# Sending parcels from Chiang Mai: post, couriers & customs

> How to ship parcels home from Chiang Mai and receive local deliveries: Thailand Post, DHL/FedEx/UPS, packing, customs rules and rough costs.

Sooner or later you'll want to send something out of Chiang Mai — a box of clothes back home, a birthday gift, a signed contract, or the ceramics you couldn't resist at the market. And once you settle in, parcels start arriving too. Here's how post and couriers work here, honestly and without the guesswork.

## Thailand Post: the affordable workhorse

For most things, **Thailand Post** (ไปรษณีย์ไทย) is your friend — cheap, everywhere and surprisingly reliable. Chiang Mai has a main **General Post Office (GPO)** plus dozens of neighbourhood branches, so there's almost certainly one a short ride away; ask us and we'll point you to the nearest.

Internationally you choose by speed and budget. **EMS World** is the fast, fully tracked airmail option — roughly **3–14 days** to most countries — and carries both documents and merchandise. Standard **air parcel** is a notch slower and cheaper (around **one to two weeks**). And **surface/sea mail** is the bargain for anything heavy and non-urgent: it can take **several weeks to a couple of months**, but the saving over air is enormous. Every service gives you a tracking number to follow on the Thailand Post site.

![A neatly packed brown parcel being weighed on a counter scale beside rolls of tape and a ball of string](/blog/sending-parcels-post-chiang-mai/visual.webp)

## Private couriers: faster, pricier, tracked

When something is urgent, valuable or important — a passport document, a laptop, legal papers — reach for a private courier. **DHL, FedEx and UPS** all operate in Chiang Mai, with service points and door pickups, full customs support and door-to-door tracking. Expect them to be noticeably dearer than the post office, but faster and more accountable, often landing within a few working days. DHL even lets individuals book a pickup online. For a single precious item, where peace of mind matters more than a few hundred baht, they're worth it.

## Packing it right

Price is driven by **weight and box size** — couriers charge on whichever is greater, actual or "volumetric" weight — so pack tight and don't ship air. You can buy sturdy boxes, tape and bubble wrap at the **post office counter** (Thailand Post sells flat-rate EMS boxes in set sizes), and at stationery shops, hardware stores and around markets like [Warorot](/blog/warorot-market-chiang-mai). Cushion fragile things well, describe the contents honestly on the customs declaration, and keep a photo of what's inside along with the receipt and its tracking number.

## What you can't send

A few rules genuinely matter. By **air**, Thailand Post won't accept **lithium batteries, power banks or aerosols** (spray cans, some cosmetics) — they're classed as dangerous goods, and sending them anyway can carry real penalties; ship battery-powered gadgets by courier under their dangerous-goods handling instead. Exporting a **Buddha image or genuine antique** needs an **export permit from the Fine Arts Department**, obtained in advance — small souvenir amulets are usually fine, but the real rule is strict, so read our note on [what's restricted in Thailand](/blog/illegal-in-thailand) before you pack one. Finally, remember the **destination country** may charge **import duty or VAT** at the receiving end. Rules change, so check the current lists on the Thailand Post, courier and destination-customs sites.

## Receiving parcels: Shopee, Lazada and the front desk

Getting things delivered here is the easy part. **Shopee** and **Lazada** are the local Amazon equivalents, with **cash-on-delivery** and parcels usually arriving in **one to a few days** via carriers like Flash, Kerry, J&T or Thailand Post — handy for everything from kitchen kit to the odds and ends we cover in our [shopping guide](/blog/groceries-shopping-chiang-mai). Two local quirks are worth knowing. Riders almost always **phone before delivering**, so a working **Thai number** matters (one of the first things to sort when [settling in](/blog/settling-in-chiang-mai)). And Thai addresses run building-and-room, road, sub-district, district, province, postcode — with your **phone number treated as part of the address**.

![A delivery rider on a scooter handing a package to a smiling front-desk host at a leafy condo entrance](/blog/sending-parcels-post-chiang-mai/visual-2.webp)

If you're not home, most drivers leave parcels with **building security or a front desk**, or you can route them to a nearby **7-Eleven pickup point**. Staying somewhere like Ada House, our team simply signs for your deliveries and keeps them safe until you're back. Without a fixed address, **poste restante** at the GPO still works — mail is held for you to collect with your passport.

## Costs, timing and a last word

Treat every price as a ballpark: a small EMS parcel is modest, a full 10 kg box by air runs into the thousands of baht, and sea mail can be a fraction of that if you can wait. Couriers sit at the top for both speed and cost. Always **confirm the exact rate at the counter or on the courier's website** with your real weight and destination — it's the only figure that counts, and it feeds neatly into your wider [cost-of-living sums](/blog/cost-of-living-chiang-mai).

None of this is as fiddly as it sounds. Most long-stayers settle into a simple rhythm — the post office for the cheap and cheerful, a courier for the precious, and the front desk for everything coming in. Whenever you're unsure which service or box you need, just ask the Ada House team; we do this run all the time and are glad to help you weigh, wrap and address it. One honest caveat: postal rules, prohibited-item lists and prices all change, so double-check the current official sources before you seal the box.
