← Nakhon RatchasimaKorat · Maids & domestic helpers

Hiring a maid, cleaner & domestic helper in Korat.

Where to find a cleaner, housekeeper or nanny, what each costs, live-in versus live-out, the work-permit rules that matter, and how to vet before you hire. Rates are 2026 guide ranges in Thai baht (≈ THB 35–36 = USD 1).

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By Kirby Scofield
Founder of BAANLYY · International real estate broker, investor & relocation specialist
Last updated 9 July 2026 · Last reviewed 9 July 2026
Overview

The short version

Household help is affordable in Korat, Thailand's largest province by area and a major logistics and manufacturing hub whose foreign community leans toward SUT-linked international-school families and industrial-estate professionals rather than retirees or tourists. Domestic help here is almost entirely Thai staff hired directly or through word-of-mouth -- on-demand cleaning apps have partial coverage around Central Plaza and the city centre but thin out toward the industrial estates and outer suburbs. You can bring in a weekly maid or hire a full-time live-in housekeeper or nanny for a fraction of what it would cost back home -- the trade-off is choosing the right channel and vetting carefully, especially for anyone living in or minding children. Below: where to find help, what it costs, what's usually included, live-in versus live-out, the visa and work-permit rules to know, and how to vet. For dedicated childcare, pair this with the Korat childcare & nurseries guide.

01

Where to find a maid or cleaner

Korat-specific routes worth knowing, alongside the standard options every expat should check.

RouteBest forHow it works
Direct hire & personal referralBest local starting pointKorat's foreign community skews toward international-school families around Suranaree University of Technology (SUT) and industrial-estate professionals posted to the city's manufacturing and logistics sector, so most expats hire through a school parent network, employer HR contact or a landlord referral rather than an app.
International-school parent networksNannies & regular helpParents at Anglo Singapore International School, Wesley International School and Korat Adventist International School (KAIS) commonly swap trusted nanny and cleaner contacts directly.
Cleaning apps / platformsPatchy coverage outside the centreOn-demand cleaning apps common in Bangkok have partial coverage around Central Plaza and the city centre but thin out quickly toward the industrial estates and outer suburbs -- confirm current availability for your address.
Domestic-staff agenciesLive-in maids, housekeepers & nanniesA smaller field of agencies than Bangkok screens and places full-time or live-in staff, usually for a placement fee of roughly half to one month's salary -- worth it for busy professional or industrial-estate households.
Condo & building referralsCheap part-time cleaningCondo towers around Mukmontri/The Mall, Terminal 21 and Central Plaza often already have a cleaner servicing several units -- ask the juristic office or fellow residents for an introduction.
Expat groups & classifiedsDirect hire, lowest costKorat expat Facebook and LINE groups, including those tied to the industrial estates, carry maids advertising directly or recommended by departing expats -- cheapest, but you handle the vetting yourself.
02

What it costs

Indicative rates for 2026, generally a touch below Bangkok and the beach resort markets.

Type of helpRate (guide)
One-off deep clean (per visit)THB 1,200–3,200
Weekly live-out maid (once a week, ~4 hrs)THB 1,800–4,200 / month
Daily live-out maid (full-time, ~6 days)THB 9,500–15,500 / month
Live-in maid / housekeeperTHB 9,500–17,000 / month + room & board
English-speaking or cook/childcare live-inTHB 13,500–21,000+ / month
Nanny-housekeeper (phi liang)THB 13,500–26,000 / month

Live-in salaries assume you provide a maid's room, meals and utilities. Expect to pay more for English fluency, cooking or a driving licence, and budget for an agency placement fee (often half to one month's salary) plus a customary year-end bonus for long-term staff.

03

What's included — and what to agree upfront

Standard cleaning duties are similar everywhere; the disputes come from unspoken assumptions. Settle scope, hours and add-ons before day one.

CategoryWhat it covers
Usually includedGeneral cleaning, mopping and dusting, laundry and ironing, washing up, making beds, tidying and taking out rubbish.
Common add-ons (agree upfront)Cooking and meal prep, grocery shopping, childcare or elderly care, pet care, plant watering, and running small errands.
Clarify before you startScope, hours and days, whether cleaning products and equipment are provided, overtime, and what happens on public holidays and when you travel.
04

Live-in vs live-out

Live-in help is available across the day, usually at a lower effective hourly cost, in exchange for lodging, meals and less household privacy -- it suits larger homes and families needing childcare. Live-out help commutes in for set hours or days, protects your privacy and is simpler to end, but costs more per hour. Live-in help is comparatively rarer in Korat than in the beach and Bangkok markets -- most households here use a part-time or daily live-out cleaner instead. If housing for live-in staff matters to you, factor it into your home search around Mukmontri/The Mall, Terminal 21 or the SUT corridor.

