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2x half million baht donation for police

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I can no longer cope with the extremely loud motorbike noise in Thailand/Pattaya and plan to move to another country if things don't improve.

I’m trying to sell my apartment, but potential buyers lose interest when they stand on the balcony and hear big bikes and scooters with modified exhaust pipes speeding by (Pattaya has turned into a racing circuit, with riders reaching 100 km/h where only 40 km/h is permitted), producing roaring and crackling noises. I will have to lower my fair price from around 12 million to well below 10 (maybe below 9) in order to attract a buyer.

That is why I am offering half a million baht to the local commander of the traffic police in Pattaya, as well as to the commander of the Royal Thai Traffic Police. They can donate it to charity or use it to hire additional traffic police.
I will provide this total of one million baht if they remove all extremely loud scooters (without silencers or with modified exhaust pipes) and big bikes (with modified exhaust pipes) from the roads in Pattaya and throughout Thailand.
By “remove,” I mean confiscate the vehicles for at least one month (+ a fine) and destroy the illegal exhaust pipe. In the case of a second offense, the bikes or scooters should be confiscated for six months and a hefty fine imposed.

Additionally, close (permanently) all shops that sell or install these illegal exhaust pipes. Close all motorbike rental shops for at least one month if they rent out big bikes with modified loud exhaust pipes or rent to tourists without a proper driving license. For the next offense, close the business permanently.

Thailand, not land of smiles, but land of noise...

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  • For bt12 million I'd like to think I'd have a balcony with a far better view than overlooking a busy/noisy street.

  • ScottinPattaya
    ScottinPattaya

    You are wrong: The general speed limit inside Thai cities and built-up areas is 50–60 km/h (approximately 30–37 mph). In specific, highly congested areas, near schools, or around the Grand Palace in B

  • Personally I would put your money towards relocation costs as the odds would be against you......or anything changing in the short/medium term.

  • Popular Post
2 minutes ago, ScottinPattaya said:

where only 40 km/h is permitted

Where is that? Even school zones are 50 kph.

Normal speed limit in town in Thailand is 80kph.

Fixation on things is not healthy. Best practise ignoring the thing. OR fitting double or triple glazed patio doors with different thicknesses of glass. Patio doors are cheap here. getting them to use different thicknesses will be the hassle

As an example seamen used to the pulsing throb of the mechanical systems in ships only wake unexpectedly when the noise stops.

  • Author
  • Popular Post
1 minute ago, VocalNeal said:

Where is that? Even school zones are 50 kph.

Normal speed limit in town in Thailand is 80kph.

Fixation on things is not healthy. Best practise ignoring the thing.

As an example seamen used to the pulsing throb of the mechanical systems in ships only wake unexpectedly when the noise stops.

Some parts of Thepprasith Rd: 30/h.
And even when it is 50-60, then 100/h is still crazy

I edited my post . Double glazing on the patio doors. Using different thicknesses of glass.

  • Author
  • Popular Post
9 minutes ago, VocalNeal said:

Where is that? Even school zones are 50 kph.

Normal speed limit in town in Thailand is 80kph.

Fixation on things is not healthy. Best practise ignoring the thing. OR fitting double or triple glazed patio doors with different thicknesses of glass. Patio doors are cheap here. getting them to use different thicknesses will be the hassle

As an example seamen used to the pulsing throb of the mechanical systems in ships only wake unexpectedly when the noise stops.

You are wrong:
The general speed limit inside Thai cities and built-up areas is

50–60 km/h (approximately 30–37 mph). In specific, highly congested areas, near schools, or around the Grand Palace in Bangkok, the limit is often reduced to 30–50 km/h. Always check for posted signs, as they may override the general limit. 

  • City/Urban Limit: 50–60 km/h

  • Bangkok City Centre: 60 km/h generally, 50 km/h on specific inner-city roads.

  • School/Congested Zones: 30–40 km/h.

