Nurseries, bilingual and Thai kindergartens and daycare for ages 0-5, honest monthly fees in baht and dollars, the best areas for young families, and how enrolment works - a practical guide for expat and relocating families in Isaan, near the Nong Khai border crossing into Laos.
Udon Thani is in Isaan, near the Nong Khai border crossing into Laos. Its childcare choice is smaller than Thailand's biggest cities, but a growing expat and mixed-family community supports a handful of bilingual nurseries and playgroups, alongside plentiful, very affordable Thai kindergartens (anuban) and easy access to trusted nannies. Whether you need full-day daycare for a toddler, a gentle bilingual pre-school, or a nanny for a baby, here's how childcare in Udon Thani works: the types on offer, honest monthly fees, which areas suit families, how to enrol - and what to check before you commit. Udon Thani's Nong Khai border crossing into Laos is a common visa-run route — families travelling with young children should carry birth certificates and, if only one parent is travelling, a notarised parental consent letter.
Udon Thani has a small but growing number of bilingual English-Thai nurseries and pre-schools serving expat, mixed Thai-foreign and professional families. Teaching is split English-Thai with small classes and play-based learning. Choice is narrower than in Bangkok, Phuket or Chiang Mai, so the strongest settings fill quickly — it pays to enquire early and stay flexible on area.
Thai government and private kindergartens (anuban, ages 3-6) are the most common and affordable option in Udon Thani, found in every neighbourhood. Teaching is in Thai with larger classes and a more structured style, but the language and cultural immersion is excellent and the cost is very low. Many long-stay and mixed families use a private Thai anuban for genuine fluency, sometimes pairing it with English at home.
Udon Thani's international and stronger bilingual schools — including UTIS (IB continuum) and ICS (American curriculum) — run their own early-years or kindergarten classes, typically starting around age 2 or 3. Choosing one lets a child settle into the campus and community they'll continue in through primary school, and is the most direct path if a specific curriculum matters to you.
For babies and toddlers, or families who prefer care at home, hiring a Thai nanny (phi liang) or live-out helper is common and affordable in Udon Thani. Many families use a nanny for the first year or two before moving to a nursery for socialisation. Trusted carers are usually found by word of mouth in local expat and parenting groups, or through housekeeping and relocation agencies.
Because formal options are still limited outside the main hubs, Udon Thani's foreign and mixed families lean on informal playgroups, university or workplace family networks, and community groups for socialisation — especially for the under-threes. These complement rather than replace daycare, and are a good way to trade nanny and nursery recommendations while you settle in.
Nong Prajak Park and the surrounding lakefront neighbourhood is Udon Thani's most popular base for expat families — green space, a walkable lake path and the city's best concentration of bilingual nurseries and playgroups, with easy access to both UTIS and ICS.
The downtown core around Prajak Silapakhom Road and the Clock Tower has a strong mix of Thai kindergartens, a handful of bilingual nurseries, malls, hospitals and everyday services within easy reach.
The area around Central Plaza and UD Town mixes condos and housing estates with reasonable access to nurseries and kindergartens nearby, plus the shopping and dining families use day to day.
Further from the centre, childcare is overwhelmingly Thai anuban and home-based nanny care, suiting families who prioritise space and lower rent over walkable bilingual options.
Indicative fees - actual costs vary by setting, hours (half vs full day), and days per week. USD figures are approximate (around ฿36 = $1); always confirm current fees, registration charges and deposits directly with each nursery or school.
| Option | THB | USD (approx) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Thai government kindergarten (anuban) | ฿1,500 - 5,000 / term | $40 - 140 | Very low cost; Thai-language immersion, larger classes |
| Private Thai / bilingual nursery | ฿5,000 - 12,000 / month | $140 - 335 | Some English exposure; full-day care common |
| International / bilingual pre-school | ฿10,000 - 22,000 / month | $280 - 610 | English-medium, small classes; limited options outside the centre |
| International / bilingual early years | ฿90,000 - 250,000 / year | $2,500 - 7,000 | Nursery-Reception on a campus, e.g. UTIS (IB continuum) and ICS (American curriculum) |
| Full-time Thai nanny (live-out) | ฿9,000 - 16,000 / month | $250 - 445 | In-home care; rates vary with hours, experience & English |
Many nurseries and Thai kindergartens in Udon Thani accept children year-round with rolling intakes, while international and bilingual school early years follow the roughly August-June academic year with a smaller January intake. Because Udon Thani has fewer settings than Thailand's largest cities, enquire and visit as soon as you know your move date — the strongest bilingual nurseries and school-linked early years can have waitlists for the youngest ages.
