How to Move to Thailand from Australia in 2026
The step-by-step guide — visas, banking, housing, healthcare, and the exact timeline to make it happen without the usual chaos.
Read the Guide →Expert guides on visas, cost of living, banking, healthcare and lifestyle — written by someone who has helped 100+ Australians make the move.
Practical, honest, and written from first-hand experience — not copied from a government website.
The step-by-step guide — visas, banking, housing, healthcare, and the exact timeline to make it happen without the usual chaos.
Read the Guide →Visa options, cost of living, healthcare, culture and lifestyle — a straight comparison from someone who has helped clients settle in both countries.
Read the Guide →Everything Australians aged 50+ need to know about the Non-Immigrant O-A Visa — requirements, documents, health insurance, and how to renew it without drama.
Read the Guide →What does life actually cost in Bangkok, Chiang Mai, Ho Chi Minh City and Da Nang? Real budgets from real expats — not the $800/month fantasy you see on YouTube.
Read the Guide →Thailand's private hospitals are world-class and a fraction of Australian prices. Here's what you actually need, what it costs, and which health insurance policies are worth buying.
Read the Guide →The traps are real — dodgy landlords, bait-and-switch listings, deposits that vanish. Here's how to find a great place and protect yourself every step of the way.
Read the Guide →By Felix Harris, Golden Compass Relocation Services · Last updated March 2026 · 12 min read
"I've helped hundreds of Australians move to Thailand. The ones who do it smoothly are the ones who plan. This guide is exactly what I wish every client had read before they called me."
Thailand has become one of the world's top destinations for Australians seeking a better lifestyle, lower cost of living, and genuine warmth year-round. In 2026, the country hosts an estimated 200,000+ Australians either living full-time or spending significant time there annually. Whether you're retiring, working remotely, or simply ready for a change, Thailand offers something most Western countries no longer can: an affordable, high-quality life with world-class food, modern healthcare, and a welcoming culture.
But moving to Thailand from Australia isn't something you do on a whim. There are visas to navigate, bank accounts to open, health insurance to organise, and a hundred small decisions that can either go smoothly or become expensive headaches. This guide covers all of it, in the right order.
The biggest mistake Australians make is choosing the wrong visa — or arriving on a tourist visa and extending indefinitely without a proper long-term solution. Here are the main options in 2026:
| Visa Type | Best For | Duration | Key Requirements |
|---|---|---|---|
| Non-Immigrant O-A (Retirement) | Australians 50+, retired | Annual renewable | Age 50+, ~A$32K in Thai bank or A$2,600/mth income, health insurance mandatory |
| LTR Visa (Long-Term Resident) | Remote workers, wealthy retirees | 10 years | Varies by category: income, investment, or skills requirements |
| Thailand Elite | Long-stay lifestyle expats | 5–20 years | Fee-based from 900,000 THB (~A$36,000) for 5 years |
| SMART Visa | Entrepreneurs, investors | Up to 4 years | Must meet investment, talent, or startup criteria |
For most Australians moving to Thailand, the Non-Immigrant O-A (Retirement) Visa is the standard path if you're 50+. If you're younger and working remotely, the LTR "Work from Thailand" visa is the best long-term option currently available. Never rely on back-to-back tourist entries as a long-term strategy — immigration has tightened significantly.
Most people underestimate how much needs to be done on the Australian side before departure. This is the list that catches people off-guard:
Do not arrive in Thailand without at least a month's accommodation organised. The ideal approach: rent a serviced apartment for your first 30 days while you search for a longer-term property. Never sign a 12-month lease from Australia without having seen the property.
Typical monthly rental costs in Bangkok in 2026:
| Area | 1 Bedroom (THB/mth) | AUD Approx | 2 Bedroom (THB/mth) | AUD Approx |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sukhumvit (Asok–Thong Lo) | 25,000–45,000 | A$1,000–1,800 | 40,000–75,000 | A$1,600–3,000 |
| Ari / On Nut | 18,000–30,000 | A$720–1,200 | 28,000–50,000 | A$1,120–2,000 |
| Chiang Mai — Inner City | 12,000–22,000 | A$480–880 | 18,000–35,000 | A$720–1,400 |
You will need a Thai bank account for visa financial requirements, rent, utilities, and everyday transactions. The most expat-friendly banks are Kasikorn Bank (KBank) and Bangkok Bank. Documents typically required: original passport, non-immigrant visa, proof of Thai address, and sometimes a reference letter.