  • Highway/Open Roads: 90–120 km/h

  • Author

Sitting on the balcony, even sitting on the beach is unpleasant. We have to stop talking because we can’t hear each other anymore.
Riding my scooter and suddenly being passed by a thundering noise is scary.

  • Popular Post
27 minutes ago, ScottinPattaya said:

if things don't improve.

Personally I would put your money towards relocation costs as the odds would be against you......or anything changing in the short/medium term.

1 hour ago, ScottinPattaya said:

I can no longer cope with the extremely loud motorbike noise in Thailand/Pattaya and plan to move to another country if things don't improve

Thailand has been my home for over 20 years, this issue you've addressed has always been here.

Why did you move here, now you are complaining?

  • Popular Post

For bt12 million I'd like to think I'd have a balcony with a far better view than overlooking a busy/noisy street.

1 hour ago, ScottinPattaya said:

You are wrong:
The general speed limit inside Thai cities and built-up areas is

50–60 km/h (approximately 30–37 mph).

No @ScottinPattaya You are wrong.

I didn't see that in the driving test. Only this one.

https://driving.information.in.th/images/speed-limits%20in%20thailand.webp

There is also this. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speed_limits_in_Thailand

"Thailand has a maximum speed limit of 80 km/h in municipal areas," -https://www.motorist.co.th/en/article/3984/the-6-most-ignored-traffic-rules-in-thailand

Pattaya must not be classed as a built-up or even grown-up area.

But at least if you drive at 60 kph in built-up areas you won't get your photo taken.

  • Popular Post
5 hours ago, ScottinPattaya said:

I can no longer cope with the extremely loud motorbike noise in Thailand/Pattaya and plan to move to another country if things don't improve.

I’m trying to sell my apartment, but potential buyers lose interest when they stand on the balcony and hear big bikes and scooters with modified exhaust pipes speeding by (Pattaya has turned into a racing circuit, with riders reaching 100 km/h where only 40 km/h is permitted), producing roaring and crackling noises. I will have to lower my fair price from around 12 million to well below 10 (maybe below 9) in order to attract a buyer.

That is why I am offering half a million baht to the local commander of the traffic police in Pattaya, as well as to the commander of the Royal Thai Traffic Police. They can donate it to charity or use it to hire additional traffic police.
I will provide this total of one million baht if they remove all extremely loud scooters (without silencers or with modified exhaust pipes) and big bikes (with modified exhaust pipes) from the roads in Pattaya and throughout Thailand.
By “remove,” I mean confiscate the vehicles for at least one month (+ a fine) and destroy the illegal exhaust pipe. In the case of a second offense, the bikes or scooters should be confiscated for six months and a hefty fine imposed.

Additionally, close (permanently) all shops that sell or install these illegal exhaust pipes. Close all motorbike rental shops for at least one month if they rent out big bikes with modified loud exhaust pipes or rent to tourists without a proper driving license. For the next offense, close the business permanently.

Thailand, not land of smiles, but land of noise...

Thailand land of noise?

Depends on where you live.

I live in a Bangkok suburb and the most noise I hear is from call to prayer at the nearby mosque.

Never hear noise late at night either from my apartment block or from other homes or traffic in the

neighborhood.

My street is nearly a cul de sac, really a short loop with access at each end, more 4 door sedans than

motorcycles on my street.

My rent is higher than average, hence no apartments shared by groups of drunken louts making noise.

I don't know if access is restricted, (there is a guard shack at each of the two entrances to the little enclave where I live) but the only street vendors are the ice cream guy and the broom seller. I see them less frequently than daily.

Today I could hear someone playing music somewhere nearby, but not loud, it could hardly be heard over my fan.

That is very rare so I noticed it.

If you were looking for a quiet spot I think you just picked the wrong location on a busy street in Pattaya.

9 hours ago, ScottinPattaya said:

I can no longer cope with the extremely loud motorbike noise in Thailand/Pattaya and plan to move to another country if things don't improve.

