# Setting up utilities in Chiang Mai: electricity, water, internet and bills

> How utilities work when renting in Chiang Mai — landlord rates vs the PEA rate, fibre internet, typical bills, and paying at 7-Eleven. A settling-in guide.

You've viewed the apartment, haggled gently over the rent, and the keys are nearly yours. Now for the unglamorous bit: electricity, water, internet and how on earth you pay for it all. The good news is that utilities in Chiang Mai are cheap, reliable and far simpler to sort out than in most Western countries. The catch is that *how* you're billed matters more than *what* you use — and the moment to ask about it is before you sign, not after.

## How it usually works when you rent

In most Chiang Mai rentals, you'll never open a utility account at all. The electricity and water accounts typically stay in the landlord's or the building's name; the meter gets read once a month, a bill appears under your door or on LINE, and you pay the landlord or the building office along with your rent. It's wonderfully low-admin.

The details vary by property type. In condos, electricity is often billed directly by the utility to your unit, while water goes through the building's juristic office. In apartment buildings and serviced residences, both usually come from the office at the building's own rates. In houses, you'll often simply take over paying the existing bills. If you're still comparing places, our guide to [renting an apartment in Chiang Mai](/blog/renting-apartment-chiang-mai) covers the wider process — utilities are just one line on the checklist.

![An electricity meter and a tangle of power lines on a wooden pole beside a Chiang Mai soi](/blog/utilities-setup-chiang-mai/visual.webp)

## The per-unit question to ask before you sign

Here's the one thing we'd tattoo on every rental checklist. Electricity in Thailand is priced per unit (kilowatt-hour), and the government rate charged by the Provincial Electricity Authority (PEA) works out at **roughly 4 to 4.5 baht per unit** for a typical home. Many apartment buildings and serviced residences, however, bill tenants at their own flat rate — commonly **7 or 8 baht per unit**, sometimes more.

This isn't a scam aimed at foreigners; it's long-standing common practice that also covers the building's admin and common-area costs, and Thai tenants pay it too. But the difference is real money. Run the air-con generously through April and the gap between the government rate and a building rate can be thousands of baht in a single month. So ask directly: *"Is electricity billed at the government rate or the building's rate — and how much per unit?"* Condos billed directly by PEA generally get the government rate; apartments usually don't.

## Putting accounts in your own name

Renting a house, or a condo where the owner suggests transferring the account? You can register with PEA at a local office, and with the Provincial Waterworks Authority (PWA) for mains water. As a foreigner you'll typically need your **passport and a signed lease**, and often supporting documents from the owner; a refundable meter deposit may apply. Requirements genuinely vary by office and change over time, so treat any list — including this one — as a starting point and confirm first: PEA's call centre is **1129** (24/7) and PWA's is **1662**. Honestly, most tenants never need to do this: the landlord-keeps-the-account arrangement works fine.

## What you'll actually pay each month

Water first, because it's barely worth worrying about: most people pay **100–300 baht a month**, even at building rates.

Electricity is where the range gets wide, and air conditioning is the entire story. A frugal fan-based lifestyle might see bills of 500–1,000 baht. Moderate air-con use in a one-bedroom typically lands somewhere around 1,500–3,000 baht. Then comes the hot season (March to May), when **bills can easily double or triple** — and running air-con around the clock in an older, poorly insulated unit at a building's 8-baht rate can push past 6,000 baht. Budget for the April bill, not the December one. For how utilities fit into the bigger monthly picture, see our [cost of living breakdown](/blog/cost-of-living-chiang-mai).

## Getting fibre internet installed

Thailand's home internet is one of the great expat perks: fibre is fast, cheap and nearly everywhere. The big national providers — AIS, True and 3BB (now part of AIS) — all serve Chiang Mai, with packages commonly in the **300 Mbps to 1 Gbps range for roughly 400–800 baht a month**.

Sign up at a provider's shop in a mall with your passport, or ask your building which providers are already wired in — many condos are pre-wired, which makes activation quick. Otherwise a technician visit is usually scheduled within a few days to a week; the confirmation call will likely be in Thai, so ask building staff or your landlord to help coordinate. While you wait, tethering works brilliantly — our [SIM card and internet guide](/blog/sim-card-internet-chiang-mai) covers mobile data for your first week.

![A resident paying a bill by scanning a QR code at a convenience store counter at night](/blog/utilities-setup-chiang-mai/visual-2.webp)

## Paying bills, power cuts and moving out

Paying Thai bills is oddly satisfying. Take the paper bill to any **7-Eleven** and the cashier scans the barcode for a few baht's fee; or scan it yourself in a mobile banking app and pay by PromptPay QR in seconds — one of many reasons a [Thai bank account](/blog/thai-bank-account-chiang-mai) earns its keep. Utility and provider apps work too. Just don't ignore bills: disconnection for non-payment happens faster than you'd expect.

Power cuts are rare and usually brief — a storm, or scheduled maintenance announced in advance. If one lingers, check whether the neighbours have power, then call PEA on 1129 or check its outage app and map.

When you move out, do a final meter reading with your landlord, settle the last bills, and reclaim any deposits. Our favourite habit: photograph the meters on day one. Future you, reclaiming a security deposit, will be grateful.
