If your goal is not just to vacation, but to use your first Thailand trip to figure out where youโd actually want to live full-time, I would set up your home base in Bangkok โ specifically a BTS/MRT-connected neighborhood, not a tourist beach area.
My recommendation: make Bangkok your base for the first 4โ8 weeks
Not because Bangkok is automatically the best place to live forever.
But because for a first-timer trying to evaluate Thailand as a long-term home, Bangkok is the best testing base for these reasons:
Why Bangkok is the smartest home base
1) It gives you the easiest access to the rest of Thailand
If youโre trying to compare Chiang Mai vs Hua Hin vs Korat vs Pattaya/Jomtien vs Krabi vs Phuket vs Isaan, Bangkok makes that much easier than basing yourself in one regional city.
From Bangkok you can do:
- cheap domestic flights from Don Mueang or Suvarnabhumi
- long-distance trains north, south, and northeast from Krung Thep Aphiwat Central Terminal
- easy buses/vans to places like Hua Hin, Pattaya, Kanchanaburi, Ayutthaya, and Korat
That matters because if youโre genuinely trying to choose a long-term home, you do not want to burn time and money constantly repositioning yourself.
2) You can test the โhardestโ part of Thailand first
If you can handle Bangkok well, the rest of Thailand usually gets easier.
Bangkok lets you test:
- heat + traffic
- condo living
- public transport
- healthcare access
- immigration/visa errands
- shopping and everyday convenience
- whether you want a big city, suburb, beach town, or provincial city
Itโs better to learn early whether you want urban Thailand or whether you immediately know, โNo, I want smaller, quieter, greener, cheaper.โ
3) Itโs the best place to organize the search
If youโre apartment hunting, checking hospitals, looking at long-stay areas, or figuring out visas, Bangkok is simply the most efficient launch point.
Where I would stay in Bangkok for this purpose
Best home-base areas for a first-timer doing a โwhere should I live?โ Thailand scouting trip
1) On Nut
Best overall base if you want a realistic long-stay setup, not a tourist fantasy.
Why I like it:
- BTS access
- lots of condos and apartments
- supermarkets, local food, cafes, gyms
- easier and cheaper than central Sukhumvit
- gives you a more realistic feel for daily Bangkok life
If I were advising someone to spend 30โ60 days in Bangkok while scouting Thailand, On Nut would be near the top of my list.
2) Ari
Best if you want a cleaner, more livable, more pleasant version of Bangkok
Why it works:
- BTS access
- less chaotic than lower Sukhumvit
- good cafes, restaurants, local streets
- feels more โI could live hereโ than โIโm on holidayโ
Downside: usually pricier than On Nut.
3) Phra Khanong / Udom Suk
Best if you want value and a less tourist-heavy Bangkok base
Good for:
- lower condo costs than central Sukhumvit
- still on the BTS line
- easy access to both central Bangkok and airports
- more practical for longer stays
4) Bang Na
Best if you want space, newer condos, and easier airport access
This is a strong choice if your plan is:
- take side trips often
- maybe rent a car at times
- want less of the central-city crush
- are seriously considering suburban Thailand rather than downtown Bangkok
Where I would not use as the main scouting base
If the goal is โfind where I want to live full-time,โ I would not make these my primary first base:
Not ideal as the main base
Phuket
Too expensive, too tourist-shaped, and not representative of most of Thailand living unless you already know you want an island/tourism-heavy life.
Krabi / Ao Nang
Great trip destination, weak scouting base for all of Thailand.
Chiang Mai
Excellent place to test as a possible long-term home, but not the best national scouting base because it makes southern and eastern Thailand more awkward.
Pattaya / Jomtien
Worth testing, but not as your first base if youโre trying to evaluate the whole country objectively.
Rural Isaan
Good if you already know you want rural or provincial life. Bad if you still need to compare multiple lifestyles.
The smarter way to do it: use Bangkok as HQ, then test Thailand in loops
If I were setting this up from scratch for a first-timer, Iโd do it like this:
6โ8 week Thailand scouting plan
Phase 1: Bangkok base โ 10 to 14 nights
Stay in On Nut, Ari, Phra Khanong, or Udom Suk.
Use this time to test:
- daily transport
- condo living
- food costs
- shopping convenience
- hospitals / clinics
- visa logistics
- how much city life you can tolerate
Then do short trips from Bangkok:
Easy test trips from Bangkok
Hua Hin โ 3 nights
Test:
- beach town living
- slower pace
- lower stress than Bangkok
- โCould I live by the sea without island logistics?โ
BangkokโHua Hin is an easy train route, around 3.5โ4 hours on the better services in 2026.
Pattaya / Jomtien โ 3 nights
Test:
- coastal condo life
- big expat infrastructure
- convenience + beach combo
- whether Pattayaโs environment is a fit or a hard no
Kanchanaburi โ 2 nights
Test:
- inland scenic lifestyle
- quieter town feel
- whether you want more green space and less city
Phase 2: Northern test โ 7 to 10 nights
Base: Chiang Mai
This is the place to answer:
- Do I want cooler season weather and mountains?
- Do I want a walkable, lower-cost city?
- Can I tolerate burning season tradeoffs?
- Would I rather live here than Bangkok?
Optional add-on:
Chiang Rai โ 2 to 3 nights
Good if you think you may want somewhere even quieter and slower than Chiang Mai.
Phase 3: Isaan / inland test โ 7 to 10 nights
This matters if youโre seriously evaluating value, space, quieter life, and a more local Thailand.
I would test 2 of these 3:
Korat / Nakhon Ratchasima
Best if you want:
- a practical regional city
- cheaper living than Bangkok
- access to Bangkok without living in Bangkok
- a less tourist-heavy everyday life
Khon Kaen
Best if you want:
- a more functional Isaan city with good services
- less tourism, more everyday livability
- a city feel without Bangkok scale
Udon Thani
Best if you want:
- lower-cost city living
- a calmer pace
- a more local base with enough infrastructure
Phase 4: Southern beach reality check โ 7 to 10 nights
Choose one or two, not all of them.
Hua Hin
Best for โeasy beach townโ testing
Koh Lanta
Best for โquiet island lifeโ testing
Phuket
Only if you think you may genuinely want an island / tourism-business / international-expat environment
Krabi / Ao Nang
Best if you want scenic south without full Phuket intensity
If you want the shortest possible answer:
If you are a first-timer to Thailand and want to figure out where to live full-time, do this:
Set up your first home base in Bangkok for 2 weeks
Stay in:
- On Nut
- Phra Khanong
- Udom Suk
- Ari
Then use Bangkok as the launch point to test these 4 living styles:
Test 1: Chiang Mai
โDo I want northern city life?โ
Test 2: Hua Hin or Jomtien
โDo I want easy beach-town life?โ
Test 3: Korat or Khon Kaen
โDo I want cheaper provincial city life?โ
Test 4: Phuket/Krabi/Koh Lanta
โDo I actually want southern beach/island life, or do I just like visiting it?โ
My actual recommendation for you
If the question is one single place to set up a home base while you scout Thailand, Iโd choose:
Bangkok โ On Nut area
Because it gives you the best combination of:
- transport access
- realistic long-stay living
- condo inventory
- airport/train access
- easy trips all over Thailand
- and enough everyday life to quickly figure out what you do and donโt want


