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Best Condos Near BTS in Bangkok: A Station-by-Station Rental Guide

Find your perfect Bangkok condo by BTS station, with real rental prices and neighborhood insights.

Summary

Compare Bangkok condos near every major BTS station, rental prices, lifestyle perks, and tips to find your ideal neighborhood fast.

If you've spent more than a week in Bangkok, you already know the golden rule: rent by the BTS line, not by the map. Google Maps will tell you a condo is "close" to everything, then you'll find yourself stuck on Rama IV in Friday traffic, watching your 20-minute commute turn into an hour. The city rewards those who live within walking distance of a station, and the options vary wildly depending on which part of the Skytrain network you choose.

This guide breaks it down station by station, with real prices and real neighborhoods, so you can make a decision without the guesswork.

Asok and Nana: The Sukhumvit Sweet Spot

The Asok interchange, where the BTS Sukhumvit Line meets MRT Sukhumvit, is arguably the most connected point in the entire city. You can reach Siam in 10 minutes, hit the airport link at Makkasan, and walk to Terminal 21 for lunch without breaking a sweat.

Condos within 300 meters of Asok BTS start around 25,000 THB per month for a one-bedroom. Buildings like The Address Asoke on Sukhumvit Soi 10 sit right in that range, offering around 35 sqm, decent finishes, and a rooftop pool shared with a very international crowd.

Nana station, one stop west, offers slightly lower rents, 20,000 to 28,000 THB for a one-bedroom, with buildings like Sukhumvit City Resort pulling in both short-stay and long-term tenants. The trade-off is that Nana Soi 4 gets loud at night. If you work early mornings, go one block further from the main strip.

Thong Lo and Ekkamai: Where Bangkok Lives on Weekends

Thong Lo is Bangkok's most livable station, and most renters already know it. The stretch along Sukhumvit Soi 55 has some of the city's best cafes, Japanese restaurants, and independent shops, all within reasonable walking distance if you don't mind the heat.

A one-bedroom in one of Thong Lo's mid-rise buildings runs between 22,000 and 45,000 THB depending on the floor and building age. Newer high-rises closer to the station, particularly those along Sukhumvit Soi 55 near the 57 Heritage development, push toward the top of that range. Older low-rise units tucked into the sois behind the main road come in cheaper but require more flexibility on interiors.

Ekkamai, the next station east, is the more affordable neighbor. Buildings along Ekkamai Soi 10 and Soi 12 attract younger renters and digital nomads looking for value. Prices drop to 15,000 to 22,000 THB for a one-bedroom, and the area has its own distinct character built around the Eastern Bus Terminal gateway and the weekend market scene.

Ari and Saphan Kwai: Local Bangkok Without the Tourist Layer

If you want to feel like you actually live in Bangkok rather than an expat simulation, the upper Sukhumvit stretch isn't the only answer. Ari station on the BTS Silom Line extension has become one of the city's most sought-after spots for Thai professionals and long-term residents who prefer neighborhood life over mall convenience.

The streets around Ari Soi 1 through Soi 4 have coffee shops, small Thai restaurants, and a night market that actually serves the locals. Condos here, like Rhythm Rangnam near the Victory Monument area or the newer buildings along Phahon Yothin Road, range from 15,000 to 28,000 THB for a one-bedroom. You're also close to the Chatuchak Park MRT if you need to cross to the other line.

Saphan Kwai, one stop north, drops the price further and adds a very Bangkok mix of street food, wet markets, and older shophouse blocks. Less polished, more genuine.

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Silom and Sala Daeng: Business District Logic

The Silom Line core, Sala Daeng and Chong Nonsi, makes sense if you work in the financial district or Sathorn. It cuts out the commute entirely, which in Bangkok is worth a lot more than a rent discount somewhere farther out.

Condos near Sala Daeng BTS, which also connects to the MRT Silom station, include buildings like Baan Sathorn and The Met on South Sathorn Road. Expect to pay 25,000 to 50,000 THB for a one-bedroom depending on size and amenities. The area is quiet by Bangkok standards on weekends, which some people love and some find too still.

Lumpini Park is a short walk away. If you're the type who runs in the mornings, that's a genuine lifestyle upgrade that doesn't show up on any listing sheet.

On Nut and Phra Khanong: The Value Equation

On Nut has gone through a real transformation over the past decade. What used to be the "too far from everything" end of the Sukhumvit Line is now one of the best value propositions on the BTS grid. There are two Lotus's supermarkets, a strong local food scene on Sukhumvit Soi 77, and rents that reflect a different reality than the Asok or Thong Lo stretch.

A solid one-bedroom at Lumpini Ville On Nut or something comparable in the Sukhumvit 50 corridor runs between 12,000 and 18,000 THB per month. That's a meaningful difference if you're budgeting carefully or just don't need to be central to everything.

Phra Khanong, one stop east, is where Bangkok's younger crowd has been quietly relocating for the past few years. The neighborhood around Sukhumvit Soi 71 and the streets behind the station has enough restaurants, gyms, and coffee spots to make daily life genuinely comfortable without crossing back into the tourist belt.


Picking the right station comes down to three things: where you work, what you're willing to pay, and what kind of Bangkok experience you actually want. The best deal isn't always the lowest rent. It's the one that saves you two hours a day in traffic and gets you home to a neighborhood you enjoy.

Superagent uses AI to match renters with condos across all BTS and MRT lines, filtering by station, price, and move-in date so you're not scrolling through listings that don't fit. Worth a look before you commit to anything.