# Tailors and clothing repair in Chiang Mai

> Bespoke suits in days, zips replaced for pocket change: how Chiang Mai's tailors and market seamstresses work, what to pay and what to avoid.

In Chiang Mai, the needle and thread lead a double life. On one side are the tailor shops with their bolts of wool and linen, promising a made-to-measure suit or dress in a matter of days. On the other, tucked behind markets and down quiet sois, sit seamstresses at pedal-powered sewing machines who will hem your trousers, replace a zip or resurrect a dying backpack for pocket change. Both worlds are worth knowing — and they play by very different rules.

## A suit or a dress, made in days

Bespoke tailoring is one of Thailand's classic visitor experiences, and Chiang Mai does it at friendlier prices than Bangkok. Shops cluster around the eastern side of the Old City and the Night Bazaar area, and the good ones will measure you, cut a garment, and refine it over several fittings — typically across **three to five days**. As a rough benchmark, a made-to-measure two-piece suit runs somewhere around 6,000–12,000 baht, with the cloth doing most of the work on price; simpler dresses and shirts cost considerably less. If a suit matters to you, plan for at least four days in town so the fittings never feel rushed.

![A tailor measuring a customer's shoulders beside shelves stacked with bolts of suit fabric](/blog/tailors-clothing-repair-chiang-mai/visual.webp)

## How to judge a good tailor

The reliable signs are surprisingly consistent. A good tailor wants to talk about cloth before talking about price: fibre content, weight, lining, how a fabric drapes on you rather than on the hanger. They insist on **at least two fittings**, because that is where a suit actually gets made — the first cut is only a hypothesis. And their prices are boringly realistic. A "pure cashmere" suit for 4,000 baht is not cashmere, and a shop that quotes a third of everyone else's price has found the savings somewhere you will eventually notice, usually in the canvas, the stitching or the fabric itself.

## The polite art of avoiding the tout

Thailand's tailoring scene comes with a well-documented sales machine: drivers and friendly strangers who steer you towards a particular shop and collect a commission — often quoted at 100–300 baht per delivered tourist — which is quietly baked into your bill. The tell-tale signs are false urgency ("promotion ends today"), a mysterious government export sale, and the famous **"one-day suit"**, which by definition skips the fittings that make tailoring worth paying for. None of this requires confrontation. A smile, a "maybe later", and walking into a shop on your own steam is the entire defence. Any tailor good enough to deserve your money does not need to pay strangers to fetch you.

## The everyday miracle of repair

Now for the other world, which we'd argue is the more useful one for long-stayers. Thailand still has a genuine repair culture: neighbourhood seamstresses, often working at decades-old pedal machines, who treat a broken zip as a problem worth ten minutes rather than a reason to bin the garment. Hemming a pair of trousers typically costs **20–50 baht**; replacing a zip or stitching up a torn backpack usually lands somewhere between 20 and 100 baht depending on the job. It is one of those small pleasures that keeps the [cost of living](/blog/cost-of-living-chiang-mai) here so gentle — and it quietly changes how you shop, because anything can be altered to fit and almost nothing is beyond saving.

## Where to find a seamstress

You rarely need to look far. The densest concentration is in the lanes behind Warorot Market, where rows of stalls with sewing machines handle alterations while you wander. Beyond that, check the edges of any fresh market, the small shophouses along residential sois, and the streets near laundries — repair and washing tend to cluster together. Most stalls have no English sign; look for the machine, a rail of half-finished clothes, and a tin of spare buttons. Pointing at the problem is a perfectly good briefing. Simple jobs are often done on the spot or by the next day, which makes it painless to travel light and fix things here — a strategy we already push in our guide to [what to pack](/blog/what-to-pack-chiang-mai).

![A seamstress mending a backpack at a pedal sewing machine in a narrow market lane](/blog/tailors-clothing-repair-chiang-mai/visual-2.webp)

## Fabric shopping and having things made

If you'd rather start from the cloth, the fabric district around [Warorot Market](/blog/warorot-market-chiang-mai) spreads across several blocks, from everyday cottons — often only 100–200 baht a metre — up to silks and handwoven pieces from the hill communities. It pairs beautifully with an interest in [Lanna textiles](/blog/lanna-textiles-weaving) if you want something with real local character. Dressmakers dotted around the city (and a few in the market itself) will then turn your fabric into clothes, usually within a few days. The most reliable trick: bring a garment that already fits you well and ask them to copy it. Measurements can lie; a beloved shirt never does.

## Caring for what you've had made

Handmade clothes reward a little care, especially in a humid climate. Wash gently and air-dry — most local laundries do this by default anyway — and keep suits and dresses on proper hangers with room to breathe, because Chiang Mai's rainy season is enthusiastic about mould. Dry-clean tailoring rarely, brush it often, and when a seam eventually gives way, you already know the answer: it's a twenty-baht problem, not a tragedy.
