Skip to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

Thailand News and Discussion Forum | ASEANNOW

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

Briton Cuts Living Costs With Move to Chiang Mai

A British man who left the UK due to rising living costs says he now lives comfortably in Chiang Mai, Thailand, on just GBP800 a month, compared with more than GBP3,000 a month previously. Robert Hoadley, 45, from Portsmouth, relocated in 2025 and says the move has given him greater financial freedom, improved work-life balance and a healthier lifestyle.

Get today's headlines by email image.png

Robert spent years working in construction before deciding to leave the UK. He said he had become frustrated by working long hours simply to cover increasing expenses and felt he had little freedom to enjoy life. After deciding he did not want to wait until retirement to pursue a different lifestyle, he sold everything he owned and moved more than 6,000 miles away to Thailand.

Now based in Chiang Mai, Robert works online as a content creator, producing material about the cost of living and relocating abroad. He is developing multiple online income streams that allow him to work remotely. His social media platform, Sea Turkey Adventures, has attracted more than 6,000 followers, with some videos receiving over 200,000 views.

Robert says daily life in Thailand is significantly less stressful. He highlighted lower living costs, affordable leisure activities and a wider range of lifestyle options, including gyms, cafes, swimming pools and outdoor pursuits. He also noted that pints can cost as little as GBP2, although he says he now drinks less than he did in the UK and focuses more on health, fitness and routine.

IMG_4539.jpeg

According to Robert, one of the biggest benefits is the reduced financial pressure. He said many people underestimate how far money can stretch abroad and believes Thailand offers good food, friendly people, a strong expatriate community and a high quality of life at a fraction of UK costs. He added that the warmer climate and more relaxed pace of life have also contributed to his overall happiness.

Despite the positives, Robert acknowledges there are aspects of Britain he still misses. He cited friends and family, traditional pub culture, certain foods and what he described as the UK’s distinctive sense of humour and sarcasm. He said those qualities are difficult to replace, even though he is satisfied with his decision to move overseas.

The Mirror reported that as he continues building his online business and audience, Robert says he remains committed to his new life in Thailand. His experience reflects a growing interest among some Britons in seeking lower living costs and different lifestyles abroad while maintaining remote sources of income.

image.png

Pictures courtesy of The Mirror

Join the discussion? image.png

Already a member? image.png

image.png Adapted by ASEAN Now Mirror 13 June 2026

User Feedback

Recommended Comments

Spider5511 Explorer Member

Spider5511

Member
5 hours ago, Nick Carter icp said:

Many long term rentals have a 1 year minimum contract.

Not true at all, in the 2-3-5K room zone it is monthly or 3 months at most and usually a few K to 1 month deposit only too.

Spider5511 Explorer Member

Spider5511

Member
4 hours ago, spidermike007 said:

I am in the US right now and I can tell you that inflation is out of control. Those ridiculous inflation and CPI numbers that the government is throwing around has nothing to do with the day-to-day reality of the vast majority of the population. They are pure BS.

Unless you own a nice home free and clear in America and Europe right now or you're quite wealthy it's difficult to live a high quality of life.

By comparison I live very well in Thailand (in a smaller town admittedly) on a relatively modest income. The difference in the cost of living is astonishing, especially if you take into account things like labor cost of home repairs vehicle repairs and things of that nature.

Complete nonsense, groceries cost the same in virtual all of Europe, if you then look at what you actually receive in those countries for the taxes you pay, as well the minimum you would get, even if having no job at all, it is 3-5 times better than what you would be at in life in Thailand as a Thai or poor farang. Not even talking specifics such as healthcare, education, social welfare and much more, good roads and infrastructure, real policing.

Americans seem to be delusional in general, specially lately with Europe on top, constantly bashing Europe for things, or saying Europe has the exact same problems. UK does that too. While in reality it is UK who is worst off followed by USA. Perhaps the geniuses americans are actually speak of Europe as a continent somehow and think that UK is 90% of that continent.

To not even start about most of eastern europe, where life is still as good as it was 20-30 years ago, for 90% of it. Even far better today.

