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8,000 Baht Condo Rentals in Bangkok: Do They Exist and Where to Find Them
Discover affordable condo rentals at 8,000 baht monthly in Bangkok's best neighborhoods.

Summary
Explore real 8,000 baht condo rentals in Bangkok. Find budget-friendly apartments in prime locations with our complete neighborhood guide and listings.
So you're hunting for a condo in Bangkok under 8,000 baht a month. I know what you're thinking. Is that even real, or is someone going to show you a studio the size of a closet in outer Senanikom? Spoiler alert: options exist, but you need to know where to look and what trade-offs come with that price tag.
I've been helping people find rental condos across Bangkok for years, and the 8,000 baht range is the sweet spot where you stop getting completely crushed by rent but still get access to real buildings with amenities. It's not glamorous, and you're definitely not getting a riverside penthouse. But it's possible to find something decent if you understand the market.
Where 8,000 Baht Actually Gets You a Real Condo
Let's be honest. At 8,000 baht, you're not living on Sukhumvit or near Chitlom BTS. You're looking at areas that are maybe 15 to 25 minutes from central Bangkok by public transport. That's actually fine. Most of these zones are where regular working people live, not tourists.
The Bearing area near Chatuchak has a bunch of older condos that rent in the 7,500 to 9,000 baht range. Walk down Soi Vibhavadi 71, and you'll find actual buildings with gyms, small pools, and security. It's quiet, and you're genuinely surrounded by local Bangkok life. The BTS is about a 10 minute walk away.
Lat Phrao zone is another goldmine for this budget. Between Lat Phrao 71 and Lat Phrao 89, you'll find dozens of smaller condos charging 7,000 to 8,500 baht for one bedroom units. The area got popular because it's a straight shot down to Asok on the MRT. Families and young professionals live here, not backpackers.
Bang Khapi and Soi Wat Mahatat areas work too. These neighborhoods are less flashy but genuinely residential. You get actual Thai community, decent local food, and your money stretches further.
What You're Actually Getting at This Price
Here's where reality hits. At 8,000 baht, you're typically looking at a studio or a very small one bedroom. The building probably has maybe 5 to 10 stories, not some massive 30 floor complex. It's called a condo, but it's often a older property that's been converted or a modest mid rise built 10 to 15 years ago.
That said, most buildings at this price still have actual features. You'll get a security guard, a small gym area, maybe a pool that's like 15 meters long. Common areas exist. It's not a squat. Air conditioning comes standard. Hot water is included.
I looked at a building near Saphan Khwai BTS last year where 8,000 baht got you a studio about 28 square meters. No balcony to speak of, but decent furniture, cable TV, and the building had been recently renovated. It wasn't trendy, but it was clean and functional. The kind of place where you actually want to live, not just crash.
The trade off is usually size or location. You either get a slightly bigger unit further out, or a tight studio closer to a BTS station.
The Honest Challenges at This Budget
Let me not sugarcoat it. At 8,000 baht, you're going to deal with some compromises. Water pressure can be hit or miss. Some older buildings have internet that maxes out at 10 megabytes when they advertise high speed. Parking usually costs extra, sometimes 500 to 1,000 baht monthly on top of your rent.
Finding availability is tougher too. Landlords know this is budget friendly, so units get taken quickly. Thai families rent these places too, not just expats, which is actually good because it keeps the buildings genuine but means less inventory at any given moment.
Your neighbors might include shift workers, students, and retirees. You're genuinely living in a neighborhood condo, not a serviced apartment building where management handles everything. That's fine if you're independent and don't need a concierge, but it's worth knowing upfront.
How to Actually Find These Places
Jumping on Facebook condo rental groups is your starting point. There are dozens of groups specifically for Bangkok rentals where landlords post directly. You'll see 50 listings in the 7,500 to 8,500 baht range just scrolling for 20 minutes. The downside is communicating through Thai and dealing with dozens of messages.
Walking neighborhoods physically still works. Soi Lat Phrao 71 has at least seven buildings with available units at any time. You can literally walk the soi and see "for rent" signs on the buildings. Talk to security guards. They always know what's vacant.
Superagent.co actually filters Bangkok condos by exact budget range, which saves you from wading through listings at 15,000 baht when you're looking at 8,000. The platform shows you actual buildings in neighborhoods where that budget makes sense instead of generating false hope.
Real Budget Scenarios That Work
If you're single and working remote, grab that 28 square meter studio near Saphan Khwai. You spend most time outside anyway. The commute to meetings is fast, and you're saving 3,000 to 5,000 baht monthly compared to downtown condos.
If you have a partner, look further out. A one bedroom 40 square meters around Lat Phrao or Bang Kapi costs roughly the same as a studio downtown. Your money actually buys space and quiet.
Families trying to stretch rent budgets do find 8,000 baht condos in outer zones like Senanikom or Minburi, but you're honestly better off looking at shared houses or townhouses at that point instead. You get more room for similar money.
Finding a decent condo at 8,000 baht in Bangkok isn't a fairytale. It's a real option if you're willing to live where actual Bangkok residents live, not in the expat bubble. You sacrifice trendy address for financial breathing room. Most people who make this choice don't regret it. The neighborhoods are solid, the buildings are functional, and you're living like someone who actually works in Bangkok, not someone on holiday.
