Realistic 2026 monthly costs for expats, DTV holders, digital nomads and retirees on Thailand’s laid-back Krabi-province island — in Thai baht and US dollars. The three spending tiers as actual figures, rent by area, the low-season shutdown nobody plans around, scooter-first transport, and a full category-by-category breakdown so you can build a real number, not a guess. Unbiased, never paid placement — and every figure is a planning range, not a promise.
This page is the numbers for Koh Lanta. For its mainland province, see the Krabi budget tables; for the bigger, busier islands, the Koh Samui and Phuket tables; and for the how to think about it — the levers behind each cost and the move-in cash nobody warns you about — read the general cost of living guide. All figures below are 2026 planning ranges at ≈ 35 THB to 1 USD; rents (especially in high season), prices and the exchange rate move, so confirm specifics before relying on them and build your own total with the cost-of-living calculator.
Most foreigners land in one of three brackets. Place yourself honestly — aspiration is where budgets break. Figures are an all-in monthly total for a single person (the premium tier assumes a family with a pool villa and a car).
| Lifestyle tier | Per month (THB) | Per month (USD) |
|---|---|---|
| Lean / local — modest studio or bungalow inland or Old Town, mostly Thai food, a scooter | 28,000–45,000 | $800–1,290 |
| Comfortable / mid expat or nomad — nice 1-bed near a beach, local + Western dining, scooter, good insurance | 45,000–85,000 | $1,290–2,430 |
| Premium / family — private-pool villa, car, Western dining (schooling often off-island) | 110,000–280,000+ | $3,140–8,000+ |
Rent is the main lever between tiers; on Koh Lanta the season is the wildcard — the same villa can cost far less on a long low-season lease than at the December peak.
Rent is the largest line for most expats and the one you control most. Koh Lanta runs north (busy, convenient Saladan) to south (remote, scenic, pricier), with the popular nomad and expat strip along the west-coast beaches. Monthly rent for a typical furnished unit:
| Area | Studio / 1-bed | Small pool villa (2–3 bed) |
|---|---|---|
| Saladan (north — main town, ferry pier, services) | ฿8–18k | ฿28–55k |
| Long Beach / Phra Ae (expat & nomad hub, restaurants) | ฿8–20k | ฿30–60k |
| Klong Khong (laid-back, budget bungalows) | ฿6–14k | ฿22–45k |
| Klong Nin (quiet, mid-island, good beach) | ฿7–16k | ฿25–50k |
| Kantiang Bay (south, upscale, remote) | ฿10–22k | ฿35–80k |
| Old Town / east coast / inland (local, cheapest) | ฿5–12k | ฿20–40k |
High season (roughly Nov–Apr) asking rents rise and availability tightens; low-season leases (May–Oct) are far cheaper, and 6–12-month terms beat monthly stays. Compare neighbourhoods with the area comparison tool and the neighborhood finder.
Koh Lanta has no mass transit and only limited, tourist-priced taxis and songthaews, so your own scooter is the practical default rather than a luxury. The island is small enough that a scooter reaches everything. Typical monthly transport spend:
| Option | Per month (THB) | ≈ USD |
|---|---|---|
| Scooter rental + fuel | 2,500–4,000 | $71–114 |
| Owned scooter (fuel, service, insurance) | 800–1,800 | $23–51 |
| Car rental + fuel + insurance | 12,000–22,000 | $340–630 |
| Taxis / songthaew (limited, if car-free) | 3,000–8,000 | $85–230 |
Always wear a helmet and carry proper insurance — scooter accidents are the leading cause of expat injury on the islands, and remote stretches of Lanta’s coast road are quiet and unlit at night.
