Property Education · Cost of Living

Cost of living in Krabi 2026: the budget tables.

Realistic 2026 monthly costs for expats, DTV holders and retirees on Thailand’s limestone-and-beach southern coast — in Thai baht and US dollars. The three spending tiers as actual figures, rent by area, transport (because there is no BTS and barely any taxis here), and a full category-by-category breakdown so you can build a real number, not a guess. Unbiased, never paid placement — and every figure is a planning range, not a promise.

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By Kirby Scofield
Founder of BAANLYY · International real estate broker, investor & relocation specialist
Last updated 7 July 2026 · Last reviewed 7 July 2026

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Comparing islands and cities?

This page is the numbers for Krabi. For the neighbouring island, see the Phuket budget tables; for the capital, the Bangkok budget tables; for the how to think about it — the levers behind each cost and the move-in cash nobody warns you about — read the general cost of living guide. All figures below are 2026 planning ranges at ≈ 35 THB to 1 USD; rents (especially in-season), prices and the exchange rate move, so confirm specifics before relying on them and build your own total with the cost-of-living calculator.

01

Monthly budget at a glance — the three tiers

Most foreigners land in one of three brackets. Place yourself honestly — aspiration is where budgets break. Figures are an all-in monthly total for a single person (the premium tier assumes a family with a villa, international schooling and a car).

Lifestyle tierPer month (THB)Per month (USD)
Lean / local — modest studio or 1-bed inland, mostly Thai food, a scooter28,000–48,000$800–1,370
Comfortable / mid expat — nice 1-bed near Ao Nang, local + Western dining, scooter or car, good insurance50,000–95,000$1,430–2,715
Premium / family — private-pool villa, international schooling, car, Western dining140,000–350,000+$4,000–10,000+

Rent and, for families, school fees account for almost the entire spread between tiers; the Ao Nang / resort-coast premium is the Krabi-specific wildcard.

02

Rent by area — furnished condos, houses & villas

Rent is the largest line for most expats and the one you control most. In Krabi the dominant variable is how close to Ao Nang and the resort coast you live; the condo market is thinner than Phuket’s, so houses and small villas are common rentals. Monthly rent for a typical furnished unit:

AreaStudio / 1-bedSmall pool villa (2–3 bed)
Ao Nang (main beach / tourist hub)฿10–28k฿35–75k
Klong Muang / Tubkaek (upscale north coast)฿14–35k฿45–120k+
Nong Thale / Sai Thai (inland value, near intl school)฿7–16k฿28–55k
Krabi Town (local, central, services)฿6–15k฿25–45k
Ao Nam Mao / east coast (quiet)฿8–18k฿30–55k
Railay (boat access only, limited & seasonal)฿18–40krare / resort-style

In-season (roughly Nov–Mar) asking rents and short-term rates rise sharply; 6–12-month leases are far cheaper per month than monthly stays. Compare neighbourhoods with the area comparison tool and the neighborhood finder.

03

Transport — the no-BTS, few-taxis reality

Krabi has no mass transit and only patchy ride-hailing, so getting around is a genuine monthly cost rather than an afterthought. Almost everyone runs a scooter; families and rainy-season commuters add a car. Typical monthly transport spend:

OptionPer month (THB)≈ USD
Scooter rental + fuel2,500–4,000$71–114
Owned scooter (fuel, service, insurance)900–1,800$26–51
Car rental + fuel + insurance13,000–22,000$370–630
Songthaew / taxi (occasional)1,500–6,000$43–171

Always wear a helmet and carry proper insurance — scooter accidents are the leading cause of expat injury in the south, and an uninsured claim is brutal. Ride-hailing coverage is thinner here than in Bangkok or Phuket, so don’t rely on it.

04

Category-by-category — a comfortable single person

What the “comfortable” tier looks like line by line: a nice one-bedroom within reach of Ao Nang, a mix of local and Western life, a scooter. Adjust each line to model your own tier.

