60) on hand at all times.
Open your bank account in the first month — rent, school fees, and utility autopay all work more smoothly with a local account.
Housing
Chiang Mai is extremely affordable. A spacious 3-bedroom house in a gated village (called a 'moo ban') rents for $600–$1,200/month. Hang Dong is the top family area — close to international schools. Nimmanhaemin is the urban, walkable alternative preferred by digital nomads.
Where to search
These are the main platforms locals and expats use for long-term rentals — much cheaper than Airbnb for monthly stays.
On each platform, search 'Chiang Mai' to filter listings for the area.
Tip: arrive on a 1–3 month short-stay first. It is far easier to negotiate rent and inspect properties in person than remotely.
Typical monthly rents
- 1-bed condo, Nimmanhaemin: $300–$600/month
- 3-bed house in a moo ban (gated village), Hang Dong: $600–$1,200/month
- 3-bed house, Nimmanhaemin area: $700–$1,400/month
- Serviced apartment (short-stay, bills included): $800–$1,500/month
Best areas for families
What you need to rent
- Passport
- 1–2 months deposit (negotiable — Thai landlords are generally flexible)
- Current visa stamp as proof of status
- Cash or bank transfer for deposit — most Thai landlords prefer cash or prompt transfer
- Rental contracts are common but often simple 1-page documents in Thai — ask for an English version
Schools
Chiang Mai has several strong international schools with English-medium instruction and affordable fees. Competition for places is far lower than in Europe — you can usually secure a spot 3–6 months in advance.
Public system
Thai government schools are free but teach entirely in Thai. Not a realistic option for most expat families unless children are very young and the family plans a long stay of 3+ years. Private tutors for Thai language are easy to find and affordable ($10–$20/hr) if you want your child to pick up the language.
International options
Most international schools cluster around the Hang Dong area, 15–20 minutes south of the city centre, close to the main expat neighbourhoods. Schools follow US or IB curricula in English. Fees range from $5,000–$12,000/year — a fraction of comparable schools in the UK or US. Apply 3–6 months before your target start date.
Language notes
International schools teach entirely in English. Most offer some Thai language classes. Expat children generally do not need Thai for daily life in Chiang Mai — the city is highly English-friendly in expat areas.
Most international schools are in the Hang Dong / Nong Hoi area — factor in transport or housing near there.
Education options
US / ACSI curriculum international schools
Established options clustered near Hang Dong, 15–20 min south of the city centre.
IB curriculum international schools
Fewer options available, higher fees. Strong university preparation.
Childcare
Childcare in Chiang Mai is abundant and very affordable. Hiring a full-time nanny — a luxury in most Western cities — is within easy reach for most expat families here.
Daycare & nurseries
- International nurseries and pre-schools are widely available in Hang Dong and Nimmanhaemin — most are bilingual (English/Thai)
- Typical fees: $140–$390 / month — far cheaper than equivalent daycare in Europe or the US
- Most accept children from 18 months old; some from 1 year
- Visit at least 2–3 nurseries in person before enrolling — English fluency of staff varies significantly
Nanny & au pair
- Full-time live-in nanny: $295–$505 / month — one of the most affordable places in the world for this arrangement
- Part-time live-out nanny: $3–$6 / hr depending on English level and experience
- Many Thai nannies have prior experience with expat families — ask specifically for this when posting
- English fluency varies — build in a 2–4 week settling-in period and be patient
Where to find childcare
- Search 'Chiang Mai Expat Club' on Google — the most common way expat families find nannies
- Search 'Chiang Mai Mums' on Google — good for parent-to-parent recommendations
- ThaiNanny.com — dedicated nanny platform with profiles and reviews
- Word of mouth at international school gates — the fastest route to a vetted referral
Healthcare
Reviewed Jan 2026
Reviewed Jan 2026
- There is no public healthcare for foreigners in Thailand — all expat families rely entirely on private hospitals.
- Bangkok Hospital Chiang Mai and Chiang Mai Ram Hospital are the two top private hospitals — both have English-speaking doctors and 24-hour emergency care.
- Costs are very low: a GP consultation is $15–$30, specialist visits $40–$80, and even emergency treatment rarely exceeds $500.
