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💉 Vaccinations & Travel Health Thailand: Complete Guide 2026

Thailand is generally a safe destination for travelers, but preparation is key. There are no mandatory vaccinations for most visitors, yet several recommended vaccines and health precautions can save you from miserable days in bed — or worse, a hospital visit costing thousands. This guide covers every vaccination you should consider, how to protect yourself from mosquito-borne diseases, what to pack in your travel pharmacy, and why travel insurance is the single most important thing you can buy before boarding your flight.

Last updated: 2026-03-02

Do You Need Vaccinations for Thailand?

Thailand has no mandatory vaccination requirements for travelers arriving from most countries. The only exception is yellow fever: if you're arriving from or have transited through a yellow fever endemic country (parts of Africa and South America), you must show proof of yellow fever vaccination. For everyone else, vaccinations are recommended but not required at the border. That said, both the WHO and CDC strongly recommend several vaccines for Thailand travelers. The key is timing — visit a travel clinic 6-8 weeks before your departure to allow time for multi-dose vaccines to take full effect. In the Netherlands, book an appointment at your local GGD travel clinic (reizigersadvies.ggd.nl). A consultation costs €50-70 and includes a personalized vaccination plan based on your itinerary, duration of stay, and planned activities. In the UK, visit a travel clinic such as MASTA or Nomad Travel Clinics — consultations range from £30-60. Your regular GP may offer some travel vaccines for free (tetanus, diphtheria) or at reduced cost under the NHS. In the US, check with your county health department or a CVS MinuteClinic — costs depend on your insurance coverage. Pro tip: bring your yellow WHO vaccination booklet (Carnet de Vaccination) to every appointment. Many travelers lose track of what they've had — this booklet is your permanent record.

Recommended Vaccinations for Thailand

VaccineRecommended ForDoses & TimingApprox. Cost (NL)Approx. Cost (UK)
Hepatitis AAll travelers — transmitted via contaminated food/water1 dose protects for 1 year; booster after 6-12 months gives 25+ years protection€50 per dose£50-60 per dose (free on NHS in some cases)
Hepatitis BLong stays (>1 month), medical contact, intimate contact with locals3 doses over 6 months (0, 1, 6 months); accelerated schedule available (0, 7, 21 days + booster)€45 per dose (€135 total)£40-50 per dose
Typhoid (Tyfus)Adventurous eaters, rural travel, street food lovers1 injection, protects for 3 years; oral alternative: 3 capsules over 5 days€35£25-35
Tetanus / Diphtheria (DTP)All travelers — check if your booster is up to date (every 10 years)1 booster dose if last vaccination >10 years agoOften free via huisarts (GP)Free on NHS
Japanese EncephalitisRural areas >1 month, especially rice paddies, farms, and northern Thailand during rainy season2 doses, 28 days apart; protection starts 1 week after 2nd dose€80 per dose (€160 total)£65-90 per dose
Rabies (pre-exposure)Remote travel, animal contact, cycling/motorcycling, children (higher bite risk)3 doses over 21-28 days (day 0, 7, 21); simplifies post-exposure treatment significantly€55 per dose (€165 total)£50-70 per dose

⚠️ Malaria & Dengue: Know the Risks and How to Protect Yourself

MALARIA: The risk in Thailand's main tourist areas is very low. You do NOT need malaria prophylaxis for Bangkok, Chiang Mai city, Phuket, Koh Samui, Koh Phangan, Krabi, or Hua Hin. Higher risk exists along the Myanmar and Cambodia border areas — specifically Kanchanaburi province (jungle areas, not the city), Tak province (Mae Sot area), Trat province (border jungle, not Koh Chang), and parts of Ranong. If you're trekking in these border regions, consult your travel clinic about prophylaxis. Options: Malarone (atovaquone/proguanil) costs approximately €3/day — start 1-2 days before, take daily, continue 7 days after leaving the malaria zone. Doxycycline is a cheaper alternative at approximately €0.30/day but causes sun sensitivity (a problem in tropical Thailand). Mefloquine (Lariam) is rarely prescribed now due to neuropsychiatric side effects. DENGUE FEVER: This is the bigger concern for most travelers. Dengue is transmitted by Aedes mosquitoes that bite during the DAY, especially around dawn and dusk. There is no prophylaxis or specific treatment. Cases peak during the rainy season (June-November), with 2024 seeing over 150,000 reported cases in Thailand. Symptoms appear 4-10 days after a bite: sudden high fever (39-40°C), severe headache behind the eyes, joint and muscle pain ('breakbone fever'), nausea, and rash. CRITICAL: If you suspect dengue, take paracetamol (acetaminophen) for fever — NEVER take ibuprofen, aspirin, or naproxen, as these thin the blood and can cause dangerous hemorrhaging. Seek medical attention if fever exceeds 40°C, you see blood in stool/vomit, or you feel extreme fatigue after the fever breaks (possible dengue hemorrhagic fever).

