Where to study Thai locally, Hat Yai's much larger established scene nearby, how group, private and online lessons compare, how the education (ED) visa really works, plus realistic costs, timelines and practical tips.
Songkhla town, the quieter historic provincial capital rather than the much larger commercial city of Hat Yai within the same province, has a modest local tutor scene rather than a full school infrastructure -- that sits 30-45 minutes away in Hat Yai. Here is where to study locally, when it makes sense to commute or base yourself in Hat Yai instead, how the class formats compare, how the ED visa really works and its cautions, and what to expect on cost and timeline.
Songkhla town itself, the quieter historic provincial capital rather than the much larger commercial city of Hat Yai within the same province, has a modest scene of private tutors serving its smaller foreign community -- confirm any specific tutor's current availability directly, since small-town listings turn over quickly.
Songkhla Rajabhat University (SKRU), one of Southern Thailand's oldest institutions, is a useful source of student tutors and informal conversation partners for expats who prefer a casual, lower-cost arrangement over a formal course.
Hat Yai, within the same province and roughly 30-45 minutes away, is southern Thailand's largest commercial hub and has a considerably larger and more established language-school scene than Songkhla town -- including Prince of Songkla University's own language centre and international schools like AUA Language Center. See our dedicated Hat Yai language schools guide for the specifics.
Online lessons with a Thailand-based teacher are popular for residents of Songkhla town given the smaller local scene -- useful if you don't want to commute to Hat Yai for regular lessons.
Structured group courses in a real classroom are the most affordable way to learn face-to-face and add accountability plus fellow students to practise with. They move at the group's pace rather than yours, and most schools place you into a level so you are not starting from scratch beside intermediate speakers.
Private lessons, in person or online, are the quickest way to improve because everything is tailored to you -- your pronunciation, the vocabulary you actually use, and the speed you can handle. They cost more per hour than group classes, but many learners need fewer total hours to reach the same point.
Video-call lessons with a Thailand-based teacher or a marketplace tutor fit around work, retirement schedules or travel and are typically the best value per hour. They work well for speaking and listening; pair them with a good app or workbook if you also want to read and write.
Apps and courses (spaced-repetition flashcards, structured audio courses and Thai-script readers) are a strong, low-cost supplement between lessons, especially for vocabulary and the tones. Few people reach conversational Thai on apps alone, but they multiply what you get out of every class.
The education (ED) visa lets you stay in Thailand long-term to study, including studying Thai at an accredited language school. A school that is licensed to enrol foreign students handles the paperwork; you then get an initial Non-Immigrant ED visa and extend it in-country, with 90-day reporting like other long-stay visas.
Immigration has repeatedly tightened the ED visa because some schools sold it purely as a stay permit. Expect real attendance requirements, periodic progress or oral checks at immigration, and scrutiny of the school's standing. Treat it as a route for people who genuinely intend to study -- not a loophole.
Songkhla town itself does not have a confirmed, independently verified ED-visa-licensed school -- Hat Yai, home to Prince of Songkla University's language centre and established schools like AUA, is where the province's ED-visa infrastructure actually sits. Confirm a school's current accreditation directly before committing.
The ED visa makes most sense if learning Thai seriously is a real goal and you want a year or more of structured classes anchoring your stay. If study is secondary, a DTV, LTR, retirement or marriage visa is usually the cleaner fit, with Thai lessons taken privately or online alongside it.
As a rough guide, group courses in Thailand often work out around 100-250 THB an hour depending on the school and package, private and online one-on-one lessons commonly run about 300-600 THB an hour, and a full ED-visa study year is a larger bundled commitment once fees are added. Always confirm current pricing directly -- packages and promotions change.
With steady lessons and daily practice, most learners reach useful survival Thai -- markets, taxis, ordering, small talk -- within a few months, and comfortable everyday conversation over roughly one to two years. Thai is tonal, so consistency and speaking practice matter far more than cramming; little and often beats occasional marathons.
Learning the Thai script is optional for speaking but pays off fast: it fixes your pronunciation of the tones, unlocks menus, signs and apps, and makes you far more independent day to day. Many schools teach it as a dedicated module once you have a speaking foundation.
The fastest progress comes from combining lessons with daily use -- practising with neighbours, market vendors, your landlord and local staff turns the whole town into a classroom, and it is the difference between classroom Thai and Thai you can actually use.
Songkhla town has a modest local scene of private tutors, plus student tutors connected to Songkhla Rajabhat University, and the same online lessons available everywhere in Thailand. Hat Yai, roughly 30-45 minutes away, offers a much wider choice of established schools.
We could not independently verify a confirmed ED-visa-licensed school physically in Songkhla town. Hat Yai, within the same province, has the area's established ED-visa infrastructure -- see our Hat Yai language schools guide.
No. You only need an ED visa if you want it to be the basis of your long-stay in Thailand. If you already hold a DTV, LTR, retirement or marriage visa, you can simply pay for group, private or online Thai lessons without any special study visa.
As a rough guide, group classes often run around 100-250 THB per hour and private or online one-on-one lessons around 300-600 THB per hour, while a full ED-visa study year is a larger bundled commitment once school and visa fees are added. Confirm current pricing directly with each school.
With regular lessons and daily practice, most people reach useful survival Thai within a few months and comfortable everyday conversation over roughly one to two years. Thai is tonal, so consistent speaking practice matters far more than intensity -- little and often is the key.
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Hero photo by Thirdman on Pexels. General information only; language-school pricing, courses and visa rules vary and change often -- confirm current details directly with schools and Thai immigration. Prices in Thai baht (THB) and are indicative.