For international transfers: set up Wise or Revolut alongside your Thai account. These services save 3–5% compared to traditional SWIFT transfers — thousands of dollars per year.
The Thai Non-Immigrant O-A visa requires proof of health insurance as a mandatory condition. Minimum coverage: 40,000 THB outpatient / 400,000 THB inpatient annually. We strongly recommend comprehensive cover of at least 3,000,000 THB inpatient.
Costs for comprehensive international health insurance in 2026 (approximate):
Thailand has exceptional private hospitals — Bumrungrad International, Samitivej, Bangkok Hospital are all world-class. With the right insurance, you will receive faster, better treatment than in an Australian public hospital for most conditions.
| Timeline | Task | Who |
|---|---|---|
| 6 months out | Visa consultation. Determine which visa and begin preparation. | Migration agent |
| 5 months out | Australian affairs: tax advice, super review, property decision. | You + Accountant |
| 4 months out | Housing research begins. Build property shortlist. | GC / Agent |
| 3 months out | Health insurance selected. Visa application submitted. | Pacific Prime / Agent |
| 2 months out | Lease signed. Visa approved. Shipping arranged if needed. | GC + Crown Relocations |
| 1 month out | Tie up loose ends: mail redirect, account updates, tax notifications. | You + GC |
| Move Week | Depart. Arrival support. SIM card, local registration. | GC in-country |
| Month 1–3 | Settle in. 90-day reporting. Build local routines. | You + GC support |
Book a 60-minute Discovery Consultation and get a personalised move plan — visa, housing, banking, timeline — tailored to your exact situation.
Book Your Consultation →By Felix Harris, Golden Compass Relocation Services · Last updated March 2026 · 10 min read
"Thailand or Vietnam?" is the question I'm asked on almost every first call. Both countries are spectacular, genuinely affordable, and welcoming to Australians. But they are very different places — and the right answer depends entirely on your lifestyle, age, visa situation, and personality.
| Factor | Thailand | Vietnam |
|---|---|---|
| Long-term visa options | Excellent — O-A, LTR, Elite | Limited — no retirement visa |
| Comfortable lifestyle budget | A$3,200–4,800/mth | A$2,800–4,200/mth |
| Healthcare quality | World-class in Bangkok/Chiang Mai | Excellent in HCMC/Hanoi; limited elsewhere |
| English widely spoken | Yes, in expat areas | Less common outside major cities |
| Expat community | Very large, well-established | Growing, younger demographic |
| Bureaucracy | Moderate — visas well understood | More complex — evolving rules |
| Best for | Retirees, families, long-term | Remote workers, 1–5 year adventure |
This is the single biggest differentiator in 2026. Thailand has a mature, well-established long-term visa system. The Non-Immigrant O-A (Retirement Visa) for Australians 50+ is annual renewable and well understood. The LTR Visa offers 10-year stays for remote workers and wealthy retirees. Thailand Elite provides fee-based 5–20-year stays.
Vietnam, by contrast, does not have a retirement visa. The primary options are the 90-day e-visa (renewable once), a business visa requiring a Vietnamese company sponsor, or a temporary residence card for those with work permits. This is workable — many expats manage it successfully — but it's significantly less clean than Thailand's system.
Both countries are dramatically cheaper than Australia. The difference between them is smaller than most people expect — roughly 15–20% in Vietnam's favour for comparable lifestyles.
| Expense | Bangkok (A$/mth) | HCMC (A$/mth) |
|---|---|---|
| 2BR apartment (inner city) | A$1,400–2,400 | A$1,200–2,100 |
| Groceries (2 people) | A$320–480 | A$180–300 |
| Eating out daily | A$160–280 | A$90–180 |
| International health insurance | A$120–220/mth | A$150–300/mth |
| Total comfortable budget | A$3,200–4,800 | A$2,800–4,200 |
Thailand has some of the finest private hospitals in the world. Bangkok's Bumrungrad International, Samitivej, and Bangkok Hospital Group are regularly rated among the best in Asia. Vietnam's private healthcare has improved substantially — FV Hospital and Vinmec in HCMC are excellent. For specialist treatment, many Vietnam expats still prefer to fly to Bangkok. Outside the two major Vietnamese cities, healthcare quality drops off significantly.
