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Setting up utilities in Udon Thani.

Electricity, water, internet, cooking gas and rubbish for your Udon Thani home or condo β€” who the providers are, how bills and landlord markups really work, typical costs, and exactly how to pay everything by app or at 7-Eleven.

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By Kirby Scofield
Founder of BAANLYY Β· International real estate broker, investor & relocation specialist
Last updated 3 July 2026 Β· Last reviewed 3 July 2026
Overview

The short version

Getting your utilities sorted in Udon Thani is usually painless β€” in a rented condo, apartment or house the electricity, water and often internet are already connected in the landlord's name, and you simply pay the monthly bills. PEA runs electricity, PWA runs mains water, and both are reliable across the built-up Nong Prajak, City Centre and Central Plaza/UD Town corridor. The main thing to watch, as everywhere in Thailand, is a landlord's per-unit electricity markup. Here is exactly how each utility works in Udon Thani, what it costs, and how to pay it.

Electricity (PEA)

PEA runs the Udon Thani gridProvider

Udon Thani β€” like everywhere in Thailand outside Bangkok, Nonthaburi and Samut Prakan β€” is served by the Provincial Electricity Authority (PEA), not the capital's MEA. Power is 220V, and the grid across Nong Prajak, the City Centre and the Central Plaza/UD Town corridor is generally reliable, with brief storm-related outages more likely toward the outer suburbs than in the built-up centre.

Whose name is on the meterRenters vs owners

In a rented condo, apartment or house the electricity meter almost always stays in the landlord's or developer's name and you simply pay the monthly amount billed to you. Owners or long registered leases who want the account switched into their own name register at the local PEA office with a passport, the house registration book (tabien baan) and property documents β€” most renters never need to do this.

The rate trap: PEA vs landlord markupCost

The true PEA residential rate is roughly 4-5 THB per unit (kWh) plus the Ft adjustment and VAT. Many privately let apartments and houses around Nong Prajak and UD Town bill tenants at a marked-up flat rate of 6-8 THB per unit, which is legal but can add 30-80% to your bill. Always confirm the exact per-unit rate in writing before signing, since Udon Thani's hot season (roughly March-May) can double AC-driven consumption.

Typical monthly billsWhat to expect

A one-bed condo or apartment running AC overnight typically costs 900-2,200 THB a month; a house with several AC units and a water heater can reach 2,500-5,000 THB in hot season. Udon Thani's low cost of living generally extends to utilities too β€” bills here run somewhat below Bangkok or Chiang Mai for a comparable unit, in line with other Isaan hubs like Khon Kaen and Nakhon Ratchasima.

Water (PWA)

PWA mains across the built-up cityProvider

The built-up core of Udon Thani β€” Nong Prajak Lake, the City Centre and the Central Plaza/UD Town corridor β€” has solid Provincial Waterworks Authority (PWA) mains coverage. Condos and most modern apartments run entirely on mains water with no special setup needed; a private well or storage tank becomes more common the further out you go toward the rural fringes of the province.

Water bills & drinking waterCost

PWA mains water is cheap β€” typically only a few hundred baht a month for a household β€” and in many condos it is folded into a small monthly common-fee (CAM) charge rather than billed separately. As everywhere in Thailand, nobody drinks straight from the tap: 20-litre refill bottles (roughly 15-25 THB) or a home filter are the norm, widely available from shops across Nong Prajak and the City Centre.

Dry-season considerationsFeb-Apr

Udon Thani's water table and the Huai Luang reservoir system that feeds parts of the province can run tighter toward the end of the dry season (roughly February-April) in drought years, occasionally prompting local conservation appeals in outlying districts. This has rarely translated into household mains disruption in the built-up city core around Nong Prajak and UD Town.

Internet & fibre

Fibre providersHome internet

Home fibre in Udon Thani comes from the same national providers as the rest of Thailand β€” AIS Fibre, True Online and 3BB (now part of AIS) β€” with strong, well-established coverage across Nong Prajak, the City Centre and the Central Plaza/UD Town corridor. Coverage thins out somewhat further into the rural outer districts of the province.

Speeds & costWhat you pay

A typical home fibre package runs about 450-900 THB a month for 300-1,000 Mbps, usually on a 12-month contract with the router included β€” among the more affordable fibre pricing of any major Thai city, in keeping with Udon Thani's generally low cost of living. It is fast and reliable enough for remote work, video calls and streaming without a second thought.

Who sets it upRenters

In most condos and modern apartments fibre is already installed and you either take over the existing line or start a new plan in your own name with your passport β€” typically a same-week process near Nong Prajak or the City Centre, sometimes a little longer for a house on the outskirts.

