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Car rental in Thailand is less about a single excursion and more about how you live for the next few weeks. Most visitors come here for a longer stay — winter escape from November to March, two- or three-week holidays, road trips with friends across the islands. Without a car you'll see the beach next to your hotel and a couple of nearby markets, and that's it. Thailand is too big and too varied for that to be enough.

Remote workers, young couples, families with children, groups of friends on Phuket and Samui — that's the typical profile. People realise within a day or two that a car here is part of daily life, the same way an air conditioner is in the apartment. With a rental you can swim in three different bays in a day, stop at a mountain temple on the way, and still be back at your hotel for dinner.

A couple from Manchester landed at HKT in February, signed the contract on the bonnet at arrivals, and were on the west-coast road to Karon in under ten minutes. The shuttle for the big international desks was still loading.

TakeCars works in four key locations: car rental in Bangkok, Phuket car hire, hire a car on Samui, and rent a car in Pattaya. Each one comes with vetted local partners, transparent terms, deposit by cash or card, and delivery straight to the airport terminal. Most clients pick up at the airport and drop back at the same point a few weeks later — no extra logistics.

Prices and seasonality

Prices depend on two simple factors — the model and how long you rent for. Economy cars (Toyota Yaris, Honda City, Nissan Note, Mitsubishi Mirage) start from $21 a day in low season; in peak season (November–February) the same car runs $24–27. Crossovers and seven-seaters such as Toyota Veloz or Mitsubishi Pajero start from $57 in low season and rise to $71 at peak.

Rental length is the main lever for saving money. A car that costs $30 a day on a one-week booking comes out at around $21–22 over 25–30 days. Most clients book for three weeks or longer, and the whole pricing structure is built around long-term hire.

A week and a month are different rates. What costs $30 a day on a weekly booking becomes $21–22 over a long stay — that's just the standard long-stay discount.

Seasonality cuts the other way too. From 25 December to 25 January is super-peak: even partners with 2,500 cars in their fleet need 1–2 months of lead time on those dates, otherwise nothing is left. Low season runs May to October — humidity and the rains, but prices drop 30–40% and the country is almost empty along any route.

Last December a couple tried to book a Yaris on the 18th for Christmas week. Nothing free in Phuket, nothing in Bangkok, nothing in Pattaya. They ended up in a Pajero at twice the rate — and even that disappeared by the 22nd.

In practice: May to early November you can usually fly in and arrange a car on arrival. From mid-November onward, lock the booking in before you buy the flight.

Most tourists in Thailand start their trip here

Where to pick up the car

Most cars are picked up at the airport: Suvarnabhumi (BKK) and Don Mueang (DMK) in Bangkok, Phuket International (HKT), and Samui (USM, one of the most scenic terminals in the country).

Car rental in Bangkok — about 40 models in our fleet. Most people take the car to get out of town: inside the city the BTS Skytrain and Grab beat sitting in traffic. On the road to Pattaya, Hua Hin, or Kanchanaburi a car is essential.

Phuket car hire — around 35 cars. Here a car is everyday life: beaches are spread from Karon to Mai Khao, with almost no buses between them and the west-coast road is all curves. Hotel delivery is usually included.

A family on Phuket last March kept their Yaris Ativ for three weeks, used it like a second hotel room — beach in the morning, viewpoint at Promthep before sunset, late dinner in Kata. They drove maybe 800 km the whole stay and never paid for parking once.

Hire a car on Samui — 21 models. Toyota Yaris Ativ, Mitsubishi Attrage, and Honda Brio are the workhorses. In one day you can drive the ring road, stop at viewpoints, and be back on your beach for sunset.

Rent a car in Pattaya — your base for trips to Ko Chang, Rayong, and Jomtien Beach. Bangkok–Pattaya is the only toll motorway in this direction (~$1–2 per point).

A guest on Samui last August took our Honda Brio round the ring road in a single morning, stopped at the Big Buddha, then Lamai for lunch, and was swimming back at Chaweng by four. The whole loop ran on half a tank.

Pattaya pairs naturally with Rayong beaches and Khao Kheow for week-two day trips. For Ko Chang, leave the rental on the mainland and pick up a local scooter once you're off the ferry — partner contracts don't cover the rental car on the boat.