Thailand is more polished and has deeper infrastructure for long-term expat life. Thais are famously warm and the quality-of-life infrastructure (malls, transport, parks) is excellent. Vietnam is rawer, more energetic, and faster-moving. HCMC is one of the most exciting cities in Asia. The food is arguably even better for sheer variety and value. It's a country on the rise in a way that is palpable on the street.
Simple rule: If you want a settled, secure, long-term base — Thailand. If you want a 1–5 year adventure with lower costs and higher energy — Vietnam. If you're 50+ and want certainty, Thailand wins on visa alone.
For most Australian retirees and semi-retirees aged 50+: Thailand is the better choice in 2026. The visa options are simply superior, the infrastructure for long-term foreign residents is more mature, and the healthcare is exceptional.
For Australians aged 30–49 working remotely and wanting an adventure: Vietnam is a fantastic choice for a 1–3 year chapter. The energy is unmatched, costs are lower, and the country feels like it's on the way up.
Many of our clients visit both on a recce trip before deciding. If you have the flexibility, we strongly recommend a 2-week stay in each country before committing to a full move.
Book a Discovery Consultation and we'll help you choose the right destination and build a personalised plan around your life, budget, and timeline.
Book Your Consultation →By Felix Harris, Golden Compass Relocation Services · Last updated March 2026 · 11 min read
The Thailand Non-Immigrant Visa Category O-A — commonly called the Thailand Retirement Visa — is the primary pathway for Australians aged 50 and over who want to live in Thailand long-term. It is renewable annually and, when managed correctly, provides a stable and legal basis for indefinite residence.
| Requirement | Current Standard (2026) |
|---|---|
| Age | Must be 50 years or older at time of application |
| Nationality | Australian citizens and permanent residents qualify |
| Criminal record | No criminal record in Australia or Thailand (AFP clearance required) |
| Financial — Option A | 800,000 THB (~A$32,000) in a Thai bank account |
| Financial — Option B | Monthly income/pension of 65,000 THB/mth (~A$2,600/mth) |
| Health insurance | MANDATORY: min. 40,000 THB outpatient + 400,000 THB inpatient per year |
The first Non-Immigrant O-A visa must be obtained from a Thai consulate outside Thailand. For Australians, the main options are the Thai Consulate-General in Sydney (131 Macquarie Street), Melbourne (Clarendon Street), or the Embassy in Canberra.
The O-A visa issued from Australia is valid for 1 year from issue, allowing multiple entries. The first stamp upon entry grants a 12-month stay from the date of entry.
| Document | Specification |
|---|---|
| Passport | Original, valid for at least 18 months from application date |
| Passport photos | 4 x recent colour (4cm × 6cm, white background) |
| Police Clearance | Australian Federal Police check, dated within 3 months |
| Medical certificate | From Australian doctor confirming no prohibited diseases |
| Financial evidence — Option A | Bank letter/statement showing A$32,000+ equivalent |
| Financial evidence — Option B | Pension statement or income proof showing A$2,600+/mth |
| Health insurance | Certificate from O-A approved insurer (Pacific Prime, AXA, Cigna Thailand) |
| Application fee | Approximately AUD $295 (confirm with consulate) |
Since 2019, health insurance has been mandatory for the O-A visa and all annual renewals. Minimum coverage required: 40,000 THB outpatient and 400,000 THB inpatient per year. While the minimum is 40K/400K, we strongly recommend at least 1,000,000 THB inpatient — a single hospitalisation for a cardiac event or broken hip can easily exceed the minimum coverage at a Bangkok private hospital.
Important: Your Australian Medicare card and standard Australian health insurance are NOT accepted for O-A visa purposes. You must hold a policy specifically meeting Thai immigration's minimum requirements.
Once you're in Thailand, renewals are done in-country at your local immigration office — not at the consulate. The renewal process in 2026:
On a Non-Immigrant O-A with extension of stay, you must report your address to immigration every 90 days. This can be done in person, by post, or online via the Thai Immigration Bureau's system. Missing a 90-day report: 2,000 THB fine per occurrence. Set a calendar reminder 14 days before each deadline.
