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Thailand Practical Travel Info

Visa rules by nationality, money, safety, and getting connected.

Visa rules depend entirely on your passport — most Western nationalities (US, Canada, UK, EU, Australia, NZ) currently get visa-free entry for up to 60 days, though Thailand has approved a change to 30 days that may take effect during 2026 (verify before booking). Currency is the Thai baht; carry cash for street food and markets. Thailand is very safe overall — the main real risk is scooter accidents, not crime.

This is the boring-sounding section that quietly saves your trip: whether you actually need a visa (spoiler — nobody has one universal answer, it depends entirely on your passport), how much cash to carry, what could genuinely go wrong, and how to get online without your phone bill giving you a small heart attack when you land.

Questions people actually ask

Do I need a visa for Thailand?
It depends on your nationality — see the visa table on our visa & entry page. Most Western passport holders currently get 60 days visa-free, though this may shorten to 30 days during 2026. Always check the current rule for your specific passport before booking.
Is Thailand safe to visit?
Yes, overall it's one of the safer countries in Southeast Asia for tourists. Violent crime against travelers is rare. The real risk is scooter/motorbike accidents — wear a helmet and confirm your travel insurance actually covers scooter riding, since many policies exclude it by default.
What currency does Thailand use?
The Thai baht (THB, ฿). Check current exchange rates before you go, since they move — as a rough planning anchor, $1 has recently traded in the low-to-mid 30s in baht. Carry cash for street food, markets, and taxis; cards work fine at hotels and malls.