CategoryPer month (THB)≈ USD
Rent — nice 1-bed near Ao Nang14,000–28,000$400–800
Electricity (with AC)1,500–4,000$43–114
Water150–350$4–10
Internet (fibre, ~500 Mbps)600–900$17–26
Mobile plan300–700$9–20
Food (mostly local + some Western)10,000–22,000$285–630
Transport (scooter; car if family)2,500–4,000$71–114
Health insurance (healthy, 30s–40s)3,000–9,000$85–255
Gym / fitness / muay thai1,200–3,500$34–100
Entertainment & misc4,000–12,000$114–340

Watch the electricity line: many condos and villas bill at a marked-up rate rather than the government tariff, and AC runs harder in the southern climate — ask before you sign. Detail in utility bills and health insurance.

05

Move-in cash — the day-one total

Your first month is far more expensive than a steady-state month. The Thai norm of two months’ deposit plus one month’s advance means you need about three months’ rent in hand before you move in. On an 18,000 THB/month lease:

Upfront itemAmount (THB)≈ USD
Security deposit (2 months)36,000$1,030
Advance rent (1 month)18,000$510
Agent commission (normally landlord-paid)0$0
Internet, utility deposit & setup4,000–12,000$114–340
Day-one total58,000–66,000$1,660–1,890

Build a separate “landing fund” for this — on top of flights and shipping. The deposit rules (and the consumer-protection cap for landlords renting five or more units) are in the renting guide.

06

International schooling — the family caveat

This is where Krabi differs most from the bigger hubs. The province has only a small number of international and bilingual schools — nothing like the choice in Phuket or Bangkok — so families needing a specific curriculum or top-tier provision sometimes base in Phuket instead. Where schooling is available, expect annual tuition per child (plus one-off enrolment and capital levies) in these broad bands:

School tierAnnual tuition (THB)≈ USD
Bilingual / budget120,000–350,000$3,400–10,000
Established international (limited options)350,000–650,000$10,000–18,600
Top-tier — usually means Phuketsee Phuket guide

If you have school-age children, settle schooling first — in Krabi it can decide whether the province works for you at all. See the international schools guide and the Phuket tables for the wider school market.

07

How to use these numbers

Treat every figure here as a planning range, then make it concrete: pick your tier from section 01, choose an area from section 02, decide scooter vs car in section 03, and adjust the category lines in section 04 to match how you actually live. The cost-of-living calculator turns those choices into a single monthly total that stays current with the exchange rate, the area comparison shows where the same baht buys the best life, and the Phuket tables let you weigh quiet Krabi against its busier neighbour. Get the rent-and-location decision right and the rest of the budget tends to fall into place.

Living Summary

Cost of Living in Krabi — living summary

Editorial analysis compiled and periodically refreshed by BAANLYY’s research team — not a live data feed.

Analysis last reviewed 2026-07-06.

Growth Trajectory

How the Cost of Living in Krabi Has Changed

  1. 2018
    Consumer-protection deposit rule
    A regulation caps deposits at two months and requires return within seven days for landlords renting five or more units, giving Krabi tenants renting from larger landlords real footing on move-out disputes.
  2. 2020–2021
    Pandemic tourism collapse depresses resort-coast rents
    With international arrivals near zero, asking rents around Ao Nang and the wider resort coast fall sharply as owners compete for the few long-stay tenants still on the island; inland Krabi Town rents move far less.
  3. 2022–2023
    Tourism and long-stay demand rebound
    Reopening brings visitors and long-stay foreigners back quickly, and resort-coast rents recover most of their pre-pandemic ground within about two years, while inland areas stay comparatively steady throughout.
  4. 2024
    DTV visa widens the long-stay pool
    The Destination Thailand Visa gives remote workers and digital nomads an easier path to multi-month stays, adding a new pool of long-stay renters looking specifically at lower-cost coastal towns like Krabi as a Phuket alternative.
  5. 2025–2026
    Rising insurance and visa coverage minimums
    Expat health-insurance premiums keep climbing and some long-stay visa categories now require proof of minimum coverage, adding a growing fixed cost on top of rent — while inland Krabi living remains the most reliable value lever for anyone watching their monthly total.
08

