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    Home»Money»Couple Moved to Bangkok; Life Is More Affordable, and People Are Kinder
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    Couple Moved to Bangkok; Life Is More Affordable, and People Are Kinder

    Press RoomBy Press RoomJune 30, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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    It was easier to leave our New York life than we thought it would be.

    My partner, James, and I had both lived there since the ’90s. But downtown Manhattan had lost both its appeal and its affordability. The spike in hate crimes against Asian and LGBTQ+ communities also left us feeling unsafe. The streets felt mean.

    I was already working remotely for a New York literary magazine and freelancing on the side, while James had left his design job at a consulting firm, so we were no longer tied to the city for work.

    Have you relocated abroad for career opportunities, retirement, or lower living costs? We want to hear from you. Fill out this short form to share your story with a reporter.

    Two years ago, after we were approved for Thailand’s five-year visa for remote workers, we packed up the life we’d built together over 17 years in New York — I’d been living in the city for 31 years.

    We squeezed everything into a basement storage unit, rented out our studio apartment in downtown Manhattan, and moved to Thailand. The rental income now helps cover the mortgage, though we still pay the monthly common charges.

    The move surprised even me. Although we’d bought an apartment in Bangkok in 2021, I’d never imagined living outside the US.


    An infinity pool on the rooftop of a Bangkok apartment.

    The one-bedroom apartment in Bangkok has an infinity pool on the roof. 

    Provided by Erasmo Guerra



    Bangkok life has been surprising

    We arrived in Bangkok at the end of that year. Our one-bedroom apartment wasn’t much bigger than our New York studio, but the building had plenty of shared spaces, from a glass-enclosed conference room in the lobby to an infinity pool on the roof deck.

    We woke to real birds singing along the Chao Phraya River instead of the recorded birdsong James had programmed as our morning alarm back in New York.

    We hadn’t bought the apartment with a permanent move in mind. James, who grew up in Thailand and went to college in Bangkok, thought it made more sense to have our own place than stay with friends whenever we visited his family. He also wanted a home that his widowed mother, who lived in southern Thailand, could use.

    Instead of easily paying $30 for takeout for two in Manhattan’s Financial District, I now buy two orders of khao man gai, or chicken ginger rice, from the mom-and-pop restaurant across the street for 100 baht, or about $3.


    Two men are seated outside an open-air restaurant in Bangkok.

    Their day-to-day costs of living are less expensive in Bangkok. 

    Provided by Erasmo Guerra



    The owner was patient when I first stumbled through my takeout order. Once she realized I was becoming a regular, though, she insisted I say it in Thai. She stood outside the restaurant, repeating each word until I got it right, even during the lunch rush. I appreciated her taking the time to teach me.

    For dinner, we often head to a nearby night market, then carry home crispy roti to eat on our balcony while watching the neon-lit dinner boats cruise along the river. We always say we’ll buy tickets for one someday, but we never do. We prefer the spectacle from a distance.

    Day-to-day, we spend less than $15 eating out and about $60 a week on groceries. A recent dental cleaning cost me less than $50 out of pocket, a box of Bausch + Lomb daily contact lenses was under $10, and the fade I get every two weeks at a local barber costs less than $6.

    What surprised me most, though, wasn’t just how much less expensive Bangkok was — it was how much kinder it felt. Even in the brutal heat, people are patient. And despite occasionally seeing an entire family — including an infant and the family dog — balanced on a single motorcycle like a daredevil circus act, the city somehow feels gentler than New York ever did.


    Couple hugging by the water in Koh Samui, Thailand.

    Guerra and James’ mom, while celebrating her birthday in Koh Samui in 2014. 

    Provided by Erasmo Guerra



    Looking back and moving forward

    With each passing day, New York feels a little farther away.

    When my visa expires, we’ll probably move back. For now, I’m not thinking that far ahead. I’m focused on the life we’ve built here and the emotional and mental reset it has provided.

    James’s one regret is that his mother, Pikun — named after a Thai flower — never got to stay in the Bangkok apartment we bought in part for her.

    On our first trip back to Thailand after she died, we took a taxi from the airport to our new home. As we drove through the city, I spotted a storefront with the words “Pikun Silver” above the entrance. We live near Bangkok’s gem and jewelry district. Seeing her name at that moment felt like a sign that she was with us, welcoming us home.

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