Insect Protection: Your Best Defense Against Mosquito-Borne Disease

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DEET 30-50% Is the Gold Standard

DEET-based repellents are the most effective against Thai mosquitoes. Use 30-50% concentration — anything less wears off too quickly in tropical heat. Reapply every 4-6 hours, and always apply AFTER sunscreen (sunscreen first, then repellent on top). Available at Boots and Watsons in Thailand (Soffell brand 65 THB, imported brands 150-250 THB), but bring a high-concentration product from home as Thai options tend to be lower DEET percentages.

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Permethrin-Treated Clothing for Extra Protection

Spray your clothes (especially pants, socks, and long-sleeve shirts) with permethrin spray before your trip. One treatment lasts through 5-6 washes. Permethrin kills mosquitoes on contact and works as a barrier when combined with DEET on exposed skin. This is particularly useful for jungle treks or temple visits at dawn and dusk.

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Use Air Conditioning Over Open Windows

Mosquitoes are less active in air-conditioned rooms. If your budget accommodation doesn't have AC, sleep under a mosquito net (most guesthouses in rural areas provide them). In hostels, an overhead fan helps keep mosquitoes away — they struggle to fly in moving air.

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Mosquito Coils and Plug-In Repellents

Mosquito coils are available at every 7-Eleven (35 THB for a pack of 10). Light them on your balcony or in outdoor dining areas — they create a smoky barrier mosquitoes avoid. Electric plug-in repellents (like ThaiTiger brand, 89 THB with refill) work well indoors overnight. Both are Thai travel staples and much cheaper than buying imported products.

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Cover Up at Dawn and Dusk

Dengue-carrying Aedes mosquitoes are most active at dawn (6-8 AM) and dusk (5-7 PM). Wear long sleeves, long pants, and closed shoes during these hours. Light-colored clothing attracts fewer mosquitoes than dark colors. This is especially important during temple visits or outdoor markets in the early morning.

Travel Pharmacy Essentials: What to Pack and What to Buy There

medicine

Imodium (Loperamide)

Traveler's diarrhea hits 30-50% of Thailand visitors. Bring Imodium from home or buy it at Boots/Watsons (89 THB for 6 tablets). Use for symptom relief when you need to travel — but let mild cases run their course as your body fights the bacteria. Combine with ORS for the best recovery.

medicine

Oral Rehydration Salts (ORS)

The single most important item for diarrhea and heat exhaustion recovery. Available at every 7-Eleven (15 THB per sachet) and pharmacy. Mix with 200ml bottled water and sip throughout the day. Stock up — you'll need 3-4 sachets per day during a stomach bug. Tastes salty but works better than sports drinks.

medicine

Paracetamol (Acetaminophen)

Your go-to painkiller and fever reducer in Thailand. CRITICAL: If you suspect dengue fever, paracetamol is the ONLY safe option — ibuprofen, aspirin, and naproxen thin the blood and can cause hemorrhaging in dengue patients. Available everywhere (Boots, Watsons, 7-Eleven) for 20-35 THB. Bring a supply from home as a backup.

medicine

Antihistamines

Essential for mosquito bite reactions, minor allergic reactions, and tropical rashes. Cetirizine (non-drowsy, 10mg) is available at Boots for 45 THB per 10 tablets. Useful for itchy bug bites — apply combined with a topical antihistamine cream (Fenistil or local equivalent, 85 THB at pharmacies).

