Property Education · Cost of Living

Cost of living in Phuket 2026: the budget tables.

Realistic 2026 monthly costs for expats, DTV holders and retirees on Thailand’s biggest island — in Thai baht and US dollars. The three spending tiers as actual figures, rent by area, transport (because there is no BTS 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 Phuket. For the capital, see 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 school and a car).

Lifestyle tierPer month (THB)Per month (USD)
Lean / local — modest studio or 1-bed inland, mostly Thai food, a scooter35,000–55,000$1,000–1,550
Comfortable / mid expat — nice 1-bed near a beach, local + Western dining, scooter or car, good insurance60,000–110,000$1,700–3,150
Premium / family — private-pool villa, international school, car, Western dining180,000–450,000+$5,100–12,900+

Rent and, for families, international-school fees account for almost the entire spread between tiers; the beach premium is the Phuket-specific wildcard.

02

Rent by area — furnished condos & villas

Rent is the largest line for most expats and the one you control most. On Phuket the dominant variable is how close to the popular west-coast beaches you live. Monthly rent for a typical furnished unit:

AreaStudio / 1-bedSmall pool villa (2–3 bed)
Patong (beach / nightlife)฿15–35k฿45–90k
Kamala / Surin / Bang Tao (west coast, upscale)฿16–40k฿55–150k+
Rawai / Nai Harn (south, expat & family)฿12–28k฿40–90k
Phuket Town (local, central)฿8–18k฿30–55k
Chalong / Kathu (inland, value)฿7–16k฿28–50k
Mai Khao / Nai Yang (north, quiet, near airport)฿10–22k฿35–70k

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 reality

Phuket has no mass transit, so getting around is a genuine monthly cost rather than an afterthought. Most residents run a scooter; families and rainy-season commuters add a car. Typical monthly transport spend:

OptionPer month (THB)≈ USD
Scooter rental + fuel2,800–4,500$80–129
Owned scooter (fuel, service, insurance)1,000–2,000$28–57
Car rental + fuel + insurance14,000–24,000$400–685
Ride-hailing / taxi (occasional)2,000–8,000$57–230

Always wear a helmet and carry proper insurance — scooter accidents are the leading cause of expat injury on the island, and an uninsured claim is brutal.

04

Category-by-category — a comfortable single person

What the “comfortable” tier looks like line by line: a nice one-bedroom within reach of a beach, 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 a beach20,000–38,000$570–1,090
Electricity (with AC)1,800–4,500$51–129
Water150–400$4–11
Internet (fibre, ~500 Mbps)600–900$17–26
Mobile plan300–700$9–20
Food (mostly local + some Western)12,000–25,000$340–710
Transport (scooter; car if family)2,800–4,500$80–129
Health insurance (healthy, 30s–40s)3,000–9,000$85–255
Gym / fitness / muay thai1,500–4,000$43–114
Entertainment & misc5,000–15,000$140–430

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 island 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 a 25,000 THB/month lease:

Upfront itemAmount (THB)≈ USD
Security deposit (2 months)50,000$1,430
Advance rent (1 month)25,000$710
Agent commission (normally landlord-paid)0$0
Internet, utility deposit & setup5,000–15,000$140–430
Day-one total80,000–90,000$2,290–2,570

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 school fees — the family multiplier

For families this is frequently the largest cost of all, dwarfing rent. Phuket has several established international schools; annual tuition per child varies enormously by school and curriculum (plus one-off enrolment and capital levies):

School tierAnnual tuition (THB)≈ USD
Budget / bilingual200,000–450,000$5,700–12,900
Established international450,000–850,000$12,900–24,300
Top-tier (premium British / boarding)850,000–1,200,000+$24,300–34,000+

If you have children, price schooling first — it can reshape which tier and which part of the island you can afford. See the international schools guide.

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 Bangkok tables let you weigh island life against the capital. Get the rent-and-location decision right and the rest of the budget tends to fall into place.