I’m trying to sell my apartment, but potential buyers lose interest when they stand on the balcony and hear big bikes and scooters with modified exhaust pipes speeding by (Pattaya has turned into a racing circuit, with riders reaching 100 km/h where only 40 km/h is permitted), producing roaring and crackling noises. I will have to lower my fair price from around 12 million to well below 10 (maybe below 9) in order to attract a buyer.

That is why I am offering half a million baht to the local commander of the traffic police in Pattaya, as well as to the commander of the Royal Thai Traffic Police. They can donate it to charity or use it to hire additional traffic police.
I will provide this total of one million baht if they remove all extremely loud scooters (without silencers or with modified exhaust pipes) and big bikes (with modified exhaust pipes) from the roads in Pattaya and throughout Thailand.
By “remove,” I mean confiscate the vehicles for at least one month (+ a fine) and destroy the illegal exhaust pipe. In the case of a second offense, the bikes or scooters should be confiscated for six months and a hefty fine imposed.

Additionally, close (permanently) all shops that sell or install these illegal exhaust pipes. Close all motorbike rental shops for at least one month if they rent out big bikes with modified loud exhaust pipes or rent to tourists without a proper driving license. For the next offense, close the business permanently.

Thailand, not land of smiles, but land of noise...

Soundproofing. It'll cost less and achieve more.

  • Popular Post
9 hours ago, ScottinPattaya said:

That is why I am offering half a million baht to the local commander of the traffic police in Pattaya, as well as to the commander of the Royal Thai Traffic Police.

Top cops don't even get out of bed for that sort of money.

9 hours ago, ScottinPattaya said:

I can no longer cope with the extremely loud motorbike noise in Thailand/Pattaya and plan to move to another country if things don't improve

I empathize with your frustration. Once, I was standing under the BTS line when a loud vehicle drove by, and the overhead BTS infrastructure amplified the noise. I dislike loud vehicles and wish action would be taken against them.

On 2/5/2026 at 11:55 AM, ScottinPattaya said:

Sitting on the balcony, even sitting on the beach is unpleasant. We have to stop talking because we can’t hear each other anymore.
Riding my scooter and suddenly being passed by a thundering noise is scary.

Could happen in any country, more especially the second scenario; trucks / big trucks etec., exist world wide.

The whole thread surprises me. Loud motorcycle exhausts are surely not a reason to move to another country. There uncountable locationon the beaches / inland/ in villages where this is not a serious problem. Too fussy...

On 2/5/2026 at 4:37 AM, VocalNeal said:

...

As an example seamen used to the pulsing throb of the mechanical systems in ships only wake unexpectedly when the noise stops.

Yes, but that's because the ship is about to sink... :)

On 2/5/2026 at 1:05 PM, SAFETY FIRST said:

Thailand has been my home for over 20 years, this issue you've addressed has always been here.

Why did you move here, now you are complaining?

I think it has got a lot worse in the last 3-4 years. My theory is that the stoners coming here for cheap weed are buying these big bikes and racing around to show off. They come down Thappraya Road like its the Le Mans straight blipping their throttles. Sad the police do nothing about it.

On 2/5/2026 at 11:31 AM, ScottinPattaya said:

I can no longer cope with the extremely loud motorbike noise in Thailand/Pattaya and plan to move to another country if things don't improve.

I’m trying to sell my apartment, but potential buyers lose interest when they stand on the balcony and hear big bikes and scooters with modified exhaust pipes speeding by (Pattaya has turned into a racing circuit, with riders reaching 100 km/h where only 40 km/h is permitted), producing roaring and crackling noises. I will have to lower my fair price from around 12 million to well below 10 (maybe below 9) in order to attract a buyer.