protection

DEET Insect Repellent

Bring a high-concentration DEET spray (30-50%) from home. Thai brands like Soffell (available at 7-Eleven, 65 THB) work but tend to have lower concentrations. For jungle treks, apply to all exposed skin plus spray on clothing. Reapply after swimming or heavy sweating. Consider picaridin (Icaridin) as a DEET alternative if you have skin sensitivity.

protection

Sunscreen SPF 50+

Thailand's UV index regularly hits 11-12+ (extreme). Apply SPF 50 every 2 hours, more frequently when swimming. Thai sunscreen brands are good but expensive — Boots and Watsons carry Nivea and Banana Boat (250-450 THB). Bring your preferred brand from home. Apply sunscreen BEFORE DEET repellent for both to work effectively.

firstaid

Plasters & Antiseptic

Small wounds get infected fast in tropical humidity. Clean every cut immediately with antiseptic (Betadine, 55 THB at 7-Eleven) and cover with waterproof plasters. Bring a small tube of antibiotic ointment (Neosporin or equivalent). Coral cuts, scooter road rash, and blisters from hiking sandals are the most common injuries — treat them seriously in the tropics.

medicine

Motion Sickness Pills

Essential for ferry rides to islands (Koh Phangan, Koh Tao, Phi Phi) and winding mountain roads in the north (Chiang Mai to Pai, Mae Hong Son loop). Dramamine (dimenhydrinate) is available at pharmacies (45 THB) — take 30 minutes before boarding. The Koh Tao ferry from Chumphon in rough seas makes even experienced travelers queasy.

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Prescription Medications

Bring all prescription medications in their ORIGINAL packaging with the pharmacy label visible. Carry a doctor's letter (in English) listing your medications and dosages — Thai customs may question unmarked pills. Some medications that require a prescription at home are sold over the counter in Thai pharmacies (antibiotics, some painkillers), but quality varies. For controlled substances, bring only what you need for your trip duration.

Food & Water Safety: How to Avoid Getting Sick

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Drink Bottled Water Only

Thai tap water is not safe to drink. Bottled water is cheap and available everywhere: 7 THB at 7-Eleven for a 600ml bottle, 10-15 THB in restaurants. Large 6-liter bottles for your hotel room cost 25-35 THB at Tesco Lotus or Big C. Brushing your teeth with tap water is generally fine in cities (Bangkok, Chiang Mai, Phuket) but use bottled water in rural areas to be safe.

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Ice in Restaurants Is Generally Safe

Commercial tube ice (the cylindrical kind with a hole through the middle) is made from purified water and is safe in restaurants, bars, and cafes. Crushed ice at reputable establishments is also fine. Be cautious with ice from street vendors — if it's irregular shards that look hand-chipped from a large block, it may be from non-purified water. When in doubt, drink without ice.

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Eat at Busy Street Stalls

The golden rule of Thai street food safety: eat where the locals eat. A busy stall means high turnover, which means fresh food. Avoid stalls where pre-cooked food has been sitting out for hours. Look for stalls that cook to order — you can see the wok firing up for your dish. The busiest stalls at night markets and food courts are almost always the safest bet.

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Avoid Raw Shellfish and Old Buffets

Raw or undercooked shellfish (oysters, mussels, shrimp) are the highest-risk foods for traveler's diarrhea, hepatitis A, and parasites. Hotel buffets where food sits under heat lamps for hours are another common source of food poisoning. If you eat at a buffet, stick to freshly cooked dishes and avoid anything that looks lukewarm. Peel your own fruit rather than eating pre-cut fruit from street vendors.

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Hand Sanitizer Is Your Best Friend

Carry a small bottle of hand sanitizer (alcohol-based, 70%+) at all times. Use it before eating, after handling money, and after using public restrooms. Thai street food is eaten with your hands, spoons, and shared utensils — clean hands prevent most stomach issues. Small bottles available at 7-Eleven for 25-45 THB. Also handy: antibacterial wet wipes for cleaning hands and surfaces.