08

Frequently asked

How much does it cost to live in Phuket per month in 2026?As a planning range: a lean, local lifestyle for a single person runs roughly 35,000–55,000 THB a month (about 1,000–1,550 USD); a comfortable mid-expat lifestyle runs roughly 60,000–110,000 THB (about 1,700–3,150 USD); and a premium or family lifestyle with a villa, international school and a car runs from roughly 180,000 THB into 450,000+ THB (about 5,100–12,900+ 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 Phuket more expensive than Bangkok?It depends on how you live. Day-to-day local costs — Thai food, scooters, fresh markets — are similar to or slightly above Bangkok. But Phuket has no mass-transit system, so most residents run a scooter or a car, and rent in the prime beach and west-coast areas (Patong, Kamala, Bang Tao, Surin) often carries a tourist premium that pushes comfortable budgets a little higher than the Bangkok equivalent. Live local in Chalong, Kathu or Phuket Town and Phuket can be cheaper than central Bangkok; chase the beach and it gets pricier.
How much is rent in Phuket?A furnished one-bedroom condo ranges from about 10,000 THB a month in local inland areas like Chalong or Kathu to 20,000–40,000 THB near the popular west-coast beaches. Studios start around 7,000–12,000 THB inland and 14,000–25,000 THB beachside; a small private-pool villa typically runs 35,000–80,000 THB and large luxury villas climb well into six figures a month. Distance from the beach is the single biggest lever on Phuket rent.
Do I need a car in Phuket?Most expats use a scooter (roughly 2,500–4,000 THB/month to rent, or cheap to buy) for daily errands; it is by far the cheapest way to get around the island. A car (around 12,000–20,000 THB/month to rent, plus fuel and insurance) becomes worth it for families, the rainy season or long west-to-east commutes. Phuket has no BTS/MRT and ride-hailing is patchier and pricier than Bangkok, so transport is a real, recurring line on a Phuket budget in a way it is not everywhere.
What are the upfront move-in costs for a Phuket rental?Thai leases typically ask for two months' deposit plus one month's advance rent, so on a 25,000 THB/month unit you need about 75,000 THB for deposit and advance, plus 5,000–15,000 THB for internet setup, a utility-account deposit and any kit — roughly 80,000–90,000 THB (about 2,300–2,570 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 watch for higher in-season asking rents.
Is healthcare good in Phuket and how much does insurance cost?Phuket has several strong private hospitals (Bangkok Hospital Phuket, Siriroj/Dibuk, Phuket International) used by expats and medical tourists. 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. Some long-stay visas legally require a minimum amount of cover. It is a line you should never skip — one uninsured emergency at a private hospital can erase years of premiums.
Is Phuket a good place to live cheaply as a retiree or DTV holder?Yes, if you live like a resident rather than a holidaymaker. Renting inland or on the quieter south/east of the island, eating mostly Thai food, running a scooter and choosing local services keeps a single person comfortable on roughly 45,000–70,000 THB a month. The budget inflates fast with a beachfront address, daily Western dining, a car and an international-school bill — so decide which of those you actually need before you sign anything.
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Bangkok Budget TablesCost of Living GuideCost-of-Living CalculatorCompare AreasRenting GuideHealth InsuranceInternational SchoolsNeighborhood Finder
Living Summary

Phuket cost of living, right now

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

Analysis last reviewed July 2026.

Growth Trajectory

Phuket cost-of-living & rent trend since 2020

  1. 2020
    Pandemic rent collapse
    Border closures empty the island's condos and villas; landlords slash asking rents across Patong, Kamala and Bang Tao to hold onto any tenant.
  2. 2021
    Phuket Sandbox
    Thailand's quarantine-free reopening pilot launches on the island; rents stay depressed but occupancy starts to recover late in the year.
  3. 2022–2023
    Reopening rebound
    Full border reopening drives a fast rent recovery, especially on the west coast; local, inland areas recover more slowly and stay comparatively cheap.
  4. 2024
    Rents pass pre-pandemic levels
    Prime beachfront and west-coast rent moves above 2019 levels for the first time as branded-residence supply and tourist numbers both climb.
  5. 2025
    97.5% tourism recovery
    International arrivals reach roughly 97.5% of pre-pandemic levels through October; day-to-day costs rise with general inflation but far more gently than beach rent.
  6. 2026
    Two-speed cost of living
    Prime west-coast addresses keep getting pricier while Phuket Town, Chalong and Kathu hold their value — use the cost-of-living calculator to model both.

Turn the tables into your number

Pick your tier and area, then build a real, current monthly total in seconds.

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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.