# Ride and Delivery Apps in Chiang Mai: Your Survival Guide

> Grab, Bolt, LINE MAN and GrabMart make daily life in Chiang Mai easy. A new arrival's guide to rides, food delivery, paying, SIMs and etiquette.

A few apps quietly run daily life in Chiang Mai, and getting them onto your phone in the first day or two will save you more hassle than almost anything else you pack. They summon a car or a motorbike to your door, deliver dinner from the night market, restock your fridge, and let you pay without a single word of Thai. Here's how the ones that matter actually work, and where the old-fashioned red trucks still win.

## Grab: the app to download first

If you install only one thing, make it **Grab**. It's the region's super-app, and in Chiang Mai it does far more than rides — though rides are where most people start. Open it, drop a pin where you are, set your destination, and you'll see a fixed price before you confirm, which quietly removes the haggling that used to define getting around here. You can book a private car, an economy car, or — brilliant when you're solo and the traffic is bad — a **motorbike taxi**, where a driver turns up with a spare helmet and weaves you across town for a fraction of the car fare. The same app handles food, groceries and even parcels, so it's worth getting comfortable with early. For the bigger picture on all your options, our guide to [getting around Chiang Mai](/blog/getting-around-chiang-mai) makes a good companion read.

![A Lanna-style illustration of ride and delivery apps on a phone with a red songthaew truck and a delivery motorbike](/blog/ride-delivery-apps-chiang-mai/visual.webp)

## Bolt, and where the red trucks still win

**Bolt** is Grab's main rival, and the reason it's worth having both on your phone. It tends to undercut Grab on price — often noticeably — but its pool of drivers is smaller, so at busy times you may wait longer or watch a booking get cancelled. The local habit is simple: price-check both, ride whichever is cheaper and available, and lean on Grab when you just need a car to arrive. Both let you choose a car or a motorbike.

None of this replaces the **songthaews** — the red shared pickup trucks (locals call them *rot daeng*) that are part of the city's character. You flag one down, tell the driver where you're headed, and if it suits their route you hop in the back for a small flat fare, often around 30 baht for a short hop. **Tuk-tuks** are the three-wheelers you negotiate with up front: fun once, pricier than an app, and a place where over-charging happens, so agree the fare before you climb in. Our notes on [common scams](/blog/common-scams-chiang-mai) and on [tipping and bargaining](/blog/tipping-bargaining-thailand) will keep you on the right side of it.

## Feeding yourself, and stocking the fridge

Food delivery here is excellent, cheap and almost a way of life. **Grab Food** is the obvious starting point and shares your Grab login, but the local heavyweight is **LINE MAN**, which often lists more small restaurants and street-food stalls — exactly the places you'll want once you've explored [the cheap-eats scene](/blog/eating-cheap-chiang-mai). It runs through the LINE messaging app that everyone in Thailand uses anyway. One honest note: **Foodpanda**, long the pink-jacketed third option, pulled out of Thailand entirely in 2025, so ignore any older guide that still lists it. **Robinhood**, a Thai-built app, picked up some of that space but has historically been strongest in Bangkok — check whether it's live in your corner of Chiang Mai before you rely on it.

For groceries, **GrabMart** brings supermarket and convenience-store orders to your door, usually within the hour — a small luxury on a hot afternoon or a busy working day. Pair it with our [groceries guide](/blog/groceries-shopping-chiang-mai) for where the good stuff is.

The line-up at a glance:

- **Grab** — rides (car and motorbike), food, groceries, parcels
- **Bolt** — rides, often cheaper, fewer drivers
- **LINE MAN** — food delivery, widest street-food coverage
- **Robinhood** — Thai-built food delivery
- **GrabMart** — supermarket and convenience-store delivery

![A Lanna-style illustration of food delivery and ride-hailing in a Chiang Mai street](/blog/ride-delivery-apps-chiang-mai/visual-2.webp)

## How you actually pay

Every app lets you start with **cash** — choose it at checkout and you simply hand baht to the driver or rider, which is the easiest route in your first week. To go properly cashless, you can link a foreign **card**, though some overseas cards get declined, or load the in-app wallet (**GrabPay**) and top it up. Many residents instead use **TrueMoney**, a local wallet that now lets foreigners register with a passport, or pay merchants by PromptPay **QR code** once they have a Thai account. **Tipping** is built in — a small optional add-on at the end of a ride or delivery, never expected but always appreciated for a rider who climbed your stairs in the rain. If you're settling in for the longer term, opening [a Thai bank account](/blog/thai-bank-account-chiang-mai) makes all of this dramatically smoother.

## You'll need a SIM, a number and data

None of these apps are much use without mobile data and a local phone number. The number is how a driver calls you when they can't find the gate, and the data is what keeps the map live while you're out and about. Sort a local SIM early — it's cheap, takes minutes at the airport or any 7-Eleven, and our [SIM and internet guide](/blog/sim-card-internet-chiang-mai) walks through the options. Without one, you'll be tethered to café wi-fi every time you want a ride.

## Pins beat addresses, and a few small manners

The good news for newcomers: every one of these apps works in English, so you don't need any Thai to use them. The trick locals know is to stop typing addresses — Thai ones are long and easily misread — and instead drop a **pin** on the map exactly where you are or want to go. It's faster and far more accurate, especially down the city's smaller *sois*. Add a landmark, keep your phone on, and pickups become painless. A few courtesies go a long way, too: be ready when your driver arrives, a friendly thank-you costs nothing, and rating well genuinely matters to people doing long hours on the road. Learn even a [handful of Thai words](/blog/learn-thai-language-chiang-mai) and the whole thing gets warmer still — but the apps will carry you from day one.