We'll match you with the right immigration specialist, guide you through every document, and make sure you arrive in Thailand on the right visa — the first time.
Book Your Consultation →By Felix Harris, Golden Compass Relocation Services · Last updated March 2026 · 10 min read
"The $800/month figure you see on expat YouTube? That's someone eating street food every meal, living in a studio with no aircon, and never leaving the neighbourhood. Here's what a genuinely comfortable life actually costs."
Cost of living is the number one reason Australians seriously consider Southeast Asia. When you can live comfortably in Chiang Mai for what you'd pay in rent alone in Sydney, the maths gets hard to ignore. But the internet is full of wildly inaccurate numbers — both too low (from people optimising aggressively) and too high (from people who import their entire Australian lifestyle).
This guide gives you real budget ranges across four cities, across three lifestyle tiers: frugal, comfortable, and comfortable-plus. These numbers come from the clients I've helped settle in 2025 and 2026 and reflect actual costs, not aspirational minimalism.
Bangkok is the most cosmopolitan city in Southeast Asia, with world-class infrastructure, international hospitals, and every amenity you'd find in a major Western city. It's also, by regional standards, relatively expensive — particularly for housing in the expat-popular neighbourhoods.
| Expense | Frugal (A$/mth) | Comfortable (A$/mth) | Comfortable+ (A$/mth) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rent (1 bed, central) | $700–900 | $1,100–1,600 | $1,800–2,800 |
| Food & Dining | $250–350 | $450–650 | $700–1,000 |
| Transport | $60–100 | $120–200 | $250–400 |
| Health Insurance | $120–180 | $180–280 | $280–500 |
| Utilities & Internet | $80–110 | $110–160 | $160–220 |
| Entertainment & Social | $100–200 | $250–450 | $500–900 |
| Total Monthly | $1,310–1,840 | $2,210–3,340 | $3,690–5,820 |
Chiang Mai is consistently ranked among the world's best cities for digital nomads and retirees — and with good reason. The cost of living is 30–40% lower than Bangkok, the pace is relaxed, the weather is cooler (by Thai standards), and the expat community is warm and well-established.
| Expense | Frugal (A$/mth) | Comfortable (A$/mth) | Comfortable+ (A$/mth) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rent (1 bed, good area) | $450–650 | $700–1,100 | $1,200–1,800 |
| Food & Dining | $180–260 | $320–480 | $550–800 |
| Transport | $50–90 | $100–180 | $200–350 |
| Health Insurance | $120–180 | $180–280 | $280–500 |
| Utilities & Internet | $70–100 | $100–140 | $140–190 |
| Entertainment & Social | $80–150 | $200–380 | $400–700 |
| Total Monthly | $950–1,430 | $1,600–2,560 | $2,770–4,340 |
HCMC is Vietnam's economic engine — busy, loud, brilliant, and genuinely affordable. The expat scene is growing fast, international food and services are widely available, and the city rewards those who embrace its energy. It's cheaper than Bangkok and has a rawness that some Australians love and others find overwhelming.
| Expense | Frugal (A$/mth) | Comfortable (A$/mth) | Comfortable+ (A$/mth) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rent (1 bed, expat area) | $500–750 | $850–1,300 | $1,400–2,200 |
| Food & Dining | $150–220 | $300–480 | $550–900 |
| Transport | $40–80 | $100–180 | $200–350 |
| Health Insurance | $100–160 | $160–250 | $250–450 |
| Utilities & Internet | $60–90 | $90–130 | $130–180 |
| Entertainment & Social | $80–150 | $200–380 | $400–750 |
| Total Monthly | $930–1,450 | $1,700–2,720 | $2,930–4,830 |
Da Nang is Vietnam's sweet spot — a mid-sized coastal city with white-sand beaches, fast internet, a growing international community, and the lowest cost of living of our four cities. It's still under the radar compared to Bangkok and Bali, which means less crowding, better value, and a genuine local feel.
