The foreigner's walkthrough: which banks actually open accounts for expats and retirees, exactly what documents each visa type needs, the branches that make it easy, plus digital banking, PromptPay and the real fees. Current for 2026.
A local bank account is the backbone of daily life in Hua Hin — it's how you pay rent, settle bills through PromptPay QR, receive transfers and meet the financial requirements of long-stay and retirement visas. Opening one is usually straightforward if you hold a long-stay visa (retirement, LTR, DTV, Non-B with a work permit or marriage); it's harder, but often still possible, on a tourist visa. Because Hua Hin is a retiree town, its bank branches are unusually comfortable with foreign customers. The two things that decide your day at the branch are your visa type and your proof of a Thai address. Bangkok Bank is the most reliable starting point, with Kasikornbank and SCB favoured for their apps. Below: the banks, the exact documents by visa, fees, and how to get approved first time.
All of Thailand's major banks operate across Hua Hin, Khao Takiab and Cha-Am, but they differ in how readily they open accounts for foreigners and in the quality of their mobile apps. A common setup is Bangkok Bank as the main account plus KBank or SCB for the app and spending.
| Bank | Why expats use it | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Bangkok Bank (BBL) | Most widely recommended for foreigners; largest branch network and the smoothest for retirement and long-stay visas. Strong English service and a US/international presence, and the bank most Hua Hin retirees use for their main account. | Retirees, first accounts, overseas transfers |
| Kasikornbank (KBank) | Excellent K PLUS mobile app, popular with younger expats and digital nomads. Some branches are foreigner-friendly, others stricter — the BluPort and Market Village branches are used to expats. | Digital banking, day-to-day spending |
| Siam Commercial Bank (SCB) | Big network, polished SCB EASY app and good card products. Requirements can vary by branch; the mall branches in Hua Hin handle foreigners regularly. | Salary accounts, cards, app users |
| Krungsri (Bank of Ayudhya) | MUFG-owned, often flexible on documentation and comfortable with foreign customers. Solid app and good for those who found other banks strict. | A strong backup if you're declined elsewhere |
| Krungthai Bank (KTB) | State-owned; used for many government, tax and utility links (and some visa-related payments). Useful as a second account rather than a first choice. | Government/utility payments |
Bring originals, not copies (the branch will copy what it needs). The item most people are missing is a proof of Thai address — sort that first.
| Document | Detail | Who needs it |
|---|---|---|
| Passport | Always required — original plus the photo and visa/stamp pages. Must be valid well beyond account opening. | Every applicant |
| Visa / entry stamp | Your current visa or entry stamp in the passport. Long-stay visas (retirement, DTV, LTR, Non-B, marriage) make approval far easier than a tourist stamp. | Every applicant |
| Proof of address in Thailand | Condo lease, a letter from your landlord/condo, or a Residence Certificate from Hua Hin Immigration or your embassy. This is the document most often missing. | Most branches |
| Certificate of Residence | Issued by Hua Hin Immigration or your embassy; the single most useful document for a tourist-visa holder or new arrival. Often takes a few days to obtain. | Tourist visa / no long-stay visa |
| Work permit | If employed in Thailand, a work permit dramatically simplifies opening an account (often no residence certificate needed). | Non-B / employed |
| TM.30 / address registration | Some branches ask for the TM.30 receipt showing your address was reported to Immigration by your landlord. | Some branches |
| Thai phone number | A local SIM/number is effectively required to register mobile banking and receive OTPs. Buy one before you go to the branch. | Every applicant |
| Opening deposit | Usually THB 500–2,000 in cash to fund the account and card. | Every applicant |
Your visa is the single biggest factor in how easy the account is to open. Long-stay and retirement visas are routine here; tourist visas require extra paperwork and a foreigner-friendly branch. “Difficulty” is a rough guide to how much documentation and branch-shopping to expect.
| Visa type | What to bring & expect | Difficulty |
|---|---|---|
| Retirement (O / O-A / O-X) | Easiest category, and Hua Hin's most common expat visa — local banks are very used to retirees. Bring passport, visa, and proof of address (lease or residence certificate). Widely accepted at Bangkok Bank and most branches. | Low |
| LTR (Long-Term Resident) | Very smooth — the LTR is designed to ease banking and even allows a digital onboarding path with some banks. Bring your LTR visa and BOI documentation. | Low |
| DTV (Destination Thailand Visa) | Generally workable as a long-stay visa, but treated case-by-case. Bring passport, DTV visa, a Thai address proof and ideally a residence certificate; some branches are stricter than others. | Low–Medium |
| Non-B / work permit | Straightforward when you present a work permit and often an employer letter; frequently the fastest approval. | Low |
| Marriage (O) / Thai family | Usually easy with the marriage certificate, spouse's ID/house book (tabien baan) and address proof. | Low |
| Education (ED) | Possible with a school enrolment letter plus the usual documents; varies by branch. | Medium |
| Tourist visa / visa exemption | Hardest. Many branches decline; those that accept will require a Certificate of Residence (from Immigration or your embassy) and sometimes an agent. Bangkok Bank branches in Hua Hin are the usual route. | High |
New to Thai visas? See the BAANLYY Visa Knowledge Center and the Hua Hin visa & long-stay housing guide to match a visa to your situation first.
