📅 Mis à jour le April 8, 2026

TL;DR

Airalo (AIS network) — best overall for Thailand, strong everywhere including rural north
✅ Holafly unlimited — good option if you stay in Bangkok/Chiang Mai and use heavy data
⚠️ Avoid GigSky — 3x more expensive than Airalo for identical AIS network access

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Which eSIM Actually Works Outside Bangkok?

Let me tell you about the time I drove a rented Honda PCX from Chiang Mai to a remote Akha hill tribe village near Chiang Rai. Spectacular scenery, genuinely off-the-map stuff. I needed Google Maps the entire way and had to send location pins to the guide meeting me there.

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My friend on Holafly had intermittent signal for the last 30km. I had consistent 14 Mbps on Airalo’s AIS network the whole way. Chiang Rai is one of the least-served provinces in northern Thailand — it’s the real test for any eSIM provider.


Thailand eSIM Provider Comparison 2025

Provider Network Bangkok Chiang Mai Chiang Rai Price (5GB/30d)
Airalo AIS 52 Mbps 44 Mbps 23 Mbps $13
Holafly AIS 48 Mbps 39 Mbps 12 Mbps $39 (unlimited)
Nomad TrueMove H 41 Mbps 35 Mbps 18 Mbps $15
GigSky AIS 50 Mbps 42 Mbps 21 Mbps $39 per 1GB

GigSky numbers look fine until you see the price. $39 for 1GB is obscene when Airalo charges $13 for 5GB. Avoid completely.


Airalo Thailand Plans and Pricing

Airalo offers multiple operators in Thailand. I recommend the AIS option — it has the best rural coverage:

  • 1GB / 7 days: $4.50
  • 3GB / 30 days: $9
  • 5GB / 30 days: $13
  • 10GB / 30 days: $22
  • 20GB / 30 days: $38

For most digital nomads working from cafés with WiFi, the 5GB / 30-day plan at $13 is the sweet spot. I use 4-6GB/month in Thailand even with significant use, because I’m on café WiFi for most of the working day.


Real Speed Tests Across Thailand

Bangkok (Silom/Sathorn): 52 Mbps down / 21 Mbps up — excellent for Zoom calls and file uploads

Chiang Mai (Nimman area): 44 Mbps down / 17 Mbps up — solid, one of the better digital nomad spots in SEA for connectivity

Chiang Rai (city centre): 23 Mbps down / 8 Mbps up — very usable, no issues with video calls

Pai (mountain town, 3 hours from Chiang Mai): 14 Mbps down / 4 Mbps up — adequate for messaging and navigation, not great for video uploads

Koh Tao: 19 Mbps down / 6 Mbps up — standard island speeds, fine for basic use

Koh Lanta: 22 Mbps down / 7 Mbps up — better than expected for a smaller island For more information, check our guide on eSIM Data Plan Sizes: 1GB vs 3GB vs 5GB vs 10GB.


When to Choose Holafly Instead

If you are planning 30 days in Bangkok or Chiang Mai and you know you will be streaming Netflix every evening, Holafly’s unlimited plan at $39 makes sense.

The breakeven: if you would use more than roughly 17GB in 30 days, Holafly unlimited ($39) becomes cheaper than Airalo’s 20GB plan ($38). For heavy users, the price is essentially the same and Holafly offers unlimited peace of mind.

Remember the throttling though — after about 2GB of heavy use in a day, Holafly drops to 5-8 Mbps. Fine for Netflix at 720p, but worth knowing before you commit.


Pro Tips for Thailand eSIM

Install before landing. Suvarnabhumi Airport has free WiFi but it’s congested and slow. Install your eSIM at your departure airport or at home.

Use AIS, not TrueMove H in the north. AIS has better rural coverage in northern Thailand. Both networks perform similarly in Bangkok and Chiang Mai, but AIS pulls ahead in provinces like Chiang Rai, Mae Hong Son and Nan.

Top up from the Airalo app. Do not try to find a local AIS shop to top up an eSIM — it is complicated. Just buy a new plan in the Airalo app.

Keep your home SIM active. Some two-factor authentication services do not recognise Thai carrier numbers. Keep your home SIM in your second slot for SMS verification.

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[IMAGE: thailand-nomad-cafe-esim — Wooden café table in Chiang Mai with laptop and coffee, phone showing signal bars, no people, morning light filtering through bamboo blinds]

James Whitfield
A propos de l'auteur

James Whitfield

Travel Tech Journalist & Digital Nomad

James Whitfield is a travel tech journalist with 8 years of experience covering mobile connectivity abroad. A former editor at TechRadar's travel section, he has tested over 40 eSIM providers across 60+ countries. He shares honest reviews on best-esim-travel.com.

201 articles publiésVoir le profil →
James Whitfield

James Whitfield

Travel tech journalist and digital nomad

5 years testing eSIM providers across Southeast Asia. Real speed tests, real coverage maps.

400+ articles