That is why I am offering half a million baht to the local commander of the traffic police in Pattaya, as well as to the commander of the Royal Thai Traffic Police. They can donate it to charity or use it to hire additional traffic police.
I will provide this total of one million baht if they remove all extremely loud scooters (without silencers or with modified exhaust pipes) and big bikes (with modified exhaust pipes) from the roads in Pattaya and throughout Thailand.
By “remove,” I mean confiscate the vehicles for at least one month (+ a fine) and destroy the illegal exhaust pipe. In the case of a second offense, the bikes or scooters should be confiscated for six months and a hefty fine imposed.

Additionally, close (permanently) all shops that sell or install these illegal exhaust pipes. Close all motorbike rental shops for at least one month if they rent out big bikes with modified loud exhaust pipes or rent to tourists without a proper driving license. For the next offense, close the business permanently.

Thailand, not land of smiles, but land of noise...

Lol

They'll take your money and nothing will change

1 You bought a low floor

2 Pattaya is Pattaya you should have known that

3 Condo market is grossly inflated

Have a nice day

My sister is a realtor and one of her favorite sayings is, 'There's a buyer for every property'. She used the example of what she thought was a very unattractive house she listed that had what she thought was a different horrible wallpaper pattern in every room. She thought it would be a struggle to find a buyer but, soon enough, she showed the house and a buyer loved the different wallpaper and bought the house on the spot.

There's a buyer for your condo. If the street noise is even very noticeable inside with the sliders and windows closed, you should consider better windows that block the sound more. If it's ok inside when they are closed, don't bother.

Then, do two things, price it correctly, possibly with the help of a few realtors. Second, make sure you list it with every single agency you can find. You need maximum exposure and Thailand does not have a multiple listing service (MLS). I would consider offering an agent bonus, along with the 5% commission. Send an email to all the realtors that you can find, with a good description and good photos. The last property we sold, I think I sent the listing to over 30 agencies.

It might take some time but a buyer will be along at some point. Make sure the condo is in tip-top condition, everything works, and declutter to the max before you take the photos. Always have it ready to be shown with a few minutes notice. Good luck!

  • Popular Post

I had a friend who couldn’t stand the smell of fish but he bought a place next to the fish market and complained all the time. 😂

On 2/5/2026 at 11:31 AM, ScottinPattaya said:

I can no longer cope with the extremely loud motorbike noise in Thailand/Pattaya and plan to move to another country if things don't improve.

I’m trying to sell my apartment, but potential buyers lose interest when they stand on the balcony and hear big bikes and scooters with modified exhaust pipes speeding by (Pattaya has turned into a racing circuit, with riders reaching 100 km/h where only 40 km/h is permitted), producing roaring and crackling noises. I will have to lower my fair price from around 12 million to well below 10 (maybe below 9) in order to attract a buyer.

That is why I am offering half a million baht to the local commander of the traffic police in Pattaya, as well as to the commander of the Royal Thai Traffic Police. They can donate it to charity or use it to hire additional traffic police.
I will provide this total of one million baht if they remove all extremely loud scooters (without silencers or with modified exhaust pipes) and big bikes (with modified exhaust pipes) from the roads in Pattaya and throughout Thailand.
By “remove,” I mean confiscate the vehicles for at least one month (+ a fine) and destroy the illegal exhaust pipe. In the case of a second offense, the bikes or scooters should be confiscated for six months and a hefty fine imposed.

Additionally, close (permanently) all shops that sell or install these illegal exhaust pipes. Close all motorbike rental shops for at least one month if they rent out big bikes with modified loud exhaust pipes or rent to tourists without a proper driving license. For the next offense, close the business permanently.

Thailand, not land of smiles, but land of noise...

Certainly wouldn't be a land of smiles if you were running the show now would it!

Do you seriously expect that if you handed over that amount of cash, that it would be used for the purposes you suggest? Really?

On 2/5/2026 at 11:37 AM, VocalNeal said:

Where is that? Even school zones are 50 kph.

At the school zones in my area, there are BLUE circles with a white 30 on them about 0.5 km either side of school. THEN, a red 30 sign much closer to the schools.