Frequently asked

How much does it cost to live in Krabi per month in 2026?As a planning range: a lean, local lifestyle for a single person runs roughly 28,000–48,000 THB a month (about 800–1,370 USD); a comfortable mid-expat lifestyle runs roughly 50,000–95,000 THB (about 1,430–2,715 USD); and a premium or family lifestyle with a villa, international schooling and a car runs from roughly 140,000 THB into 350,000+ THB (about 4,000–10,000+ USD). Housing and, for families, school fees drive almost the entire spread. These are estimates that drift with the exchange rate, the tourist season and inflation — build your own number with our cost-of-living calculator.
Is Krabi cheaper than Phuket?Generally, yes. Krabi is smaller, quieter and less developed than Phuket, and rents — especially away from the Ao Nang beachfront — tend to run noticeably lower than the Phuket equivalent. Daily local costs (Thai food, markets, scooters) are similar across the two. The trade-offs are fewer international schools, a smaller private-healthcare scene and a thinner expat-services market, so Krabi rewards people who genuinely want a calmer, more local life rather than resort density. Live inland around Krabi Town or Nong Thale and Krabi is one of the better-value coastal options in the south.
How much is rent in Krabi?A furnished one-bedroom condo or house ranges from about 6,000 THB a month in local areas like Krabi Town or Nong Thale to 15,000–28,000 THB near Ao Nang beach or the upscale Klong Muang/Tubkaek coast. Studios start around 5,000–9,000 THB inland and 10,000–18,000 THB near the beach; a small private-pool villa typically runs 28,000–75,000 THB, with luxury north-coast villas climbing higher. Distance from Ao Nang and the resort coast is the single biggest lever on Krabi rent.
Do I need a scooter or car in Krabi?A scooter is close to essential. Krabi has no mass transit, ride-hailing is patchy, and public transport is mostly songthaews and tourist shuttles, so almost every resident runs a scooter (roughly 2,500–4,000 THB/month to rent, or cheap to buy) for daily life. A car (around 13,000–22,000 THB/month to rent, plus fuel and insurance) makes sense for families, the long rainy season or regular trips to Krabi Town and the airport. Transport is a real, recurring line on a Krabi budget — plan for it rather than assuming you can walk or hail your way around.
What are the upfront move-in costs for a Krabi rental?Thai leases typically ask for two months' deposit plus one month's advance rent, so on an 18,000 THB/month unit you need about 54,000 THB for deposit and advance, plus 4,000–12,000 THB for internet setup, a utility-account deposit and any kit — roughly 58,000–66,000 THB (about 1,660–1,890 USD) of day-one cash. Agent commission is normally paid by the landlord, not the tenant. Budget about three months' rent in hand before you move in, and expect higher asking rents in the November–March high season.
Is healthcare good in Krabi and how much does insurance cost?Krabi has a large government hospital (Krabi Hospital) and a private option (Krabi Nakharin International Hospital) that handle routine and urgent care well, but the private-healthcare scene is smaller than Phuket's, and complex or specialist cases are often referred to Phuket or Bangkok. For a healthy person in their 30s or 40s, expat health insurance typically runs about 3,000–9,000 THB a month depending on coverage level and deductible; premiums rise sharply with age, and some long-stay visas legally require a minimum amount of cover. Given the referral reality, never skip insurance here.
Is Krabi a good place to live cheaply as a retiree or DTV holder?Yes, for the right person. Renting inland or just off the resort coast, eating mostly Thai food, running a scooter and choosing local services keeps a single person comfortable on roughly 40,000–60,000 THB a month — often a little under the Phuket figure. The catch is that Krabi has far fewer international schools and a thinner expat-services and healthcare market, so it suits singles, couples and retirees better than families needing top-tier schooling. Decide what you actually need — schooling, specialist healthcare, an expat social scene — before you commit to Krabi over a larger hub.
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General information only — not financial advice. All figures are 2026 planning estimates at ≈ 35 THB to 1 USD and vary widely by choice, season and provider; rents, prices, insurance, school fees and the exchange rate change over time. Confirm current costs directly with landlords, providers, insurers, schools and official Thai government sources before relying on anything here. BAANLYY never takes paid placement.