Convert rents, deposits and prices between Thai Baht and your home currency at up-to-the-day mid-market rates. Set any pair, tap swap, and see exactly what a figure is worth today — the honest baseline before your bank or transfer service adds its margin. Free, in your browser, no sign-up, no paid placement.
Enter an amount, choose what you're converting from and to, and tap ⇅ Swap to flip the direction. The result updates live against the day's mid-market rate, with the single-unit rate shown beneath. Convert a monthly rent, a deposit or a full year's lease so the number lands in a currency you think in.
Up-to-the-day mid-market rates — convert rents, prices and deposits between Baht and your home currency.
Mid-market reference rates; your bank or transfer service may differ.
It uses up-to-the-day mid-market reference rates — the midpoint between the buy and sell price that banks and transfer services quote each other, before any retail margin is added. That makes it the cleanest number for planning: it tells you what your money is genuinely worth in Thai Baht today. The rate you actually receive from your bank, card or transfer provider will be slightly worse, because they add a spread or fee. Use the mid-market figure here as your baseline, then check the real cost against a provider before you move money.
The tool covers the currencies most relevant to people moving to or investing in Thailand — US Dollar (USD), Euro (EUR), British Pound (GBP), Australian Dollar (AUD), Chinese Yuan (CNY), Japanese Yen (JPY) and others — converting in either direction with a one-tap swap. THB is the default focus because that is what you pay rent, deposits and bills in once you arrive, but you can set any pair to sense-check a price against your home currency.
Yes, it's completely free with no sign-up. It runs in your browser and pulls live rates on load — nothing you type is stored or sent anywhere. There's no paid placement: no bank or transfer service is promoted for money. It's a research tool for renters, expats, retirees, digital nomads, families and investors who want a fast, honest read on what a Baht figure means in their own currency.
Banks, card networks and money-transfer services start from the mid-market rate, then add their margin — typically a spread baked into the rate plus a fixed or percentage fee. On a large transfer like first month's rent plus deposit, that margin can quietly cost you several percent. Knowing the true mid-market rate first lets you spot how much you're really paying and compare providers. Our guide to sending money to Thailand walks through how to minimise that cost.
Convert the real Baht figures you'll face — a monthly rent, a two-month security deposit, an annual lease, typical utility bills — back into your home currency so the numbers feel concrete. Then pair it with the cost-of-living estimator to build a full monthly budget, and remember the exchange rate moves daily, so leave a buffer. Treat every converted figure as a close approximation for planning, not a locked-in price.
Turn the converted figure into a full monthly plan, then learn how to move money to Thailand without losing it to fees.
Research tool only. Rates shown are up-to-the-day mid-market reference rates, not a quote — the rate your bank, card or transfer service gives you will differ once their margin and fees are applied. Always confirm the live cost with your provider before moving money. BAANLYY takes no paid placement.