| Expense | Frugal (A$/mth) | Comfortable (A$/mth) | Comfortable+ (A$/mth) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rent (1 bed, near beach) | $350–550 | $600–950 | $1,000–1,600 |
| Food & Dining | $130–200 | $270–420 | $480–750 |
| Transport | $40–70 | $80–150 | $160–280 |
| Health Insurance | $100–160 | $160–250 | $250–450 |
| Utilities & Internet | $55–85 | $85–120 | $120–170 |
| Entertainment & Social | $70–130 | $170–320 | $350–650 |
| Total Monthly | $745–1,195 | $1,365–2,210 | $2,360–3,900 |
Every budget I've seen online misses at least a few of these. Don't let them surprise you:
The honest answer: most Australians who work with me land somewhere between A$2,000 and A$3,200/month for a genuinely comfortable life — in any of the four cities. That includes good accommodation, eating out regularly, travel within the region, and having a social life. It doesn't include unusual medical costs or major purchases.
If your Australian income, pension, or savings can sustain A$2,500–3,000/month, Southeast Asia is financially viable. If your budget is A$1,500–2,000/month, you can absolutely make it work — especially in Chiang Mai or Da Nang — but you'll need to be more deliberate.
Every client's situation is different — pension amount, lifestyle expectations, destination preferences. In your free consultation, I'll help you build a real budget based on your actual numbers.
Book Your Free Consultation →By Felix Harris, Golden Compass Relocation Services · Last updated March 2026 · 9 min read
"Healthcare is the question that stops more Australians from making the move than almost anything else. It shouldn't. Thailand's private hospitals are world-class — and a fraction of what you'd pay in Australia even with Medicare."
For Australians considering a move to Southeast Asia, healthcare is usually the biggest concern — particularly for those over 50. Will the hospitals be good enough? What if something serious happens? How much will health insurance cost? These are completely legitimate questions, and they deserve straight answers.
The short version: Thailand has private hospitals that genuinely rival the best in Australia. Vietnam's private sector is improving rapidly. Insurance is available, understandable, and — for most expats — affordable. Here's everything you need to know.
Thailand's top-tier private hospitals are genuinely world-class. Bumrungrad International Hospital in Bangkok is consistently ranked among the best hospitals in Asia, serving over 1.1 million patients annually including hundreds of thousands of medical tourists from Australia, the UK, and the Middle East. Bangkok Hospital Group, Samitivej, and Vejthani are other highly reputable networks with locations across the country.
What makes Thai private healthcare exceptional for Australians:
Out-of-pocket costs at Thailand's top private hospitals are considerably lower than equivalent private care in Australia:
| Procedure / Service | Thailand Private (A$) | Australia Private (A$) |
|---|---|---|
| GP Consultation | $25–50 | $80–180 |
| Specialist Consultation | $60–150 | $200–500 |
| Full Blood Panel | $40–100 | $80–200 |
| Dental Cleaning | $25–60 | $120–250 |
| Dental Crown | $300–600 | $1,500–2,500 |
| Hip Replacement | $10,000–18,000 | $30,000–55,000 |
| Cataract Surgery (per eye) | $800–1,500 | $2,500–4,500 |
| Emergency Room Visit | $100–400 | $400–1,500 |
| Night in Hospital (private room) | $150–350 | $500–2,000 |
Short answer: yes, absolutely. Even though Thai private healthcare is affordable by Australian standards, a serious illness or major surgery can still run into tens of thousands of dollars. Health insurance protects you against the tail risk — the events that are unlikely but catastrophic if they happen uninsured.
For those on a Thailand Retirement Visa (Non-Immigrant O-A), health insurance is now mandatory. You must hold a policy with minimum coverage of 40,000 THB (~A$1,600) for outpatient and 400,000 THB (~A$16,000) for inpatient. Many insurers offer Thailand-specific plans that meet these requirements.
The most commonly recommended insurers among Australian expats in Thailand and Vietnam:
| Insurer | Annual Premium (approx.) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| AXA Global Healthcare | A$1,800–4,000 | Strong network in both Thailand and Vietnam, popular with long-term expats |
| Cigna Global | A$2,000–5,500 | Good modular options; widely used, solid claim processing |
| Pacific Cross | A$1,200–3,000 | Strong Thailand focus, often recommended by Thai immigration agents |
| BUPA International | A$2,500–6,000 | Recognised brand, comprehensive coverage, Australian-friendly |
| Allianz Care | A$1,600–4,500 | Good value in mid-tier; covers emergency evacuation |
Premiums vary significantly based on age, pre-existing conditions, deductible level, and coverage area. At age 55 with no major pre-existing conditions, expect to pay A$2,000–3,500/year for solid international coverage in Thailand. At age 65+, budget A$3,500–6,000+.
