Student International
Talk through your options
Thailand · English

Clear study abroad planning, made for students in Thailand.

For students preparing university study abroad from Thailand — whether you are completing Mathayom 6, sitting A Level, IB, or AP examinations, studying at an international or bilingual school, taking a GED where accepted, moving through a foundation or vocational diploma, or progressing from an undergraduate degree. We help turn your pathway into a clear, family-aware plan with the timing, budget, and practicalities of leaving Thailand built in from the start.

Studying abroad from Thailand is shaped by decisions that do not appear on a generic study abroad page: which pathway you are on, when your results arrive, whether the plan is self-funded or supported by a scholarship, sponsor, employer, or family arrangement, what the budget looks like in baht, and how Bangkok or your home region fits into visa and travel logistics.

Our role is to make those decisions feel ordered rather than rushed. We work alongside students and parents in Thailand to map the pathway, sequence the steps, and protect the choices that matter most along the way.

What changes from Thailand

Five pressures that shape the plan.

Most students from Thailand are not weighing only a destination. They are weighing five practical decisions at the same time, and the order in which those decisions are taken often matters as much as the answers themselves.

This is the lens we begin every conversation with — so the first conversation is grounded in your actual situation, not a generic checklist.

  • Current pathway and result timing — Mathayom 6 completion around February or March, A Level results in August, IB results in July, AP scores in July, international school calendars, and foundation or vocational diploma completion dates, all set against UK September, Australia and New Zealand February or July, US August or September, and European intakes that vary by university.
  • Pre-university pathway mapping — Mathayom 6, GED where accepted, A Level, IB, AP, international school, bilingual school, foundation, and vocational diploma routes each open different overseas entry points and timelines for direct entry, foundation year, or pathway programmes abroad.
  • Self-funded, scholarship, or sponsored routes — Thai government scholarship routes, OCSC-related routes where current rules allow, university awards, private foundations, family funding, bank support, and employer-sponsored routes follow different sequences from fully self-funded applicants.
  • THB budget framing — tuition, living costs, deposits, flights, and visa preparation read differently in Thai baht than in destination currency, especially as exchange rates move during the planning year.
  • Thailand-side logistics — Bangkok or regional departure timing, visa appointments handled from Thailand, document translation, and the practicalities of leaving home for the first time.
Where to begin

Two ways to explore.

Some students arrive knowing the country. Others arrive knowing the kind of support they need. Pick the route that matches where you are today.

Explore by service.

If you already know what you need help with — applications, scholarship and funding sequencing, the visa, or staying supported through the year — start with the Thailand services hub.

  • Application support and personal statements
  • Scholarship guidance and funding sequencing
  • Study visa preparation from Thailand
  • Mentorship and welfare planning
See study abroad services for Thai students

Explore by destination.

If you are still comparing destinations, start there. Each page covers what study, daily life, costs, and the application timeline actually look like from Thailand.

  • United Kingdom — the most established undergraduate route for Thai families
  • Australia and New Zealand — semester-aligned alternatives
  • United States and Canada — broader course profiles
  • Europe and beyond — English-taught and value routes
Compare destinations from Thailand
How we work

A planning approach grounded in your starting point.

Four stages take you from where you are now in Thailand to a confident first day abroad — with the same adviser involved end to end.

  1. 1

    Map your starting point.

    Begin with your current pathway, your result month, your self-funded or scholarship plan, and your family decision context. The plan is built outward from where you actually are, not from a generic profile-and-goals discovery.

  2. 2

    Match destinations to your timeline.

    Compare destinations and entry routes against your results month, your pathway, and your budget — so the shortlist is one your timeline can realistically support, not one that forces a scramble.

  3. 3

    Sequence applications, funding, and visa.

    Manage university applications, scholarship or sponsor confirmation, and visa document readiness as one connected timeline — because for most students from Thailand these stages are interlocked, not separate.

  4. 4

    Stay supported through arrival.

    Continue alongside the student through accommodation, Bangkok or regional departure timing, and the first weeks abroad — keeping family informed back in Thailand without taking the lead away from the student.

Begin

Start with a clear next step, from Thailand.

A first conversation is short and obligation-free. We listen first, share what we see, and outline the next two or three practical steps to take — together with the family if that helps.