Real reviews on TakeCars in Thailand

Aleksandr Silin
Aleksandr Silin
🇷🇺

Toyota Fortuner in Thailand

The rental went well, though they gave a slightly older version of the car

January 2024
Roman Krivolapov
Roman Krivolapov
🇷🇺

Honda CR-V in Thailand

I would like to leave my review. I rented a car for 25 days, drove 3550 km all over Thailand. I received the car at Bangkok airport and handed it over there. There were no problems when I received the car and when I handed it in. I liked everything , I would recommend to use their services . My rating is 5 out of 5 !

January 2025
Toshiharu Matsubara
Toshiharu Matsubara
🇯🇵

Honda Civic in Thailand

I’m strongly dissatisfied about rental car company. I ordered Honda Civic 2020 two months ago and company representative said the last car we had is Toyota Corolla Atlas. He gave me a parking ticket, showed me the car inside the airport parking pool. He gave me a ticket and left immediately, so I must pay 50TBH for parking. Everything is bad

March 2024
Natalia Kochugova
Natalia Kochugova
🇷🇺

Toyota Vios in Thailand

Despite the high mileage (150000 km), the car was in excellent technical condition. I would like to say a special thank you to the staff of the company, they were always in touch on WhatsApp, many questions were solved very quickly. They met me at the airport and after returning the car took me to the airport. We went to a meeting and extended the rental car for a few more days without requiring us to come to the company to renegotiate the contract. They work for cash. Summary: the company is excellent, located near the airport, next time we will turn to them again.

May 2024
Alexandr Andrianov
Alexandr Andrianov
🇷🇺

MG 5/GT in Thailand

everything went very well everything is great Traveled all over thailand the car is great

March 2025
Dmitrii Erne
Dmitrii Erne
🇷🇺

Toyota Fortuner in Thailand

We rented a Toyota Fortuner in March 2026 for 3 days. Pick up and drop off at Samui airport. We needed a powerful and spacious car for the whole family to drive around the island with the possibility of climbing mountains. The car was practically new, in perfect condition, clean, full tank of gas and fully corresponded to the description on the website. The car showed itself perfectly on the road: no technical problems, the driving was very comfortable. The manager was always in touch, at any time immediately answered questions. He also helped us to solve the issue of free parking of our smaller car, rented from the same company, for the time of booking. For this a special thanks! Especially pleased with the ability to pay with a Russian card. This was our 3rd booking on the website of this company. We will definitely come back!

March 2026
Konstantin Kroshkin
Konstantin Kroshkin
🇷🇺

Toyota Yaris Ativ in Thailand

Everything went fine. I was met and picked up as agreed. No complaints

July 2024
Maksim Sagil
Maksim Sagil
🇷🇺

Nissan Note in Thailand

everything was very pleasant! The price was very good compared to other companies! The car was in normal condition despite the error on the dashboard, which they taped up with duct tape and a punctured muffler 😂🤣😅 but it did not affect our trip!!!! I think this won't be the last time I turn to you!!!! Good luck and thank you again ☺️

February 2026
Dmitrii Surikov
Dmitrii Surikov
🇷🇺

Toyota Yaris Ativ in Thailand

It went fine. But it was a bit stressful at first to find a new car, as the client had renewed his car. And they charged 1000 baht for an incomplete tank, even though there was obviously not more than 500 missing

February 2024
Svetlana Levankova
Svetlana Levankova
🇷🇺

Toyota Vios in Thailand

As for car Toyota Vios. Finally I have got. Honda city. Technically car was good. But was some problems with cleaners of cars saloon. I said it to the representative of company when returned car in airport. But in common everything was good. Thank you

January 2025
Gleb Nozdrachev
Gleb Nozdrachev
🇷🇺

Nissan Note in Thailand

It went well.

January 2025
Andrei Kotov
Andrei Kotov
🇷🇺

Toyota Yaris Ativ in Thailand

Everything was good, drove all over the northern part of Thailand. There were no problems anywhere, the car showed itself well. It was convenient to pay with a Russian card!

November 2024
Nikita Pronichkin
Nikita Pronichkin
🇷🇺

Honda City in Thailand

Everything went well, thank you. The car was delivered to me on time and at the address, and I received it without any problems. Of course, it was in a poor condition, but it was relatively inexpensive

March 2026

Take Cars in Thailand

Thailand gives us one of the strongest networks of local hosts in Southeast Asia — small, often family-run fleets where every customer counts and a free upgrade to the next class is still a normal gesture rather than a marketing trick used once a year. We meet clients at the terminal exit with a name card; while the queue for the global desks is still waiting on a shuttle, the contract is signed on the bonnet and the car is moving.