This is the issue that catches many Australians off-guard. International health insurers routinely exclude pre-existing conditions — conditions you had before taking out the policy. High blood pressure, diabetes, heart conditions, previous cancer diagnoses, knee or hip problems: all potentially excluded.
What this means in practice:
Vietnam's private healthcare sector is less developed than Thailand's but improving rapidly. In Ho Chi Minh City and Da Nang, the main internationally-oriented facilities are:
For routine care, Vietnam's private clinics are excellent value. For major procedures, many expats choose to travel to Bangkok — it's a short flight and the standard of care is higher. Factor this into your planning if you're basing yourself in Vietnam.
Australia's Medicare does not cover healthcare outside Australia. You cannot claim Medicare rebates on medical expenses incurred in Thailand or Vietnam. If you intend to return to Australia for medical treatment, understand that you'll need to re-enter Australia and use the public system — which may mean wait lists for non-urgent procedures. For this reason, international health insurance is not optional for most expats.
As part of Complete and Premium packages, I introduce clients to vetted health insurance brokers who specialise in Australian expat policies. No commissions to me — just the right advice.
Talk to Me Free →By Felix Harris, Golden Compass Relocation Services · Last updated March 2026 · 11 min read
"I've seen clients lose A$3,000 deposits. Sign leases on apartments that looked nothing like the photos. Move into places with black mould, broken aircon, and landlords who vanish the moment money changes hands. None of it has to happen."
Finding housing in Southeast Asia is genuinely different from renting in Australia. There are fewer consumer protections, listings can be wildly misleading, and the language barrier creates opportunities for unscrupulous landlords to take advantage of newcomers. The good news: with the right approach, you can find excellent accommodation at a fraction of Australian prices. You just need to know the rules of the game.
This is the mistake I see most often and it almost always ends badly. Someone finds a place on Airbnb or Facebook Marketplace, falls in love with the photos, and sends a deposit before they've even landed. Then they arrive to find the apartment is smaller than it looked, the neighbourhood is noisy, or the photos were from five years ago when the place was renovated.
The rule is simple: rent a serviced apartment or hotel for your first 30 days. Use that time to explore neighbourhoods on foot, talk to other expats, and view multiple properties in person before committing. No legitimate landlord will pressure you to sign a lease remotely before you've seen the place.
| Neighbourhood | Vibe | 1-bed range (A$/mth) |
|---|---|---|
| Sukhumvit (Asok–Thong Lo) | Expat heartland, walkable, lively | $1,100–2,000 |
| Silom / Sathorn | Business district, quieter, good transit | $900–1,600 |
| Ari | Local Thai feel, cafes, less touristy | $700–1,200 |
| On Nut / Phra Khanong | Budget-friendly Sukhumvit extension | $600–1,000 |
| Riverside (Bang Rak) | Scenic, quieter, great for older retirees | $800–1,500 |
| Neighbourhood | Vibe | 1-bed range (A$/mth) |
|---|---|---|
| Nimmanhaemin | Hip, cafes, digital nomads, expats | $700–1,200 |
| Old City surrounds | Cultural, walkable, charming | $500–900 |
| Hang Dong / San Phi Suea | Quiet, nature, perfect for retirees | $600–1,100 |
Experience has taught me to recognise the warning signs fast. Walk away if you encounter any of these:
When you view a property in person, check these things — every time:
Negotiation is expected. In Thailand and Vietnam, asking for a reduction — or asking for extras — is completely normal and rarely causes offence. Common negotiating tactics that work:
In my experience, 10–15% off the asking price is achievable in most cases, particularly if you're willing to commit to a 12-month lease and pay punctually.
Property search and lease negotiation is included in every relocation package. I find you the right place, in the right neighbourhood, at the right price — and I make sure the contract protects you.
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