Travel Insurance: Don't Leave Home Without It

Travel insurance is not legally required for Thailand (unless your visa type mandates it), but it is the single most important purchase you can make before your trip. Thai hospitals — both public and private — will treat you in an emergency, but the bills pile up fast. A visit to the ER at Bumrungrad Hospital in Bangkok starts from 5,000 THB ($143). An overnight stay in a private room costs 10,000-25,000 THB. If you need the ICU, expect 50,000+ THB ($1,430+) per day. A medical evacuation flight to your home country can cost $50,000-150,000. Scooter accidents are the number one cause of insurance claims in Thailand — and many basic policies exclude motorbike injuries unless you have a valid Thai or international motorcycle license. For Dutch travelers: Allianz Global Assistance and Europeesche Verzekeringen (part of Allianz) offer comprehensive reispolissen starting from €30-50 for a 2-week trip. Make sure your policy includes: medical expenses (minimum €500,000 — Thai hospital bills can reach this in serious accident cases), medical evacuation/repatriation, adventure sports rider (if you plan to dive, ride scooters, or rock climb), and 24/7 emergency assistance in Dutch or English. For UK travelers: World Nomads, True Traveller, and Staysure offer good value. Expect to pay £25-50 for a 2-week policy with adventure sports cover. Pro tips: Some credit cards (especially gold or platinum cards from AMEX, ING, or ABN AMRO) include basic travel insurance — check your card benefits before buying a separate policy. Always carry your insurance card and emergency phone number in your wallet and phone. Take photos of your policy number and save it in your email. If you need treatment, call your insurer's 24/7 helpline BEFORE admission if possible — they can arrange direct billing at partner hospitals, saving you from paying upfront.

Travel Clinic Timeline: When to Get What

  1. 18 weeks before departure: Book your travel clinic appointment at the GGD (Netherlands, €50-70), MASTA/Nomad Travel Clinic (UK, £30-60), or your local travel health center. Start the Hepatitis B vaccination series if recommended (first dose on day 0). Discuss your itinerary, planned activities, and any pre-existing medical conditions.
  2. 26 weeks before departure: Get your first Japanese Encephalitis dose if recommended (2 doses needed, 28 days apart). Second Hepatitis B dose (if using standard schedule). This is the critical window — don't skip this appointment or the second JE dose won't be complete before you leave.
  3. 34 weeks before departure: Get your Hepatitis A vaccination (single dose gives 1-year protection). Get Typhoid vaccination if recommended (1 dose, protects for 3 years). Second Japanese Encephalitis dose (28 days after the first). Check Tetanus/Diphtheria booster status — get one if your last shot was more than 10 years ago.
  4. 42 weeks before departure: Fill your malaria prophylaxis prescription if needed (Malarone or Doxycycline — only for border regions, not standard tourist areas). Buy travel insurance if you haven't already. Start gathering your travel pharmacy items.
  5. 51 week before departure: Pack your travel pharmacy (see checklist above). Ensure all medications are in original packaging with pharmacy labels. Print or save your insurance policy details, emergency phone numbers, and vaccination records (photo of yellow WHO booklet on your phone).
  6. 6Day of departure: Carry your travel insurance card, vaccination booklet (yellow WHO card), and doctor's letter for prescription medications in your hand luggage — NOT in checked baggage. Start Malarone 1-2 days before entering a malaria zone if applicable. Pack DEET repellent in checked luggage (liquids over 100ml not allowed in hand luggage).

