The numbers to save before you ever need them — police, ambulance, fire and the English-speaking Tourist Police — plus where to go for Trang's emergency care, and exactly what to do in a medical emergency, a road accident or a lost passport.
Thailand doesn't use a single all-purpose emergency number, so put these in your phone today: 191 for police, 1669 for a medical emergency or ambulance, and 199 for fire and rescue. If your Thai is limited, the number that matters most is 1155, the Tourist Police, staffed 24/7 with English-speaking operators who can then bring in whatever service you need. Trang is genuinely well covered for a secondary provincial city: Trang Hospital runs 24-hour public emergency care, and two established private hospitals, Wattanapat Hospital Trang and Thonburi Trang Hospital, add faster, more English-friendly options. Pair this with the Trang healthcare guide for hospital detail and the Trang safety guide for the fuller local risk picture.
The core lines are toll-free and answered around the clock. When in doubt as a foreigner, start with the Tourist Police (1155) — they will coordinate the rest.
| Service | Number | When to use it |
|---|---|---|
| Police (general emergency) | 191 | The universal police line for any crime or emergency. Operators may have limited English — for foreigners, 1155 is often the better first call. |
| Medical emergency / ambulance | 1669 | The national emergency medical hotline (24hr, free). Dispatches the nearest ambulance — Trang Hospital's 24-hour emergency department is the reliable public option in the city. State your location clearly, or have a Thai speaker help. |
| Tourist Police (English-speaking) | 1155 | The single most useful number for foreigners in Trang. Round-the-clock English (and other languages) — use it for theft, a road accident or being scammed. |
| Fire & rescue | 199 | Fire, rescue and hazardous incidents nationwide. |
| Tourist assistance / TAT | 1672 | The Tourism Authority of Thailand call centre — general help, directions and guidance (not for life-threatening emergencies). |
| Highway / traffic police | 1193 | For accidents and incidents on the highways linking Trang town, Trang Airport and the coast. |
| Immigration Bureau hotline | 1178 | For visa, overstay and immigration questions (not emergencies). |
Trang Hospital, the province's main public regional hospital, is open 24 hours a day with an emergency department alongside its pharmacy and full outpatient services — the most dependable round-the-clock option in the city. Wattanapat Hospital Trang and Thonburi Trang Hospital, the two established private hospitals in town, both run their own emergency services with typically faster response and more consistently English-speaking staff, at a higher price point than the public system. For hospital-by-hospital detail and costs, see the Trang healthcare guide.
For a life-threatening situation, call 1669 for an ambulance and state your exact location — a hotel name, a nearby landmark or a Google Maps pin helps enormously. If you can't get through in English, ask a Thai speaker nearby, or your accommodation's front desk, to call for you. Carry your passport and insurance card, and if you have travel or health insurance, phone their 24-hour assistance line early — many will guarantee payment directly to the hospital so you avoid a large upfront deposit. Wattanapat Hospital Trang or Thonburi Trang Hospital are the faster private options if the situation allows you to choose.
For any crime, accident or dispute, the Tourist Police on 1155 is your English-speaking first call; for a general police response, dial 191. Road accidents involving motorbikes are a real risk anywhere in provincial Thailand. After an accident, get anyone injured help first (1669), then wait for police before moving vehicles — photograph the vehicles, positions, damage, plates and the other party's details, and never admit fault on the spot. For theft or a scam, file a police report; you'll need it for any insurance or replacement claim. See the Trang safety guide for the fuller local picture.
Work through it in order. One: file a police report — visit a local station or call the Tourist Police (1155); you'll need the report for both a replacement and immigration. Two: contact your embassy to apply for an emergency travel document or a new passport — most foreign missions are in Bangkok, since Trang has no consulate of its own. Three: because your passport carries your visa and entry stamp, report to Trang's provincial immigration office so your visa details are transferred to the new document before you travel. Keep a photo or photocopy of your passport photo page and visa stamp stored separately — do this before anything goes wrong.
As everywhere in Thailand, there isn't one single emergency number — save these three: 191 for police, 1669 for a medical emergency or ambulance, and 199 for fire and rescue. As a foreigner, call 1155, the Tourist Police, first if you're unsure — it's staffed around the clock with English-speaking operators who will coordinate the right service for you.
Dial 1669, the national emergency medical hotline — it's free, operates 24 hours and dispatches the nearest ambulance. Trang Hospital, the province's main public regional hospital, runs a 24-hour emergency department and is the reliable dispatch point for the city. State your location as clearly as possible — a hotel name, a landmark or a Google Maps pin.
Yes. The Tourist Police hotline, 1155, is specifically set up for foreign visitors and residents, with English-speaking operators available 24/7. It's the best single number to save if your Thai is limited — they handle theft, accidents and general trouble, and will loop in the regular police, ambulance or fire service as needed.
Trang Hospital, the province's main public regional hospital, is open 24 hours with an emergency department and is the most dependable round-the-clock option in the city. For private care with typically faster service and more consistently English-speaking staff, Wattanapat Hospital Trang and Thonburi Trang Hospital are the two established private hospitals in town, both running their own emergency services. See the full Trang healthcare guide for hospital-by-hospital detail.
First, file a police report — visit a local police station or call the Tourist Police on 1155; you'll need the report for both a replacement and immigration. Then contact your embassy (routed through Bangkok, since Trang has no consulate of its own) to apply for an emergency travel document or a new passport. Finally, report to Trang's provincial immigration office so your visa details are transferred to the new document before you travel.
This guide is general information for relocation planning, not medical, safety or legal advice. Phone numbers and hospital details change — confirm current contacts with local authorities, your embassy and the Tourist Police, and in any emergency call the official lines above.
Primary and official sources are cited above. Government rules, fees and procedures in Thailand change over time and vary by office; always confirm current requirements with the relevant authority before relying on them. BAANLYY never takes paid placement in editorial content.
Emergency numbers saved — now sort your hospital and insurance, understand the areas, and match a home to your budget.
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