The irony is that the only relative problem that exist with housing shortages is also caused by americans; blackrock and co. And all that housing shortage news and insanity pricing is not even factual truth in the majority of provinces/states/cities. It's big / rich city issues. Same for migrants causing issues.

DonniePeverley Platinum Member

DonniePeverley

Advanced Member

How does he earn his £800 ?

And that is really frugal living if you factor in rent, insurance, electricity, water, food, eating out etc - that's even before entertainment.

Thailand isn't cheap for a good standard of living.

If you are okay eating raw pork in boiled dishwasher water, never turn the a/c on, sip on one drink all night slowly, live in a cardboard box, then maybe you could get by.

Personally i never believe any of these 'i moved to thailand stories' that appear once a year in the UK tabloids.

Also these streamers who derive income from social media - most should be declaring that to the UK.

DonniePeverley Platinum Member

DonniePeverley

Advanced Member
2 hours ago, Rockyroad said:

Tipping is optional. I never tip 20 baht in a restaurant. Krapow Moo is 45 baht in my Bangkok regular. Cafe Boran is 25 baht.

Thai wages are low but farangs spend money helping the economy. There is also dual pricing. Stuff tipping when you have to pay 5x the Thai price!

Where are you eating in Bangkok? The finer establishments add the service charge and VAT on top.

candide Star Member

candide

Advanced Member
8 hours ago, Hummin said:

What was more sustainable, being a musician back then, or social media today? We do not really know, do we? How old were you? And did you already have a pension?

Obviously, you are one of the winners. Not everyone is so lucky, and many struggle. Thailand versus the UK? I do not know what is worse.

And honestly, I truly believe that for a good life in Thailand, you need a good partner, especially if you are dependent on making a living here. We also know little about him and how he plans to secure his future. Maybe he has more foundation than we know.

Most people earn peanuts on social media. Ex YouTube: for 1 million views it's $1000 for long videos, and $10 to $50 for shorts. Only the top influencers really earn money.

Rockyroad Platinum Member

Rockyroad

Advanced Member
11 minutes ago, DonniePeverley said:

How does he earn his £800 ?

And that is really frugal living if you factor in rent, insurance, electricity, water, food, eating out etc - that's even before entertainment.

Thailand isn't cheap for a good standard of living.

If you are okay eating raw pork in boiled dishwasher water, never turn the a/c on, sip on one drink all night slowly, live in a cardboard box, then maybe you could get by.

Personally i never believe any of these 'i moved to thailand stories' that appear once a year in the UK tabloids.

Also these streamers who derive income from social media - most should be declaring that to the UK.

Thais live on 10,000 baht. 35,000 is fine if you don't hire women.

wil iam not Gold Member

wil iam not

Advanced Member
2 hours ago, kwilco said:

He doesn't appear to have any Thai friends

How do you come to that conclusion please?

SAFETY FIRST Star Member

SAFETY FIRST

Advanced Member
12 minutes ago, Rockyroad said:

Thais live on 10,000 baht. 35,000 is fine if you don't hire women.

But he won't have 35k baht.

He's a content creator living in Thailand, he will be taxed.

When I'm working in Thailand, I am paid USD, My employer pays my taxes, I don't know the Thai tax rate.

Who knows his taxable income?

Anyway, how do you know that he won't hire women?

Scouse123 Ruby Member

Scouse123

Advanced Member
8 hours ago, simon43 said:

While life might seem good for this man right now, I wonder if he has thought about the long-term finances that will be needed as he ages. Is he still contributing to his UK state pension? If he is on a DTV visa now, then bear in mind that it's a once-off visa of 5 years, and no re-application for a further 5 years is allowed under the visa rules.

And why is his photo mirrored (back-to-front)? Do these content providers not check their content for 'technical' correctness before posting it?

I am not sure if I follow,

When this DTV visa expires, he or whoever, make a fresh application from outside Thailand for a new one.

Srikcir Ruby Member

Srikcir

Advanced Member
7 hours ago, Chomper Higgot said:

I’d have to see his health insurance before I answered that.

