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Living & Housing

Your First 7 Days in Thailand: A Day-by-Day Survival Plan

July 17, 2026 8 min read
Traveler standing with suitcases outside the Bangkok airport arrivals hall

The first time I landed in Bangkok, three different taxi drivers quoted me three different prices. That’s the day I realized the most expensive thing in Thailand is showing up unprepared. This guide is my own version of a “survival plan,” built day by day from my own mistakes and the problems hundreds of my viewers have run into. It’s not organized hour by hour — it flows by logic: don’t get ripped off, don’t panic, and land your first week having adapted.

This isn’t a tourist brochure. It’s written from the perspective of someone who actually lives here, with real prices and real warnings.

Final Checks Before You Fly

Passport and Visa

Your passport needs at least 6 months of validity left and shouldn’t be visibly worn. As of 2026, citizens of 93 countries — Turkey included — can enter Thailand visa-free and stay up to 60 days; a further 30-day extension (1,900 THB, at the immigration officer’s discretion) is available from an immigration office. If you’re planning a longer stay, look into options like a tourist visa, DTV, or — if it’s for study — the ED visa ahead of time.

Money and Cards

It’s recommended to carry 500–1,000 USD in cash. For your first ATM withdrawal, 2,000–3,000 baht is enough — you don’t need to exchange everything at the airport. Carry at least 2 different bank cards, and check foreign withdrawal fees ahead of time; some banks will surprise you.

Must-Have Apps

Before you land, download: Google Maps (with offline maps downloaded), Google Translate, WhatsApp or Telegram, Grab, and XE Currency. You’ll be using all five constantly from day one.

Day 1: Getting Out of the Airport in One Piece

Passport Control

Keep these ready for passport control: your passport, return ticket (showing it on your phone is fine), hotel address, and travel insurance if asked. Keep your TDAC handy too — the officer may ask for it.

Baggage and Exit

Photograph your suitcase before you leave home — similar-looking bags get mixed up at airports all the time. When taxi touts approach you at the exit, a firm “No, thank you” is all you need.

Your First Currency Exchange

You don’t need to exchange all your cash at the airport. 2,000–3,000 baht is enough for the first day — exchange rates in the city center are usually better anyway.

Day 1: Getting From the Airport to Your Hotel or Pattaya

At the airport you’ll be approached by official airport taxis, minivan counters, private transfer companies, and independent people offering a “private taxi.” A typical fare from Bangkok to Pattaya runs 800–1,200 baht; offers well below that usually carry risk.

Day 1 Evening: Your First Night and Staying Safe

The five biggest mistakes people make on their first night: carrying all their cash in one place, mixing jetlag with alcohol, making expensive decisions on night one, leaving their passport and cash lying around, and trusting people they just met too quickly.

A safe first-night routine is simple: shower, rest, take a short (30-minute) walk to scout the nearest market and ATM, then go to bed early.

Day 2: SIM Card, Internet, and Staying Connected

A local SIM card is close to essential for calling Grab, using Google Maps, contacting your hotel or handling an emergency, and receiving banking verification texts. A quick comparison of the three main carriers:

CarrierPackageDataPriceNote
AISTourist 7 DaysUnlimited199 THBMost popular, best coverage
DTACHappy TravellerUnlimited149 THBBalanced speed/price
TrueMove HTourist PackageUnlimited129 THBCheapest option

You can get a SIM card at the airport (pricier but fast), at a carrier’s storefront in town, or at a 7-Eleven or FamilyMart. Bring your passport (a copy is often enough) and your hotel address.

Day 2: VPN and Digital Security

Public Wi-Fi networks aren’t secure, and doing banking over them is risky. On the free side, ProtonVPN and Windscribe stand out; on the paid side, NordVPN, ExpressVPN, and Surfshark are the common picks.

Day 3: Renting a Scooter and Exploring the City

In cities like Bangkok or Pattaya, taxis can add up fast; a scooter gives you freedom. Daily rental usually falls in the 200–300 baht range, but your risk profile changes depending on where you rent from:

OptionPrice/DaySafetyNote
Hotel front desk250–400 THBHighEasy but pricier
Street shop100–200 THBLowCheap, but be careful
Online booking200–300 THBHighSafest option

When you pick up the scooter: record it on video, photograph any existing damage, check that you got 2 keys, confirm you received a helmet, and ask for the insurance documentation.

Days 3–7: Getting Around and Your Daily Rhythm

Grab is Thailand’s Uber — fixed prices, no haggling, and the safest option for tourists (typically 35–100 baht). Songthaews (the red, open-air minivans) are a more local experience — very cheap at 10–20 baht, and you get off by simply calling out “stop.”

A sample daily rhythm: breakfast and a short walk in the morning, exploring the city midday, resting and eating in the evening, and calling it an early night. Keeping it this simple for the first week helps your body adjust to the heat and the time zone.

Your First 7 Days: Rough Budget

A rough daily and weekly estimate by category:

CategoryDaily (THB)7 Days (THB)
Accommodation600–1,5004,200–10,500
Food300–8002,100–5,600
Transport100–300700–2,100
Activities200–5001,400–3,500

Visa Extension Options (Quick Overview)

If your first week ends and you decide to stay longer, you’ve got a few options: extend your 60-day visa exemption by another 30 days at an immigration office for 1,900 THB, apply for an e-Visa in advance, or — if your purpose is study — move to a longer-term option like the ED visa. I cover that in more depth in my ED visa guide.

Final Word

This guide isn’t meant to scare you — it’s meant to help you start out calm and safe. Thailand rewards patience: the first few days can be a bit rough, but everything after that is genuinely enjoyable. If you spot something missing, let me know, and if this helped, pass it along.

Contents

Frequently Asked Questions

How many days can I stay in Thailand without a visa?
As of 2026, citizens of 93 countries, including Turkey, can enter Thailand visa-free and stay up to 60 days. A further 30-day extension (at the immigration officer's discretion) is available from an immigration office for 1,900 THB.
Can I drink the tap water?
No. We don't drink tap water in Thailand — stick to bottled water, and it's worth being careful even when brushing your teeth.
How's the internet speed?
4G is fast and widely available. Wi-Fi quality varies a lot depending on where you're staying, so getting a local SIM or eSIM on day one is worth it.
Is there a Turkish community in Pattaya or Bangkok?
Yes, especially in Pattaya, where there's a noticeable Turkish community. If you feel isolated in the first few weeks, that network can be a decent starting point.

If this guide helped you out