Start with Superagent.co and filter for your exact price range. You'll see what's genuinely available today in neighborhoods that match your lifestyle. Skip the Facebook groups until you know exactly what you want.
So you're hunting for a condo in Bangkok under 8,000 baht a month. I know what you're thinking. Is that even real, or is someone going to show you a studio the size of a closet in outer Senanikom? Spoiler alert: options exist, but you need to know where to look and what trade-offs come with that price tag.
I've been helping people find rental condos across Bangkok for years, and the 8,000 baht range is the sweet spot where you stop getting completely crushed by rent but still get access to real buildings with amenities. It's not glamorous, and you're definitely not getting a riverside penthouse. But it's possible to find something decent if you understand the market.
Where 8,000 Baht Actually Gets You a Real Condo
Let's be honest. At 8,000 baht, you're not living on Sukhumvit or near Chitlom BTS. You're looking at areas that are maybe 15 to 25 minutes from central Bangkok by public transport. That's actually fine. Most of these zones are where regular working people live, not tourists.
The Bearing area near Chatuchak has a bunch of older condos that rent in the 7,500 to 9,000 baht range. Walk down Soi Vibhavadi 71, and you'll find actual buildings with gyms, small pools, and security. It's quiet, and you're genuinely surrounded by local Bangkok life. The BTS is about a 10 minute walk away.
Lat Phrao zone is another goldmine for this budget. Between Lat Phrao 71 and Lat Phrao 89, you'll find dozens of smaller condos charging 7,000 to 8,500 baht for one bedroom units. The area got popular because it's a straight shot down to Asok on the MRT. Families and young professionals live here, not backpackers.
Bang Khapi and Soi Wat Mahatat areas work too. These neighborhoods are less flashy but genuinely residential. You get actual Thai community, decent local food, and your money stretches further.
What You're Actually Getting at This Price
Here's where reality hits. At 8,000 baht, you're typically looking at a studio or a very small one bedroom. The building probably has maybe 5 to 10 stories, not some massive 30 floor complex. It's called a condo, but it's often a older property that's been converted or a modest mid rise built 10 to 15 years ago.
That said, most buildings at this price still have actual features. You'll get a security guard, a small gym area, maybe a pool that's like 15 meters long. Common areas exist. It's not a squat. Air conditioning comes standard. Hot water is included.
I looked at a building near Saphan Khwai BTS last year where 8,000 baht got you a studio about 28 square meters. No balcony to speak of, but decent furniture, cable TV, and the building had been recently renovated. It wasn't trendy, but it was clean and functional. The kind of place where you actually want to live, not just crash.
The trade off is usually size or location. You either get a slightly bigger unit further out, or a tight studio closer to a BTS station.
The Honest Challenges at This Budget
Let me not sugarcoat it. At 8,000 baht, you're going to deal with some compromises. Water pressure can be hit or miss. Some older buildings have internet that maxes out at 10 megabytes when they advertise high speed. Parking usually costs extra, sometimes 500 to 1,000 baht monthly on top of your rent.
Finding availability is tougher too. Landlords know this is budget friendly, so units get taken quickly. Thai families rent these places too, not just expats, which is actually good because it keeps the buildings genuine but means less inventory at any given moment.
Your neighbors might include shift workers, students, and retirees. You're genuinely living in a neighborhood condo, not a serviced apartment building where management handles everything. That's fine if you're independent and don't need a concierge, but it's worth knowing upfront.
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How to Actually Find These Places
Jumping on Facebook condo rental groups is your starting point. There are dozens of groups specifically for Bangkok rentals where landlords post directly. You'll see 50 listings in the 7,500 to 8,500 baht range just scrolling for 20 minutes. The downside is communicating through Thai and dealing with dozens of messages.
Walking neighborhoods physically still works. Soi Lat Phrao 71 has at least seven buildings with available units at any time. You can literally walk the soi and see "for rent" signs on the buildings. Talk to security guards. They always know what's vacant.
Superagent.co actually filters Bangkok condos by exact budget range, which saves you from wading through listings at 15,000 baht when you're looking at 8,000. The platform shows you actual buildings in neighborhoods where that budget makes sense instead of generating false hope.
Real Budget Scenarios That Work
If you're single and working remote, grab that 28 square meter studio near Saphan Khwai. You spend most time outside anyway. The commute to meetings is fast, and you're saving 3,000 to 5,000 baht monthly compared to downtown condos.
If you have a partner, look further out. A one bedroom 40 square meters around Lat Phrao or Bang Kapi costs roughly the same as a studio downtown. Your money actually buys space and quiet.
Families trying to stretch rent budgets do find 8,000 baht condos in outer zones like Senanikom or Minburi, but you're honestly better off looking at shared houses or townhouses at that point instead. You get more room for similar money.
Finding a decent condo at 8,000 baht in Bangkok isn't a fairytale. It's a real option if you're willing to live where actual Bangkok residents live, not in the expat bubble. You sacrifice trendy address for financial breathing room. Most people who make this choice don't regret it. The neighborhoods are solid, the buildings are functional, and you're living like someone who actually works in Bangkok, not someone on holiday.
Start with Superagent.co and filter for your exact price range. You'll see what's genuinely available today in neighborhoods that match your lifestyle. Skip the Facebook groups until you know exactly what you want.
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