- Get international private health insurance (IPMI) before arriving — AXA, Cigna, and Pacific Cross are popular with Chiang Mai expats. Family plans start around $200–$400/month.
- Lower-cost local Thai insurance (BUPA Thailand, Pacific Cross Thailand) starts around $100–$150/month per adult — covers Thai hospitals only but is much cheaper.
- Pharmacy care is excellent and widely available — many medications available over the counter that require a prescription in the West.
Get international health insurance before you fly — good family plans start around $200–$400/month and cover Thailand fully. Do not rely on travel insurance for long-term healthcare.
Optional insurance option
Some families prefer to have private international medical coverage for the first period abroad. SafetyWing is one option to check if you want a flexible plan while relocating.
Check SafetyWingAlways confirm that any insurance you choose matches your visa, residency, and healthcare needs.
Safety
- Violent crime against foreigners is rare — Chiang Mai consistently ranks as one of Southeast Asia's safer cities for expats.
- Road safety is the biggest daily risk — motorbike accidents are the leading cause of serious injury among expats. Avoid renting or riding motorbikes, especially with children.
- Smoke season (February–April) brings hazardous air quality from agricultural burning — buy air purifiers for your home and limit outdoor time for children during this period.
- Petty theft (phone snatching, bag theft) occurs around busy night markets — keep valuables secure.
- The main expat areas (Hang Dong, Nimmanhaemin) are quiet, well-lit, and safe at all hours.
FAQ
Is Chiang Mai good for families?
Yes — especially for families seeking a low-cost, relaxed lifestyle with access to good private healthcare. The city is calm, family-friendly, and has a large English-speaking expat community. Less suited to families who need urban Western infrastructure.
How much does a family typically need per month here?
Budget $2,500–$4,000/month for a comfortable family of four. Rent for a 3-bedroom house runs $600–$1,200/month. Food, transport, and activities are very affordable. International school fees are the largest single cost.
Is housing hard to find here?
Easy. Chiang Mai has an abundance of rental housing and very low vacancy pressure. You can find well-equipped family homes with pools within a week of arriving.
Do children need international school here, or can local schools work?
International school is required for English-speaking families. Thai government schools teach entirely in Thai and are not suitable. Good international schools in Chiang Mai charge $5,000–$12,000/year — affordable by global standards.
Is healthcare easy to access as a newcomer?
Yes. Chiang Mai has excellent private hospitals used by locals and expats alike. There is no public healthcare system for foreigners — all expats pay privately or use international health insurance. A GP visit runs $20–$40. International health insurance is strongly recommended.
Do you need a car in Chiang Mai?
Not essential but strongly recommended. Ride-share apps (Grab) and a modest bus network exist, but school runs, grocery trips, and family outings are much easier with a car or scooter. Most expat families rent a car or use a scooter daily.
How difficult is the paperwork and bureaucracy after moving?
Relatively simple, but requires staying on top of your visa cycle. There is no formal residency system — your passport and visa stamp are your only ID. You'll need to complete a 90-day address report to Thai immigration (can be done online) and ensure your visa is renewed before expiry.
What usually surprises families after arrival?
How good the quality of life is at this price point. Most families arrive expecting to make compromises and quickly find the combination of low cost, warm weather, great food, and reliable private healthcare hard to match anywhere else at this budget.
Considering Chiang Mai alongside other cities?
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Other guides families considering Chiang Mai often look at next.
Sources
Official government, institutional, and public sources.
- Thai e-Visa official portal (DTV and all visa categories)
- Thailand Privilege Visa — official site search
- American Pacific International School (APIS)
- Chiang Mai International School (CMIS)
- Chiang Mai Cost of Living — Numbeo
- NASA POWER — Climatology API (methodology)
- MERRA-2 reanalysis (meteorological source)
Community
Expat groups and community forums. Use the search buttons below to find them.
Search 'Chiang Mai Expat Club' on Google — general expat tips
Search: “Chiang Mai Expat Club”Search on GoogleSearch 'Chiang Mai Mums' on Google — family and childcare advice
Search: “Chiang Mai Mums”Search on Google