Also his current health record, especially if he carries Thai private health insurance that typically does not cover pre-existing conditions.

At 45 he should start taking annual physical checkups, keep up to date on vaccinations, etc.

Rockyroad Platinum Member

Rockyroad

Advanced Member

This place is 8000 a

3 minutes ago, SAFETY FIRST said:

But he won't have 35k baht.

He's a content creator living in Thailand, he will be taxed.

When working in Thailand, I'm paid USD and My employer pays my taxes.

Whoknows his taxable income

British man who left the UK due to rising living costs says he now lives comfortably in Chiang Mai, Thailand, on just GBP800 a month, compared with more than GBP3,000.

The guy lives on 800 and says he is happy.

Rockyroad Platinum Member

Rockyroad

Advanced Member
1 minute ago, Srikcir said:

Also his current health record, especially if he carries Thai private health insurance that typically does not cover pre-existing conditions.

At 45 he should start taking annual physical checkups, keep up to date on vaccinations, etc.

Why? I have not been to a doctor in 4 years and I'm older than him. Doctors are for sick people.

AlexRich Gold Member

AlexRich

Advanced Member

Chiang Mai is a great place to stay, outside burning season. So the reality is 6 months in CM and 6 months elsewhere.

Scouse123 Ruby Member

Scouse123

Advanced Member

@atpeace your health insurance seems cheap in your monthly budget?

DonniePeverley Platinum Member

DonniePeverley

Advanced Member
17 minutes ago, Rockyroad said:

Thais live on 10,000 baht. 35,000 is fine if you don't hire women.

17 minutes ago, Rockyroad said:

Thais live on 10,000 baht. 35,000 is fine if you don't hire women.

So your aim is to live as frugal as possible ? Then what is the point of going to Thailand.

What would your rent? Insurance? Food? So you stay at home and don't do anything? You don't buy clothes ? Don't eat out? Don't go for any trips anywhere?

That's not something to shout about.

Hummin Star Member

Hummin

Advanced Member
6 minutes ago, Rockyroad said:

This place is 8000 a

British man who left the UK due to rising living costs says he now lives comfortably in Chiang Mai, Thailand, on just GBP800 a month, compared with more than GBP3,000.

The guy lives on 800 and says he is happy.

What is your budget ?

Rockyroad Platinum Member

Rockyroad

Advanced Member
1 minute ago, DonniePeverley said:

So your aim is to live as frugal as possible ? Then what is the point of going to Thailand.

What would your rent? Insurance? Food? So you stay at home and don't do anything? You don't buy clothes ? Don't eat out? Don't go for any trips anywhere?

That's not something to shout about.

The guy said he is happy on 800 gbp which is 35,000 baht. Eating out costs 50 to 100 baht in small places. Trains are cheap. Motorbikes are cheap. Gyms are cheap. Massages are cheap.

6 minutes ago, DonniePeverley said:

So your aim is to live as frugal as possible ? Then what is the point of going to Thailand.

What would your rent? Insurance? Food? So you stay at home and don't do anything? You don't buy clothes ? Don't eat out? Don't go for any trips anywhere?

That's not something to shout about.

The cost of living in Chiang Mai is highly dependent on your lifestyle, particularly when it comes to your housing choices and diet. For a single person, a realistic monthly budget ranges from $650 USD (approx. ฿22,000 THB) on the budget/local end to $1,200+ USD (approx. ฿41,000+ THB) for a more comfortable digital nomad or expat lifestyle.

geisha Platinum Member

geisha

Advanced Member
10 hours ago, Nemises said:

He's living the absolute dream on £800 a month... right up until Burning Season hits, and he has to spend his entire budget on air purifiers and inhalers.

You don’t know that.

Rockyroad Platinum Member

Rockyroad

Advanced Member
5 minutes ago, Hummin said:

What is your budget ?

1500 to 3000 baht a day but i travel. He is in one spot.

wil iam not Gold Member

wil iam not

Advanced Member
2 hours ago, BarraMarra said:

All and all comes in just under 4 thousand pounds.

Would love to see a photo. Mine cost me Bht 3M which at the time (2012) was GBP60k.