05

Visas, work permits & the law

Most domestic helpers in Korat are Thai nationals, who need no special paperwork from you. Migrant workers must hold valid work documents, and a foreign (non-Thai) helper legally requires a proper work permit and matching visa; employing an undocumented foreign worker is illegal and carries real risk for both sides. Thailand also gives domestic workers baseline rights -- a weekly day off, public holidays, paid annual leave and a minimum working age -- which you should treat as the floor. Rules and enforcement change, so use a reputable agency for any foreign or migrant staff and confirm current requirements before hiring. This is general information for relocation planning, not legal advice.

06

How to vet — and red flags

A little diligence prevents almost every bad hire, especially for live-in and childcare roles. The essentials:

StepWhy it matters
Check referencesAsk for one or two previous employers and actually call them -- a helper with no contactable references is the single biggest red flag for a live-in or full-time role.
Verify IDSee a Thai ID card or, for migrant workers, a passport and valid work documents. Reluctance to show ID is a warning sign.
Run a paid trialDo a paid trial day or a one-to-two-week probation before committing to a live-in arrangement.
Agree scope & pay in writingPut duties, hours, salary, day off, holidays and any bonus in a simple written agreement (even a LINE message).
Prefer vetted channels for live-inFor a live-in maid or nanny, an agency that does background checks -- or a strong referral through an international-school or employer network -- is worth more than an anonymous classified ad.

Treat no contactable references, cash-only demands, reluctance to show ID, and over-promised English as warning signs. For a live-in maid or nanny, a paid trial period and a background-checking agency (or a strong school/employer-network referral) are worth far more than the lowest advertised rate.

FAQ

Korat domestic-help questions

How much does a maid or housekeeper cost in Nakhon Ratchasima (Korat)?

It depends on hours and whether they live in. A one-off deep clean runs about THB 1,200–3,200. A weekly live-out maid is roughly THB 1,800–4,200 a month; a full-time daily live-out maid THB 9,500–15,500; and a live-in maid or housekeeper about THB 9,500–17,000 a month plus room and board. English-speaking staff or those who also cook or mind children command THB 13,500–21,000+, and a dedicated nanny-housekeeper (phi liang) THB 13,500–26,000. These are 2026 guide ranges (≈ THB 35–36 = USD 1) — confirm current rates locally.

Where do I find a reliable maid or cleaner in Korat?

Korat's foreign community skews toward SUT-linked international-school families and industrial-estate professionals, so a school parent network, employer HR contact or landlord referral is usually the strongest starting point. On-demand cleaning apps have partial coverage around Central Plaza and the city centre but thin out toward the industrial estates and outer suburbs. Condo towers around Mukmontri/The Mall, Terminal 21 and Central Plaza often already have a cleaner servicing several units, and expat Facebook or LINE groups carry direct listings -- though you handle the vetting yourself.

Do I need to arrange a work permit or visa for my domestic helper?

Thai nationals doing domestic work need nothing special from you. Migrant workers must hold valid work documents, and a foreign (non-Thai) helper legally requires a proper work permit and matching visa; employing an undocumented foreign worker is illegal and risky. Because rules and enforcement change, use a reputable agency for foreign or migrant staff and confirm current requirements before hiring — this guide is general information, not legal advice.

What's the difference between a live-in and a live-out maid?

A live-in maid stays on-site and is available across the day, usually at a lower effective hourly cost, but you provide lodging and food and accept less household privacy. A live-out maid commutes in for set hours or days, gives you more privacy, and costs more per hour. Live-in help is comparatively rarer in Korat than in the beach and Bangkok markets -- most households here use a part-time or daily live-out cleaner instead.

Should I hire through an app, an agency, or directly?

In Korat, direct hire through a school, employer or landlord referral is usually the strongest starting point given patchy app coverage outside the city centre. Agencies are worth the placement fee for full-time and live-in roles where screening, references and a replacement guarantee matter -- particularly useful for busy industrial-estate professional households. Direct hiring through referrals or expat groups is cheapest and gives you the most control, but you handle vetting, pay and any paperwork yourself.

What days off and bonuses is a domestic worker entitled to?

Thailand's rules on domestic workers give live-in and full-time staff basic entitlements such as a weekly day off, public holidays and paid annual leave, and set a minimum working age — treat these as the floor, not the ceiling. Tipping isn't obligatory, but a year-end ('13th-month') bonus of around one month's pay is customary for long-serving live-in helpers.

This guide is general information for relocation planning, not legal, employment or financial advice. Rates, agency fees, work-permit rules and domestic-worker regulations change — confirm current details directly with each agency, platform or a qualified adviser before you hire.

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