Frequently Asked Questions

Is it safe to eat street food in Thailand?
Yes, Thai street food is generally safe and is eaten daily by millions of Thais. The key is choosing busy stalls with high turnover (food doesn't sit around), watching that food is cooked to order in front of you, and avoiding raw shellfish or pre-cut fruit that's been sitting out. Most cases of traveler's diarrhea come from buffets, ice from questionable sources, or unwashed hands — not from properly cooked street food. Thailand's street food culture is one of the safest in Southeast Asia because dishes are cooked at extremely high heat in woks.
Do I need malaria pills for Thailand?
Most travelers do NOT need malaria prophylaxis for Thailand. The main tourist areas — Bangkok, Chiang Mai city, Phuket, Koh Samui, Koh Phangan, Krabi, Hua Hin, and Pattaya — have negligible malaria risk. Prophylaxis is only recommended if you're trekking in jungle areas along the Myanmar or Cambodia borders (Kanchanaburi jungle, Tak province near Mae Sot, Trat province border areas). Your travel clinic or GGD can assess your specific itinerary and advise accordingly. Dengue is a much bigger risk for the average tourist than malaria.
What should I do if I get bitten by a dog or monkey in Thailand?
Immediately wash the wound thoroughly with soap and running water for at least 15 minutes — this is the single most effective first aid for rabies prevention. Apply antiseptic (Betadine/povidone-iodine). Then go to the nearest hospital IMMEDIATELY for post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP). If you had pre-exposure rabies vaccination, you need only 2 booster shots (day 0 and day 3). If you were NOT pre-vaccinated, you need 4-5 vaccine doses over 2 weeks PLUS rabies immunoglobulin (RIG), which is expensive (5,000-15,000 THB) and not always available outside Bangkok. Rabies is nearly 100% fatal once symptoms appear — never delay treatment after an animal bite. Major hospitals for PEP: Bumrungrad, BNH, Chulalongkorn Hospital (Bangkok), Maharaj Nakorn Hospital (Chiang Mai).
Can I buy antibiotics over the counter in Thailand?
Yes, many Thai pharmacies sell antibiotics without a prescription — including amoxicillin, azithromycin, ciprofloxacin, and metronidazole. However, self-medicating with antibiotics is strongly discouraged. Incorrect antibiotic use contributes to antimicrobial resistance (a serious global health problem) and can mask symptoms of conditions that need proper diagnosis. If you think you need antibiotics, visit a doctor first — a consultation at a private hospital or clinic costs only 300-800 THB ($9-23) and they can prescribe the right medication. Pharmacies at Boots, Watsons, and Fascino chains are generally more reliable and better stocked than small independent pharmacies.
How much does a hospital visit cost in Thailand without insurance?
Costs vary enormously between public and private hospitals. At a government hospital: ER visit 200-500 THB, doctor consultation 100-300 THB, basic X-ray 200-500 THB. At a private international hospital like Bumrungrad (Bangkok): ER visit from 5,000 THB, specialist consultation 800-2,000 THB, X-ray 1,000-3,000 THB, blood work 500-5,000 THB depending on tests. An overnight stay in a private room: 5,000-15,000 THB at mid-range hospitals, 15,000-30,000 THB at premium hospitals. ICU: 30,000-80,000 THB per day. Surgery can run from 50,000 THB for a simple appendectomy to 500,000+ THB for complex orthopedic procedures after a scooter accident. This is exactly why travel insurance is essential.
Is dengue fever common in Thailand, and how do I know if I have it?
Dengue is very common in Thailand, with 80,000-160,000 reported cases annually (many more go unreported). Cases peak during the rainy season (June-November) but can occur year-round. Symptoms appear 4-10 days after being bitten by an infected Aedes mosquito: sudden high fever (often 39-40°C), severe headache (especially behind the eyes), muscle and joint pain (hence the nickname 'breakbone fever'), fatigue, nausea, and sometimes a rash after 2-3 days. Most cases resolve in 5-7 days with rest and hydration. CRITICAL: Only take paracetamol for fever — NEVER ibuprofen or aspirin. Seek immediate medical attention if you experience: persistent vomiting, severe abdominal pain, bleeding gums or nosebleeds, blood in stool or vomit, or extreme fatigue after the fever drops (warning signs of dengue hemorrhagic fever). Any hospital in Thailand can do a dengue NS1 antigen test (result in 30 minutes, 500-1,000 THB).
Should I get a rabies vaccine before going to Thailand?
It depends on your travel style. Pre-exposure rabies vaccination is strongly recommended if you plan to: spend time in rural areas away from major cities, ride a bicycle or motorcycle (stray dogs often chase vehicles), interact with animals (temple monkeys, elephant sanctuaries, dog shelters), travel with children (kids are at higher risk of being bitten and may not report bites), or stay longer than 1 month. The 3-dose series costs approximately €165 (NL) or £150-210 (UK) — expensive but it buys peace of mind. The key advantage: if you're pre-vaccinated and get bitten, you only need 2 booster shots. Without pre-vaccination, you need 4-5 doses PLUS rabies immunoglobulin (RIG), which costs 5,000-15,000 THB and may not be available at rural hospitals. Thailand has approximately 10 human rabies deaths per year, mostly in rural areas.

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New content added regularly! Check back often for the latest Thailand travel guides and tips!