Every week someone asks us — usually in the planning stages of their first trip to Thailand — some version of the same question: is it actually safe? We have been running private tours here for 17 years. We have accompanied thousands of travellers from Australia, Europe, the US, and the UK through every region of this country. So let us give you the honest answer, not the hedged-liability version.

Thailand receives over 35 million international tourists a year (pre-2020 figures; numbers have largely recovered post-pandemic). Serious violent crime against tourists is genuinely rare. Your statistical likelihood of being a victim of street violence in Bangkok is meaningfully lower than in most major Western cities. The Thai tourism economy depends on visitors feeling safe, and that economic reality shapes policing priorities in tourist areas more than any government directive.

That said, safe does not mean risk-free. There are real hazards here, and glossing over them would be dishonest. Below is our practical breakdown — the things worth knowing, the things worth adjusting your behaviour for, and the things that frankly don't need to keep you up at night.

The Actual Risks Worth Taking Seriously

Real Risk — High
Road Safety

This is the single most significant hazard for tourists in Thailand, and it is almost never what people ask about. Thailand consistently ranks among the countries with the highest road fatality rates in Southeast Asia, and the numbers are not close. The mix of fast highways, inconsistent lane discipline, drivers who do not always expect pedestrians, and the extreme heat (which affects reaction times and tyre pressure alike) creates conditions that demand caution.

Do not rent a motorbike if you are not an experienced motorcyclist. We say this directly. Koh Samui, Phuket, and Chiang Mai emergency rooms treat farang (foreign) motorbike injuries every single day. The roads look manageable until they aren't, and Thai traffic does not forgive hesitation.

In cars: wear your seatbelt, front and back. Many older Thai taxis and minivans do not have functioning rear seatbelts — check before you sit down, and if they're not there, that's useful information about the vehicle's general maintenance standards. Travelling by private car with a professional, experienced driver — which is the model we use for every trip — dramatically reduces your exposure to road risk. Your driver knows the roads, drives defensively, and has an economic incentive to deliver you safely.

Real Risk — Medium
Scams

Bangkok and major tourist destinations have a well-documented set of tourist scams. They are more annoying than dangerous, but they can cost you money and time. The most common ones:

Real Risk — Easily Managed
Heat and Sun

April and May in Thailand are genuinely hot — 38–42°C in many parts of the country, with humidity that makes it feel hotter. Heat exhaustion and dehydration affect tourists more often than almost any other health issue. Drink 2–3 litres of water per day minimum, more if you're active. Avoid extended outdoor activity between 11am and 3pm during the hottest months. A hat and UPF-rated clothing are more effective than sunscreen alone. If you feel dizzy, nauseous, or stop sweating in the heat, get into air conditioning immediately — these are signs of heat exhaustion progressing toward heat stroke.

Real Risk — Easily Managed
Food and Water

Don't drink tap water. Full stop. This is standard throughout Southeast Asia and not specific to Thailand. Bottled water is cheap and available everywhere. Ice is a more nuanced issue: commercially produced ice (delivered in large cylindrical blocks or bags of cubes) is made from treated water and is safe. Ice chipped from large cloudy blocks at very small rural eateries is less certain — at busy street stalls and any established restaurant, you're fine. Thai street food from busy stalls with high turnover is generally safer than it looks; the volume of customers means food is fresh and cooked continuously.

Real Risk — Situational
Marine Hazards

If you swim or snorkel in Thai waters, know three things. First, rip currents at open beaches are real — respect the flag system (red flags mean no swimming) and don't assume a calm-looking sea is safe. Second, jellyfish are seasonal and mostly a sting-and-recover issue, but some species in the Andaman and Gulf of Thailand require medical attention; Portuguese man o' war is occasionally present. Third, sea urchins lurk on reefs — wear reef shoes when walking on rocky shallows.

Things That Are Not Significant Risks for Most Tourists

Low Risk Political Instability

Thailand has a complicated political history, and this makes international headlines from time to time. In practice, it affects tourist areas minimally. Bangkok, Chiang Mai, Chiang Rai, the Gulf islands, Phuket, Phang Nga, Kanchanaburi, Khao Yai — all of these destinations remain operationally stable and welcoming. The one genuine exception is the deep south: Yala, Pattani, Narathiwat, and parts of Songkhla near the Malaysian border have an ongoing separatist insurgency. No mainstream tourist itinerary routes through these provinces. We don't operate there. If you see a travel advisory flagging southern Thailand, that refers specifically to these border provinces, not to the country at large.

Low Risk Street Crime

Pickpocketing happens, primarily in crowded areas like Chatuchak Market in Bangkok or busy night markets. It's not common by major city standards. Violent robbery targeting tourists is rare enough that when it does occur it makes the local news. Basic precautions — don't flash expensive cameras in back alleys, use hotel safes for your passport — are sufficient.

Low Risk Religious Offence

Thailand is a deeply Buddhist country and respect for temples, monks, and the monarchy is genuinely important. Cover your shoulders and knees at temples (scarves to borrow are usually available at entrances if you forget), don't touch monks if you're a woman, and don't make jokes about the royal family in public. Follow these basic conventions and you will never have a problem. They're not difficult.

Medical Care: What to Know Before You Go

Bangkok has world-class private hospitals. Bumrungrad International Hospital and Bangkok Hospital both operate to international standards, employ English-speaking doctors, and are accustomed to treating international patients. Costs are much lower than the US or UK for equivalent care, but they are not free. In major tourist towns — Chiang Mai, Phuket, Koh Samui, Hua Hin — there are good private clinics. Remote areas like Mae Hong Son, northern hill country, and less-visited national parks have basic public health facilities only. Travel insurance with medical evacuation coverage is not optional if you're going anywhere off the beaten track. It should be part of your pre-departure checklist alongside your passport.

For a broader overview of planning your trip, see our Thailand Travel Guide — it covers visas, currency, tipping, and the practical logistics of moving around the country. And if you want to talk through your specific itinerary and where the real pinch points might be, reach us directly — that's what we're here for.