On 2/4/2026 at 11:46 PM, VocalNeal said:

I edited my post . Double glazing on the patio doors. Using different thicknesses of glass.

If the windows face the sun, the double glazing will turn the apartment into an oven. That's the downside of urban high insulation.

3 hours ago, Patong2021 said:

If the windows face the sun, the double glazing will turn the apartment into an oven. That's the downside of urban high insulation.

Not according to Google:

Double glazing generally makes a room more comfortable, not hotter. While it excels at trapping heat inside during winter to reduce heating costs, it also acts as a barrier that limits hot air from entering during summer, keeping rooms cooler. It reduces heat transfer, not increases it, despite common misconceptions.

4 hours ago, Patong2021 said:

If the windows face the sun, the double glazing will turn the apartment into an oven.

How? Does double glazing let in more heat than single glazing?

1 minute ago, Liverpool Lou said:

How? Does double glazing let in more heat than single glazing?

Double glazing generally makes a room more comfortable, not hotter. While it excels at trapping heat inside during winter to reduce heating costs, it also acts as a barrier that limits hot air from entering during summer, keeping rooms cooler. It reduces heat transfer, not increases it, despite common misconceptions.

On 2/5/2026 at 11:31 AM, ScottinPattaya said:

I’m trying to sell my apartment, but potential buyers lose interest when they stand on the balcony and hear big bikes and scooters with modified exhaust pipes speeding by (Pattaya has turned into a racing circuit, with riders reaching 100 km/h where only 40 km/h is permitted), producing roaring and crackling noises. I will have to lower my fair price from around 12 million to well below 10 (maybe below 9) in order to attract a buyer.

That is why I am offering half a million baht to the local commander of the traffic police in Pattaya, as well as to the commander of the Royal Thai Traffic Police

Yeah, right, of course you are.

If I was willing to spend 1 million baht in order to get some action from the police to make life in my B12 million condo more comfortable I, too, would be posting the offer on Asean Now, It would be absolutely pointless to be directing the proposal to the police or Pattaya City Hall, wouldn't it?

On 2/5/2026 at 11:31 AM, ScottinPattaya said:

I can no longer cope with the extremely loud motorbike noise in Thailand/Pattaya and plan to move to another country if things don't improve.

I’m trying to sell my apartment, but potential buyers lose interest when they stand on the balcony and hear big bikes and scooters with modified exhaust pipes speeding by (Pattaya has turned into a racing circuit, with riders reaching 100 km/h where only 40 km/h is permitted), producing roaring and crackling noises. I will have to lower my fair price from around 12 million to well below 10 (maybe below 9) in order to attract a buyer.

That is why I am offering half a million baht to the local commander of the traffic police in Pattaya, as well as to the commander of the Royal Thai Traffic Police. They can donate it to charity or use it to hire additional traffic police.
I will provide this total of one million baht if they remove all extremely loud scooters (without silencers or with modified exhaust pipes) and big bikes (with modified exhaust pipes) from the roads in Pattaya and throughout Thailand.
By “remove,” I mean confiscate the vehicles for at least one month (+ a fine) and destroy the illegal exhaust pipe. In the case of a second offense, the bikes or scooters should be confiscated for six months and a hefty fine imposed.

Additionally, close (permanently) all shops that sell or install these illegal exhaust pipes. Close all motorbike rental shops for at least one month if they rent out big bikes with modified loud exhaust pipes or rent to tourists without a proper driving license. For the next offense, close the business permanently.

Thailand, not land of smiles, but land of noise...

That's scandalous even preposterous suggesting that a Thai policeman would accept money.

17 minutes ago, newnative said:

Double glazing generally makes a room more comfortable, not hotter. While it excels at trapping heat inside during winter to reduce heating costs, it also acts as a barrier that limits hot air from entering during summer, keeping rooms cooler. It reduces heat transfer, not increases it, despite common misconceptions.

I know, hence my post, tell him, not me.

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