What the “comfortable” tier looks like line by line: a nice one-bedroom within reach of a beach, a mix of local and Western life, a scooter. Adjust each line to model your own tier.
| Category | Per month (THB) | ≈ USD |
|---|---|---|
| Rent — nice 1-bed near a beach | 12,000–22,000 | $340–630 |
| Electricity (with AC) | 1,500–4,500 | $43–129 |
| Water | 150–400 | $4–11 |
| Internet (fibre, ~300–500 Mbps in main areas) | 600–900 | $17–26 |
| Mobile plan | 300–700 | $9–20 |
| Food (local + some Western; modest island premium on imports) | 11,000–22,000 | $310–630 |
| Transport (scooter) | 2,500–4,000 | $71–114 |
| Health insurance (healthy, 30s–40s) | 3,000–9,000 | $85–255 |
| Gym / fitness / muay thai | 1,200–3,500 | $34–100 |
| Entertainment & misc | 4,000–12,000 | $114–340 |
Watch the electricity line: many bungalows and villas bill at a marked-up rate rather than the government tariff, and AC runs hard in the island climate — ask before you sign. Detail in utility bills and health insurance.
Your first month is far more expensive than a steady-state month. The Thai norm of two months’ deposit plus one month’s advance means you need about three months’ rent in hand before you move in. On a 16,000 THB/month lease:
| Upfront item | Amount (THB) | ≈ USD |
|---|---|---|
| Security deposit (2 months) | 32,000 | $910 |
| Advance rent (1 month) | 16,000 | $460 |
| Agent commission (normally landlord-paid) | 0 | $0 |
| Internet, utility deposit & setup | 4,000–12,000 | $114–340 |
| Day-one total | 52,000–60,000 | $1,490–1,710 |
Build a separate “landing fund” for this — on top of flights and shipping. The deposit rules (and the consumer-protection cap for landlords renting five or more units) are in the renting guide.
For families this is frequently the largest cost of all — but Koh Lanta has very few international-school options, so many families with school-age children either choose a smaller local-international school on the island or base themselves near Krabi town or Phuket for a fuller curriculum. Where on-island or nearby options exist, annual tuition per child varies widely (plus one-off enrolment levies):
| School tier | Annual tuition (THB) | ≈ USD |
|---|---|---|
| Local-international / bilingual (limited on island) | 120,000–300,000 | $3,400–8,600 |
| Established international (usually Krabi / off-island) | 350,000–650,000 | $10,000–18,600 |
| Top-tier British / IB (Phuket or Bangkok) | 750,000–1,000,000+ | $21,400–28,600+ |
If you have children, price and locate schooling first — on Lanta the constraint is availability as much as fees, and it may decide whether the island works for your family at all. See the international schools guide.
Two things make Lanta’s budget behave differently from the mainland. First, the low season (roughly May to October): the island genuinely quietens, a share of restaurants, bars and shops close, and rents soften sharply — brilliant for a budget long-stay, but plan for fewer services and weather. Second, a modest island premium: supermarket groceries, imported and Western products and building materials arrive via Krabi and a short ferry or bridge crossing, so those specific items run a notch above the mainland, while local food, markets and Thai services stay cheap. Add limited on-island healthcare and few international schools, and the pattern is clear — live local and lean into the slower rhythm and Lanta is one of Thailand’s best-value islands; rely on imports, off-island schooling and frequent mainland trips and the costs creep up.
Treat every figure here as a planning range, then make it concrete: pick your tier from section 01, choose an area from section 02, decide scooter vs car in section 03, and adjust the category lines in section 04 to match how you actually live. The cost-of-living calculator turns those choices into a single monthly total that stays current with the exchange rate, the area comparison shows where the same baht buys the best life, and the Krabi and Koh Samui tables let you weigh quiet-island life against the alternatives. Get the rent-and-season decision right and the rest of the budget tends to fall into place.
Pick your tier and area, then build a real, current monthly total in seconds.
General information only — not financial advice. All figures are 2026 planning estimates at ≈ 35 THB to 1 USD and vary widely by choice, season and provider; rents, prices, insurance, school fees and the exchange rate change over time. Confirm current costs directly with landlords, providers, insurers, schools and official Thai government sources before relying on anything here. BAANLYY never takes paid placement.