Joey

Bangkok
4.6
Joey

Jirawat

Phuket Airport (HKT)
4.9
Jirawat

Kasam

Bangkok Don Muang Airport (DMK)
5.0
Kasam

Alonggorn

Samui Airport (USM)
5.0
Alonggorn
RENT A CAR
  • Deposit and payment method

    With our partners in Thailand the deposit is $85–145, accepted in cash or as a hold on an international card.

  • Full Coverage Insurance (Super CDW)

    $3–17 a day removes liability for damage and often eliminates the deposit altogether.

  • Airport or hotel delivery

    In Bangkok delivery is usually paid (~$100 one way across town); on Phuket and Samui local partners often include it for free.

Money matters

Deposit

With our partners the deposit runs $85–145 depending on the car class. That's 2–3 times lower than the big international chains ($400–600 frozen on a credit card). Cash in baht or US dollars is fine, as is a hold on any international card.

Insurance

The price always includes Compulsory Third-Party Liability — civil liability with minimum medical cover required by Thai law. On top of that we recommend Full Coverage Insurance (Super CDW) — $3–17 a day. With it most partners drop the deposit: choose between $17 a day or $145 frozen on the card.

A couple from Amsterdam took the basic cover on a Phuket booking last April, clipped a kerb on the road down from Patong viewpoint, and lost half their deposit on a single bumper. Their second week they paid $14 a day for full cover and stopped flinching at every songthaew.

Payment on the spot

Thai operators love cash — here and now, no waiting for transfers. Cards work too: Visa and Mastercard are accepted across the country. For online prepayment our site handles the major European card networks, so the booking is settled before you fly.

Online prepayment means you arrive with everything sorted — the partner has your name, the car is ready, and the paperwork takes five minutes at the kerb.

In practice most clients split it: prepay the booking online, settle local extras (delivery, optional full cover) in cash on collection.

Driving in Thailand

Left-hand traffic

The wheel is on the right, you drive on the left — same as the UK, Japan, and Australia. Most clients from continental Europe haven't done this before. You adjust within 1–2 days. Pick quieter areas first; don't dive into Bangkok rush hour on day one.

Start with the quiet streets near your hotel for the first morning. By the second afternoon you'll forget which side you ever drove on at home.

The motorbike flow

Scooters and mopeds are their own ecosystem here. There are always twice as many bikes in the flow as cars, often more in songthaew-heavy areas. Check your wing mirrors more often than at home, and never change lanes without a clear visual. The Thai rule of thumb: bikes can come from anywhere, including the wrong side of a one-way street.

Weather and parking

In the rains (May–October) a tropical downpour is the norm, not a crisis. Twenty minutes under a petrol-station roof and the sky is clear. Parking is easier than in most European cities — by the beach, at a temple, at a shopping centre, almost all of it free.

A traveller got caught in a Krabi cloudburst on the way back from Railay last September. She pulled into a PTT, ordered a coffee, watched the road turn into a river, then drove on dry tarmac twenty minutes later. Nothing dramatic — just how October works.

Fuel and fines

Petrol (95 octane) is around $1.50 a litre. Most partners hand the car over with a full tank and ask for it back the same way. Fines are reasonable: speeding around $30, no seat belt around $15.

Thailand with locals

When something goes wrong

A car is a machine and sometimes it breaks down. With local partners issues are sorted fast: 24/7 hotline, tow truck within 1–4 hours in any tourist area, replacement same day.

A guest's battery died on the highway near Hua Hin last March. One call to the partner, twenty minutes later a mechanic was there with a new one — fitted on the verge, no extra charge.

Substitution and free upgrade

If the booked model isn't available, we hand over an upgrade at no charge. A client books a Honda Civic 1.8, and at the airport a Toyota Camry 2.5 pulls up — that kind of thing. The rule is simple: the customer never goes home with less car than they paid for.

Minor accidents

First rule: don't move the car until police (191) and insurance representatives arrive. With full cover there are no financial questions — repair, medical bills, third-party damage, all closed by the partner. The driver's job is to wait, photograph, and stay calm.

A traveller in Pattaya nudged a parked motorbike last October. Police arrived in fifteen minutes, the partner's coordinator on the phone in five. Full cover swallowed the lot — repair, the rider's clinic visit, even the petrol the traveller wasted idling on the kerb.

Cross-border restrictions

The rental can't cross an international border: Laos, Cambodia, and Malaysia are closed under all partner contracts. Inside Thailand, anywhere is fine — Bangkok to Krabi, Pattaya to Rayong, the long west-coast loop on Phuket. One-way drop-off costs extra (Bangkok to Phuket runs around $285).