Branch choice matters as much as bank choice — a foreigner-friendly branch can approve you in an hour while a stricter one across the road may decline. The mall branches are the most practiced with expats: Bangkok Bank, KBank and SCB all have counters inside BluPort and Market Village on Petchkasem Road, and there are large branches throughout the town centre, Khao Takiab and Cha-Am. For a Certificate of Residence, visit Hua Hin Immigration on Petchkasem Road or apply through your embassy. Go on a weekday morning, dress tidily, and bring more documentation than you think you need.
Thailand is largely cashless, run on bank apps and QR codes rather than cards. Once your account is open, register the mobile app on the spot — Bangkok Bank's Bualuang, KBank's K PLUS, or SCB EASY — using a Thai phone number for OTPs. Then link PromptPay to your phone or passport number: it's the free, instant system everyone uses to pay rent, split bills and buy from market stalls by scanning a QR. A Thai SIM is effectively a prerequisite, so buy one (AIS, TrueMove or dtac) before your branch visit. Expect a per-transfer and daily limit you can raise in the app.
Thai retail banking is cheap. Standard savings accounts rarely carry monthly fees; the costs you'll actually notice are card issue/annual fees and out-of-network or foreign-card ATM charges. Figures are typical 2026 ranges in THB.
| Item | Typical cost |
|---|---|
| Account opening + debit card issue | THB 100–300 card fee + THB 500–2,000 opening deposit |
| Annual debit card fee | THB 200–600 depending on card tier |
| ATM withdrawal, own bank same province | Free |
| ATM withdrawal, other bank / out of province | THB 10–20 per withdrawal |
| Foreign-card ATM withdrawal fee (if using an overseas card) | THB 220 per withdrawal |
| Domestic transfer via PromptPay / app | Free up to typical limits |
| Inward international transfer | Roughly THB 200–500 + FX spread |
| Monthly account maintenance | Usually none for standard savings accounts |
Yes. Foreigners open Thai bank accounts in Hua Hin every day, and it is easiest if you hold a long-stay visa — retirement, LTR, DTV, Non-B with a work permit, or marriage. Hua Hin's large retiree community means the banks here are especially practiced with retirement-visa customers. With a tourist visa or visa exemption it is still possible but harder: many branches will ask for a Certificate of Residence from Hua Hin Immigration or your embassy, and some will decline. Bangkok Bank branches in Hua Hin are the most reliable route for newcomers.
Bangkok Bank is the most consistently recommended for foreigners because of its large branch network, English service and comfort with retirement and long-stay visas — it's the usual first account for Hua Hin retirees. Kasikornbank (KBank) and SCB have the best mobile apps for day-to-day life, and Krungsri (Bank of Ayudhya) is a good backup if another bank declines you. Many expats end up with Bangkok Bank as their main account and KBank or SCB for spending and the app.
At minimum: your passport (with visa/entry stamp), proof of a Thai address (a condo lease, landlord letter, or Certificate of Residence), a local Thai phone number for mobile banking OTPs, and a small cash opening deposit of about THB 500–2,000. Long-stay and retirement visa holders may need little more than that; tourist-visa holders usually also need a Certificate of Residence from Immigration or their embassy, and sometimes the TM.30 address registration.
Yes, and it is the smoothest case here. A retirement visa (O, O-A or O-X) is Hua Hin's most common expat visa, so local branches — especially Bangkok Bank — handle it routinely. Bring your passport, the retirement visa, and proof of a Thai address (your condo lease or a Certificate of Residence). Many retirees also need a Thai account to meet the visa's financial requirement, so opening one early and keeping the required balance seasoned is part of the annual extension routine.
PromptPay is Thailand's free instant transfer system that links your bank account to your phone number or Thai ID/passport number. It's how almost everyone pays rent, splits bills and shops at markets by scanning a QR code. Once your account and mobile app are set up, registering for PromptPay takes a minute in the app and is highly recommended — it makes everyday money in Hua Hin effectively cashless and fee-free.
If you have a long-stay or retirement visa and all documents ready, the account and debit card are usually issued the same day in about 30–60 minutes at the branch. The delay for newcomers is almost always getting the supporting paperwork first — a Certificate of Residence from Hua Hin Immigration can take a few days, so sort your address proof and a Thai SIM before you visit the bank.
Line up your visa and bank, then match the right Hua Hin area and condo before you sign a lease.
General information, not legal, tax, immigration or financial advice. Bank policies and document requirements vary by branch and change often — confirm current details directly with the bank and with Immigration or your embassy.
Hero photo by Qing Luo on Pexels.