# Seasonal allergies, dust and air quality in Chiang Mai

> An honest guide to Chiang Mai's air for hay fever and dust sufferers — burning season, mould, tropical pollens, purifiers, masks and where to get help.

If you arrive in Chiang Mai with hay fever, dust sensitivity or a nose that reacts to everything, you have probably already read some alarming things online. The reality is more nuanced, and for many people it is genuinely better news than expected. This is general information rather than medical advice — everyone's triggers differ, so treat what follows as a friendly orientation, not a prescription. With that said, here is how the air really behaves here across the year, and the small, practical habits that make a long stay comfortable.

## The season everyone warns you about

The headline problem in Chiang Mai is not classic pollen at all — it is smoke. Every year a **burning season** settles over the north, roughly **February to April**, when agricultural and forest fires combine with mountain-valley geography to trap haze over the city. Fine-particle pollution (PM2.5) can climb to many times the level the World Health Organization considers safe, and March is usually the worst of it. Strictly speaking this smoke is an irritant rather than an allergen, but that distinction won't comfort your sinuses: if you are prone to allergies or asthma, smoke is often what hits you hardest. We cover the whole phenomenon, and how residents plan around it, in our guide to [Chiang Mai's burning season](/blog/burning-season-chiang-mai). The short version: it is real, it is seasonal, and it is very manageable indoors.

![A hazy skyline over Chiang Mai during burning season, with mountains barely visible through grey smoke](/blog/seasonal-allergies-chiang-mai/visual.webp)

## The quieter triggers, all year round

Outside the smoke months, the air is usually lovely — but a few gentler triggers persist. **Dust** is the constant one: the dry season leaves everything powdery, roadworks and unpaved sois throw up plenty of it, and it settles fast on floors and shelves. Then, when the **rainy season** arrives around May, the problem flips to **mould**. High humidity, tiled bathrooms and hard-working air-conditioning units are a perfect breeding ground, and that faint "wet towel" smell from an aircon is usually the tell-tale sign of mould in the filter or drainage. Tropical dust mites thrive in the same damp warmth. None of this is unique to Chiang Mai, but if you are sensitive, the wet-season mould and the dry-season dust are the two things worth staying ahead of.

## Good news for northern-hemisphere sufferers

Here is the part people rarely expect. If your allergies at home are driven by **birch, ragweed, or the classic temperate grass-and-tree pollen calendar, none of those plants grow here.** Thailand's pollens come from a different cast entirely — tropical grasses such as Bermuda, para and Johnson grass, which follow their own year-round rhythm rather than a sharp spring "season". The upshot is that **many** northern-hemisphere hay fever sufferers report feeling noticeably better in Chiang Mai for most of the year, simply because their specific triggers are absent. We frame that as "many report", not a promise — you might turn out to react to a local grass instead — but it is a common and pleasant surprise, and it is one reason so many long-stayers settle in.

## Keeping your indoor air clean

Whatever the season, your room is where you win or lose this. **Servicing your air-conditioning is the single highest-value habit** — a proper clean of the filters and coils clears out mould and dust, and here it is refreshingly cheap, so having it done a couple of times a year is easy. Between services you can rinse the removable filters yourself in a few minutes. For burning season, a **HEPA air purifier is the local standard**, not a luxury: run one in the room you sleep in, keep the windows shut when the haze is bad, and you effectively create a clean-air pocket to retreat to. Ada House rooms are kept clean and well aired, but the same principles apply wherever you stay.

![A clean air-conditioning filter being rinsed under a tap next to a small HEPA purifier running in a tidy bedroom](/blog/seasonal-allergies-chiang-mai/visual-2.webp)

## A simple practical toolkit

A few small things cover most situations. First, **an air-quality app**: several free ones show a live AQI reading for your exact neighbourhood, and a useful rule of thumb is to start being cautious once it climbs past around 150 (the "unhealthy" band), especially for outdoor exercise. Second, **a right-sized purifier**: match its rated coverage to your room's floor area with a bit of headroom, rather than buying the smallest unit that technically "fits". Third, **a mask that actually seals** — a well-fitted N95/KN95 style filters fine particles far better than a loose surgical or cloth mask, and the fit around your nose and cheeks matters more than the label. It is worth bringing a couple you know are comfortable; our [what to pack for Chiang Mai](/blog/what-to-pack-chiang-mai) guide has more on that.

## Pharmacies, and when to see a specialist

For everyday relief, Chiang Mai's pharmacies are excellent and everywhere. Common antihistamines and nasal sprays are widely stocked and inexpensive, and the pharmacist can talk you through the options — we won't name specific medicines here, since the right choice depends on you, but our guide to [pharmacies in Chiang Mai](/blog/pharmacies-chiang-mai) explains how they work. If symptoms are persistent, disruptive, or clearly more than mild irritation, it is genuinely worth seeing a specialist: the city's **private hospitals have proper allergy and ENT clinics**, offering allergy testing and expert advice at a fraction of Western prices. Our overview of [healthcare in Chiang Mai](/blog/healthcare-chiang-mai) points you to them. Getting tested is often the thing that turns vague, year-round sniffles into a clear plan — and clarity, here, is very affordable.
