# Settling in for a month: SIM, laundry, coworking & gym

> A friendly first-day checklist for a month in Chiang Mai — SIM cards, laundry, coworking near Nimman, gyms, and getting around. With rough prices.

The first day of a long stay is, honestly, mostly admin. A SIM that actually works, somewhere to do your laundry, a desk for the heads-down days, a gym to keep you sane. Knock these out in your first day or two and the rest of the month just opens up. We've walked a lot of guests through it, so here's the short version — with rough prices to set your expectations (they shift with the season, so treat them as ballparks and confirm on the ground).

## A SIM that just works

You've got two easy routes:

- **Want data the second you land?** Set up an **eSIM** before you fly (Airalo, Holafly and similar run roughly **800–1,500 THB** for a month). Convenient, a little pricier.
- **Want the best value for a month?** Grab a cheap **prepaid SIM** (about **50–100 THB**) at any 7-Eleven or, better, at the **AIS / TrueMove / dtac** shops inside **MAYA mall** right by Nimman, then add a **30-day data pack** (around **250–600 THB** depending on speed). Bring your passport — SIMs are registered here.

All three networks have strong coverage across the city, so don't overthink which one. The airport counters sell tourist SIMs too (299–599 THB), handy but usually only 8–15 days.

![Settling in for a month: SIM, laundry, coworking & gym](/blog/settling-in-chiang-mai/visual.webp)

## Laundry, sorted

This one's almost too easy. Nearly every soi has a **wash-and-fold shop** charging **30–50 THB per kilo**, usually ready the next day (often a 2–3 kg minimum). There are also **self-service laundromats** dotted around Nimman if you'd rather DIY — **30–80 THB a wash** plus **10–20 THB** for the dryer. Our honest take: drop-off is so cheap it's rarely worth doing it yourself.

## A desk for the deep-work days

You've got the **coworking room right here at the house** for most days. But when you want a change of scene, a faster connection, or just some buzz around you, Nimman is full of good spots:

- **Life Space** (Nimman Soi 15) — about **180 THB/day**, monthly hot desk roughly **3,000–4,000 THB**.
- **Hub53** (over by the university, Canal Road side) — day pass around **200–300 THB**, monthly **3,000–3,500 THB**.

City-wide the average lands near **280 THB a day** or **3,500 THB a month**. And most Nimman cafés are perfectly laptop-friendly for a flat white and an hour of email.

## Moving your body

- **Gyms**: local, no-frills spots run **700–1,200 THB/month** (sometimes a small sign-up fee); nicer chain and mall gyms **1,200–2,000 THB/month**. There are a couple within a 10–15 minute walk of the house — pop in and ask for current rates.
- **Muay Thai**: a brilliant way to sweat and meet people. Drop-in classes are **300–500 THB**, monthly group training around **5,000–8,000 THB**.

## The little things

- **Scooter for the month**: roughly **2,500–3,500 THB** for a Honda Click or Scoopy, plus a passport or cash deposit. No scooter? **Grab and Bolt** are everywhere — **60–120 THB** for most rides across the centre.
- **Groceries**: **Rimping** and **Tops** for Western bits and comfort snacks; local markets and street food (**40–70 THB a plate**) for everything else — and the real flavour of the place.

And that's the boring half-day done. With a working SIM, clean clothes, a desk and a gym, the month is properly yours. So on your first free morning, point the scooter uphill and treat yourself to [a weekend at Doi Suthep](/blog/doi-suthep-weekend) — you've earned it.