4 hours ago, SAFETY FIRST said:

I reckon you missed my point.

How can anyone live on a monthly income of 800, less tax.

Where will he pay tax, not in UK for sure. And the Thai tax system is prestty easy to understand, and claim many allowances.

Or House.jpg

norsurin Gold Member

norsurin

Advanced Member
38 minutes ago, DonniePeverley said:

How does he earn his £800 ?

And that is really frugal living if you factor in rent, insurance, electricity, water, food, eating out etc - that's even before entertainment.

Thailand isn't cheap for a good standard of living.

If you are okay eating raw pork in boiled dishwasher water, never turn the a/c on, sip on one drink all night slowly, live in a cardboard box, then maybe you could get by.

Personally i never believe any of these 'i moved to thailand stories' that appear once a year in the UK tabloids.

Also these streamers who derive income from social media - most should be declaring that to the UK.

True! This guy posts on FB all day long coming with advices even he not been in Thailand for a year yet.He and other foreigners think they r thai experts.

geisha Platinum Member

geisha

Advanced Member
6 minutes ago, Hummin said:

What is your budget ?

I could easily live on 25000 Baht a month spending. Add on rent , and health insurance. All my working life I thought I would retire to Phuket. While I had the means, giving up my excellent health care which is free is a worry. Now I’m quite happy spending a few months as I did for nigh on 40 years.

SAFETY FIRST Star Member

SAFETY FIRST

Advanced Member
5 minutes ago, wil iam not said:

Where will he pay tax, not in UK for sure. And the Thai tax system is prestty easy to understand, and claim many allowances.

The Thai tax department are coming down heavy on these content creators.

Most of content creators are misaligned, unhinged, not normal. He'll be taxed.

newbee2022 Star Member

newbee2022

Advanced Member
4 hours ago, Nick Carter icp said:

The food Court up on the 4 th floor is no longer there

No, but in the basement

Rockyroad Platinum Member

Rockyroad

Advanced Member
2 minutes ago, SAFETY FIRST said:

The Thai tax department are coming down heavy on these content creators.

Most of content creators are misaligned, unhinged, not normal. He'll be taxed.

Likely he makes investment income and his content business has no real income yet having just started. Would take a year or more to build a revenue stream.

Nemises Gold Member

Nemises

Advanced Member
15 minutes ago, geisha said:

You don’t know that.

Really, Einstein? It was pretty obviously a joke… but thanks for the forensic fact-check anyway. 😂

Rockyroad Platinum Member

Rockyroad

Advanced Member
23 minutes ago, Hummin said:

What is your budget ?

What is your budget?

Off Piste Silver Member

Off Piste

Advanced Member
16 minutes ago, wil iam not said:

Would love to see a photo. Mine cost me Bht 3M which at the time (2012) was GBP60k.

Or House.jpg

Phenomenal for 3M Thb, even in 2012.........................

Hummin Star Member

Hummin

Advanced Member
9 minutes ago, Rockyroad said:

1500 to 3000 baht a day but i travel. He is in one spot.

Thats a solid budget, more than I transfer for a month. Our budget without travelling is about 30k for all expenses for 5 people, 6 animals, and two persons work 4 days at the farm a week.

newnative Diamond Member

newnative

Advanced Member
5 hours ago, oslooskar said:

I would argue that we do not really extend our lifespan by following healthy practices. Rather, we avoid shortening it. In other words, the body may have a certain natural lifespan potential, and habits such as smoking, obesity, poor diet, inactivity, excessive alcohol consumption, and chronic stress can subtract years from that potential. Healthy practices like intermittent fasting may simply help us preserve more of our lifespan we were biologically capable of achieving in the first place.

This makes sense to me. My Dad lived to age 95, my Mom to 101. Both smoked most of their lives but quit in their 60s, Mom because she thought smoking made her look older as younger women weren't smoking as much. Both drank alcohol all their lives but in moderation. No special diets but Dad did eat sardines once a week after he retired.

Create an account or sign in to comment

Account

Navigation

Search

Search

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.