Cooking gas, rubbish & common fees

Cooking gas (LPG)Kitchen

Houses and older apartments across Udon Thani typically cook on bottled LPG rather than piped gas β€” you buy or exchange a gas bottle (roughly 350-450 THB for a refill) that a local shop delivers and connects, lasting a household a month or two. Newer condos near Central Plaza/UD Town are more often all-electric with induction hobs.

Rubbish & recyclingWaste

Household waste collection is run by the Udon Thani municipality (tessaban) across Nong Prajak and the City Centre, usually folded into your rent or condo common fee, with condo buildings often running their own additional collection schedule. Recycling is informal β€” glass, cans and plastic are typically collected separately by local buyers β€” and less centralised the further you are from the city centre.

Condo common fees (CAM)Condos & modern apartments

Renting a condo near Nong Prajak, Central Plaza or UD Town means a monthly common-area maintenance (CAM) fee covers the shared pool, gym, lifts, security and grounds where the building has them β€” separate from your own electricity and internet. Udon Thani's condo supply is more limited than Bangkok's, so always clarify exactly what a quoted monthly figure does and does not include before signing.

How to pay your bills

Pay by mobile banking appEasiest

The simplest way to pay any utility is your Thai bank app (Bualuang, K PLUS, SCB Easy, KMA) β€” scan the barcode on the paper bill or use the biller menu and it clears instantly. Opening a local bank account early makes settling bills, and Udon Thani life generally, much smoother β€” see our Udon Thani banking guide.

7-Eleven & counter serviceNo app needed

You can pay almost any Udon Thani utility bill in cash at any 7-Eleven or a Counter Service point, common across Nong Prajak, the City Centre and near Central Plaza/UD Town β€” hand over the bill, pay the amount plus a small (10-15 THB) fee, keep the receipt. It works day or night, before your bank account is even open.

Landlord & condo-office billingCondos, apartments & houses

In most condos, apartments and rented houses you do not pay PEA or PWA directly β€” the landlord or condo office reads the meters, adds their rate, and issues one combined monthly bill you settle by transfer or cash. Ask to see the per-unit electricity rate in writing before signing so there are no surprises once the AC starts running through the hot season.

Deposits & connectionSetup

When an account is genuinely in your own name β€” usually only owners or long registered leases β€” PEA and PWA take a small refundable deposit at connection through the local office. As a normal renter you rarely deal with this β€” utilities are already live in the owner's or condo's name and you simply start paying the monthly bills from your move-in date.

FAQ

Udon Thani utilities FAQ

How do I set up electricity in Udon Thani?

Udon Thani's grid is run by the Provincial Electricity Authority (PEA), not Bangkok's MEA. In almost every rental β€” condo, apartment or house β€” the meter stays in the landlord's name and you simply pay the monthly bill; owners or long registered leases can switch the account into their own name at the local PEA office with a passport, house registration book and property documents. Most renters never need to do this β€” utilities are already live and you just start paying from move-in.

Why is my Udon Thani electricity bill so high?

Usually air-conditioning plus a landlord markup. The true PEA residential rate is about 4-5 THB per unit, but many privately let apartments and houses bill tenants at a flat 6-8 THB per unit. Always ask the per-unit rate before signing β€” a one-bed condo running AC overnight typically costs 900-2,200 THB a month, and houses with several AC units can reach 2,500-5,000 THB in the hot season (roughly March-May).

Is Udon Thani's water supply reliable?

Yes, in the built-up city core. Nong Prajak, the City Centre and the Central Plaza/UD Town corridor all have solid Provincial Waterworks Authority (PWA) mains coverage. Levels can tighten toward the end of the dry season (roughly February-April) in drought years, prompting conservation appeals in outlying districts, but this rarely disrupts mains supply to condos and apartments in the city centre.

How much does home internet cost in Udon Thani?

Home fibre from AIS Fibre, True or 3BB typically costs 450-900 THB a month for 300-1,000 Mbps on a 12-month contract with the router included β€” among the more affordable fibre pricing of any major Thai city. Coverage is strongest around Nong Prajak, the City Centre and Central Plaza/UD Town.

How do I pay utility bills in Udon Thani?

The easiest way is your Thai mobile banking app β€” scan the barcode on the bill and it clears instantly. Without an app you can pay any bill in cash at any 7-Eleven or Counter Service for a small fee. In most condos, apartments and rented houses, the landlord or condo office reads the meters and gives you one combined bill β€” electricity, water and sometimes internet β€” to settle by transfer or cash each month.

Sources & References

Sources & References

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.

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Hero photo by Chuot Anhls on Pexels. General information only; utility providers, rates and billing arrangements vary by property and change over time β€” confirm current details locally before signing a lease. Costs in Thai baht (THB) and are indicative.