Expect to provide your child's passport and birth certificate, immunisation/vaccination records, recent photos, and a parent passport plus your Udon Thani address (a lease or condo booking is usually fine). International and bilingual schools may also ask for prior reports or a short assessment for older pre-schoolers. Thai anuban and standalone nurseries have the lightest paperwork.
Bilingual nurseries usually bill monthly or per term, sometimes with a one-time registration/enrolment fee and a refundable deposit. Thai anuban charge a small termly fee. International and bilingual school early years is billed by term or year and is the priciest option. Half-day and full-day rates differ, and some nurseries offer flexible two-, three- or five-day weeks — handy for remote-working parents.
There is no childcare rule tied to your visa — DTV, LTR, Non-B, retirement (for grandparents) and Education visa families all use the same nurseries and kindergartens, paying out of pocket. A child's own visa/stay is handled separately from enrolment; settings do not require Thai residency. If you need a school letter for a dependent visa, an international or bilingual school can usually provide one.
Udon Thani has fewer nurseries and international early-years programmes than Bangkok, Phuket or Chiang Mai. Decide early whether your priority is bilingual/English childcare (concentrate on the areas above with the widest choice), Thai immersion (any local anuban), or a full international pathway via UTIS (IB continuum) and ICS (American curriculum). Knowing this before you pick a neighbourhood saves a lot of back-and-forth.
Be clear how much English vs Thai your child will actually hear day to day. Truly bilingual settings rotate languages or have dedicated English-speaking staff; some 'international' nurseries are mostly Thai-run with limited English. If Thai immersion is your goal, a local anuban is ideal and excellent value; if English continuity matters, confirm staffing carefully before committing.
Photos and websites rarely tell the full story. Visit in person, watch a normal session if the setting allows it, and ask about staff-to-child ratios, hygiene and nap routines, and how illness or emergencies are handled. In a smaller market like this, personal visits matter even more than online reviews.
Udon Thani expat and parenting Facebook groups are the fastest way to get current, honest recommendations on nurseries, kindergartens and nannies — including fees, waitlists and which places have space right now. In a smaller market, word of mouth matters even more; pair it with your own visits, since the right fit is personal to your child and your area.
It spans a wide range. A private bilingual nursery runs roughly THB 5,000-12,000 a month, a limited number of international or bilingual pre-schools about THB 10,000-22,000 a month, and international/bilingual early years linked to schools like UTIS (IB continuum) and ICS (American curriculum) about THB 90,000-250,000 a year. Thai government kindergartens (anuban) are far cheaper at a couple of thousand baht per term, and a full-time live-out Thai nanny is roughly THB 9,000-16,000 a month. Half-day and part-week options lower the cost, and most families pay out of pocket.
Standalone nurseries often take children from around 18 months to 2 years, some earlier for daycare, up to about age 5-6 before primary school. International and bilingual school early years programmes usually begin at age 2 or 3. Thai kindergartens (anuban) run ages 3-6. For babies and young toddlers, many families start with a Thai nanny at home and move to a nursery around age 2 for socialisation.
Nong Prajak & the Lakefront has the widest range of bilingual nurseries and Thai kindergartens, along with proximity to UTIS (IB continuum) and ICS (American curriculum). City Centre — Prajak Silapakhom & the Clock Tower suits families wanting a calmer, more residential base. Central Plaza & UD Town offers convenient, mixed housing. Families in Outer Udon Thani & the Suburbs typically rely on local Thai kindergartens and a nanny, driving in for a bilingual option when needed.
Yes, but choice is more limited than in Bangkok, Phuket or Chiang Mai. Udon Thani has a small number of bilingual English-Thai nurseries and pre-schools, plus early-years classes linked to UTIS (IB continuum) and ICS (American curriculum). Always confirm how much English your child will actually hear, since some settings labelled 'international' are mostly Thai-run with limited English staffing.
Typically your child's passport and birth certificate, immunisation records, recent photos, and a parent passport with your Udon Thani address (a lease or condo booking is usually enough). International and bilingual schools may also request prior reports or a short assessment for older pre-schoolers. Thai anuban and standalone nurseries have the lightest paperwork; there's no visa rule tied to enrolment, and families on DTV, LTR and other visas all use the same settings.
Some do. If your child will need a broader choice of international schools or specific curricula down the line, it's worth comparing Udon Thani's options — UTIS (IB continuum) and ICS (American curriculum) — against the wider selection available in Thailand's largest cities. A common pattern is using local childcare for early years and reassessing the school pathway before primary.
Schools & education · Healthcare & hospitals · Cost of living · Where to live · Udon Thani city hub
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Hero photo by Thirdman on Pexels. General information only, not childcare or legal advice. Confirm current fees, ages, policies and availability directly with each nursery or school.