Rates in Thailand vary throughout the year depending on the season and the rental length in days.

1485
1500
1510
1430
1188
1207
1207
1207
1180
1393
1464
1616
  • January
  • February
  • March
  • April
  • May
  • June
  • July
  • August
  • September
  • October
  • November
  • December
  • Jan
  • Feb
  • Mar
  • Apr
  • May
  • Jun
  • Jul
  • Aug
  • Sep
  • Oct
  • Nov
  • Dec
chartHow expensive is renting a car in Thailand: average daily rates for a one-week car rental, across all car classes. Delivery across Thailand not included.

Frequently asked questions

How much is car rental in Thailand per day?

Economy cars run $21–27 per day depending on the season. A crossover or seven-seater starts at $57 in low season and rises to $71 in peak. Long-term rental (a month or more) is 30–40% cheaper per day; super-peak (25 December – 25 January) is the most expensive — book 1–2 months ahead.

When is the best time to book a car in Thailand?

For arrivals in November–February, book 1–2 months ahead. For super-peak (25.12–25.01) even earlier — by 20 December there are typically no free cars left even at the larger partners. May–October you can book closer to the date, and prices are 30–40% lower.

How much is the deposit?

$85–145 depending on the partner and the car class. Accepted in baht or US dollars in cash, or as a hold on an international card. With Full Coverage Insurance most partners waive the deposit entirely.

What documents do I need to rent a car?

Passport, your national driving licence in Latin script (any standard EU licence works), and a card or cash for the deposit. We also recommend bringing an International Driving Permit, even though our partners don't strictly require one.

Do I need an International Driving Permit?

Our partners hand the car over against your home-country licence as long as it's in Latin script — most European licences are. For peace of mind on the road we recommend the IDP — it's cheap and quick to obtain in any EU country, and it removes any doubt at a traffic stop.

Can I rent without a credit card?

Yes. Our partners accept both credit and debit international cards, and most also accept cash for the deposit. That's a key difference from the big international chains, which usually only work with credit cards.

What insurance is included in the price?

Compulsory Third-Party Liability is always included by Thai law — civil liability with minimum medical cover. Full Coverage Insurance (Super CDW) is optional — $3–17 a day. With it, the client pays zero in case of an accident, including third-party damage.

What do I do after a road accident?

Don't move the car. Call the police (191) and the rental partner — all our partners run a 24/7 hotline. Wait for the police and the insurance representatives of both sides, photograph everything. With Full Coverage the rental company handles the financial side.

Which side of the road do they drive on in Thailand?

The left — like in the UK, Japan, and Australia. The wheel is on the right. It takes 1–2 days to adjust. For the first drives, pick quieter areas and avoid Bangkok rush hour. Experienced drivers usually adapt within a single evening.

Is there a mileage limit?

With most of our partners in Thailand mileage is unlimited, especially at airports and on long-term hires. That's convenient for a road trip — you can drive half the country and not count kilometres. Only a few budget local tariffs come with a 200 km daily cap.

Can I drop the car off in another city?

Yes, with a delivery fee. Inside the same city (e.g., Bangkok airport to a Bangkok hotel) it's usually free or $5–15. Between cities is more expensive: Bangkok → Phuket is around $285. Most clients drop off at the same point where they picked up.

Can I drive into Laos, Cambodia, or Malaysia?

No. Crossing an international border is forbidden under the contract with all our partners in Thailand. If your route includes another Southeast Asian country, drop the car at the border and arrange a new rental on the other side.

Can I take the car on the ferry to Samui or Pha Ngan?

Partner contracts forbid taking the rental car on the ferry — it's a technical restriction in the insurance. It's easier to rent a separate car on the island: on Samui we have 21 models in the fleet, with delivery from USM airport included.

How much is petrol in Thailand?

Around $1.5 per litre of 95 octane (~50–55 baht per litre). Diesel is about $0.10 cheaper. PTT, Bangchak, Shell, and Esso are everywhere — staff serve you at the pump, card and cash both work. Most partners hand the car over with a full tank and ask for it back the same way.

Is it safe for tourists to drive in Thailand?

Yes, with reasonable care. The main adjustments are left-hand traffic, the dense motorbike flow, and short, intense rainstorms. Cars are far safer than motorbikes. Drive defensively for the first day, avoid speeding at night outside the tourist areas, and you'll be fine.

Got questions?

Feel free to ask and we'll reply within 2 hours.

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