# Renting a scooter in Chiang Mai: the honest guide

> How to rent a scooter in Chiang Mai: licence rules, helmets, prices, deposits (never leave your passport), insurance and safe riding — told honestly.

A scooter is the cheapest freedom in Chiang Mai: park anywhere, weave to any café, ride into the hills on a whim. It's how much of the city gets around. But we'll be straight with you — as our [safety guide](/blog/is-chiang-mai-safe) says, **the roads are the single biggest real risk** here, far more than crime. So this guide is equal parts "how to rent" and "how not to get hurt."

## Licence & the law

By Thai law you need a **valid motorcycle licence** to ride — even a little 110–125cc automatic. For visitors that means an **International Driving Permit (IDP) with the motorcycle category** (matching a motorbike licence back home), or a **Thai licence**. A car-only licence doesn't cover bikes.

This isn't just bureaucracy. **Police checkpoints** do stop riders to check licences and helmets, with on-the-spot fines. More importantly, most travel insurers only cover motorbike accidents if you held the **correct licence** and wore a helmet — so riding without one can **void your insurance** when you most need it. Plenty of tourists ride anyway and shops still rent to them; our honest advice is to ride only if you're properly licensed.

![Renting a scooter in Chiang Mai: the honest guide](/blog/renting-a-scooter-chiang-mai/visual.webp)

## Helmets & staying upright

Helmets are **legally required** for rider and passenger, and they're the easiest way to turn a life-changing injury into a minor scrape. Most rentals include one (quality varies; a better one costs 50–100 THB). The hard truth from every guide: the worst crashes involve **inexperienced first-timers** who ride too fast, ride drunk, or skip the helmet. Closed shoes beat flip-flops in a fall.

## Renting: prices, deposits & checks

Rental shops cluster around the **Old City / Tha Phae Gate** (cheapest) and **Nimman** (newer fleets, a bit more). Rough rates for a 125cc automatic:

- **Daily:** ~150–300 THB · **Weekly:** ~1,200–1,800 THB · **Monthly:** ~3,000–5,000 THB

Two rules that save real grief:

- **Never leave your actual passport as deposit.** Plenty of reputable shops accept a **cash deposit (1,000–3,000 THB) plus a passport copy**. If a shop insists on keeping the original, walk to the next one.
- **Photograph and film the bike from every angle before you ride off** — existing scratches included — to kill any "damage scam" dispute. Keep it until your deposit is back.

Before you leave, test the **brakes** (front and rear, slowly), check **tyres**, **lights/indicators** and **mirrors**, and report anything.

## Insurance & fuel

Most local rentals include only **basic compulsory cover** (third-party injury, not your bike or you). Some shops sell extra cover (~100–200 THB/day). Read your **travel insurance wording** — motorbike cover often requires the right licence, a helmet, and sometimes a cc limit. Fuel is cheap: fill up at full-service stations, or roadside bottle stands in a pinch.

![Renting a scooter in Chiang Mai: the honest guide](/blog/renting-a-scooter-chiang-mai/visual-2.webp)

## Riding tips for Chiang Mai

- **Drive on the left.** Traffic around the moat and Nimman is busy and a little chaotic.
- **Watch the songthaews** (red trucks) — they stop suddenly to pick up passengers. Give them room.
- **Rainy season roads get slick** — painted lines, metal covers and washed-on mud are treacherous.
- **Mountain roads** (Doi Suthep, the Samoeng loop, the 700+ curves to [Pai](/blog/pai-from-chiang-mai)) are steep, twisty and sometimes foggy or gravelly — **not** for your first day. Once you're a confident rider, they're also the gateway to [the Mae Hong Son Loop, northern Thailand's great road trip](/blog/mae-hong-son-loop).
- **Go slow, never ride drunk** (police do breath-test), and skip riding on heavy-rain days.

## Don't fancy it? You don't have to

You never *need* a scooter here. **Grab and Bolt** (car and motorbike taxis), **red songthaews** and the occasional tuk-tuk cover everything — see our [getting-around guide](/blog/getting-around-chiang-mai). Many guests happily never ride.

Rules, fines and prices shift year to year and shop to shop, so check current local rules, read your contract, and confirm insurance when you arrive. Treat a scooter with the same respect as any motor vehicle — licensed, helmeted, slow — and it becomes one of the best things about life here. Unsure where to rent? Ask us at the house; we'll point you to a reputable shop.
