Student International
Talk through your options
Thailand · Destinations

Compare study abroad destinations from Thailand.

Choosing where to study is rarely about ranking alone. From Thailand, the realistic shortlist is shaped by your current pathway, when your results land, what your scholarship route or family budget can support, and how the destination's intake calendar sits against your year. We help you compare those choices in a sensible order.

What to compare first

Five things that shape the shortlist from Thailand.

Most destination decisions from Thailand turn on five practical factors. The order in which you weigh them matters as much as the answers, because each one quietly closes or opens routes the others depend on.

This is the lens we use before any country is ruled in or out — so the first conversation reflects your real Thai starting point, not a generic global comparison.

  • Qualification fit by destination — Mathayom 6, GED where accepted, A Level, IB, AP, international school, bilingual school, foundation, vocational diploma, and degree routes each open different undergraduate or postgraduate entry points across the UK, Australia, the US, Canada, New Zealand, Germany, the Netherlands, and the wider European route.
  • Result-to-intake calendar — Mathayom 6 completion around February or March, A Level results in August, IB results in July, AP scores in July, set against UK September, Australia and New Zealand February or July, US August or September, and European intakes that vary by university.
  • Baht-to-destination-currency total cost — tuition, living costs, deposits, flights, and visa preparation read very differently in THB than in destination currency, especially as exchange rates move during the planning year.
  • Scholarship, government, or self-funded routing — Thai government scholarship routes, OCSC-related routes where current rules allow, university awards, private foundations, employer support, and family-funded plans constrain or guide destination choice. Self-funded students follow a different sequence.
  • Visa, accommodation, and family-communication considerations — visa appointment availability from Bangkok or regional Thailand, accommodation booking windows, travel distance, and how a family in Thailand stays informed once the student is abroad.
Family-aware planning

Reassurance built into the destination decision.

Parents and guardians in Thailand ask sensible questions about cost, safety, accommodation, and how a student stays connected. We make those answers part of the comparison, not an afterthought.

  1. 1

    Read the budget honestly in baht.

    Tuition, living costs, deposits, flights, visa preparation, and accommodation translated into THB — so the family conversation is about the real total, not the brochure number.

  2. 2

    Match safety and welfare to the family lens.

    Accommodation standards, city size, distance from Bangkok or your region, and welfare support — the practical concerns that shape parental confidence before any application is sent.

  3. 3

    Keep family communication student-led.

    Parents stay informed at the right moments without taking the planning lead away from the student. The student remains the decision-maker; the family stays close enough to feel secure.

Begin

Choose a destination with more clarity, from Thailand.

A first conversation is short and obligation-free. We listen first, then suggest two or three destinations worth comparing in more depth against your pathway, your result month, and your baht budget.