Best Web Developers in Bangkok (2026)
You need a website or app built in Bangkok. You've Googled around, asked in expat groups, maybe gotten some quotes. Now you're trying to figure out who to actually hire.
I'll break down your real options—what each type of developer offers, what they cost, and who's actually worth talking to.
Full disclosure: I'm a developer in Bangkok. I'm on this list. But I'll be honest about the tradeoffs of every option, including mine.
Your Options
In Bangkok, you've basically got four paths:
- Big agencies - Full teams, polished process, premium prices
- Small studios - 2-5 person teams, more flexible
- Solo freelancers - Direct communication, lower overhead
- Overseas/remote - Cheap rates, communication challenges
Big Agencies
The established players. They've got offices in Silom or Sukhumvit, case studies on their walls, and teams for everything.
Pros:
- Can handle large, complex projects
- Multiple specialists (design, dev, PM, QA)
- Established processes and contracts
- Good for corporate clients who need formal everything
Cons:
- Expensive (150k-500k+ THB for basic sites)
- Slow—lots of meetings, approvals, handoffs
- You talk to account managers, not builders
- Your project might get junior devs while seniors pitch new clients
Best for: Large corporations, government contracts, projects over 500k THB.
Small Studios (2-5 People)
The middle ground. Usually a few devs who left agencies to do their own thing. Less overhead than big shops, more capacity than solo freelancers.
Pros:
- More personal attention than agencies
- Can still handle medium-complexity projects
- Usually more reasonable pricing (80k-200k THB)
- Founders often still do the work
Cons:
- Quality varies wildly—some are great, some are agency rejects
- May have capacity issues (small team = limited bandwidth)
- Less formal processes can mean scope creep
Best for: Growing businesses, medium-budget projects, clients who want a balance.
Solo Freelancers
Individual developers working independently. This is my category, so I'll be extra honest about the tradeoffs.
Clearpath (That's Me)
I do websites, web apps, dashboards, and mobile apps. Full-stack, from design to deployment. Direct communication—you talk to me, I build it.
- Specialties: React/Next.js, dashboards, business tools, mobile-first design
- Price range: 40k-200k THB depending on scope
- Turnaround: 2-6 weeks for most projects
- Communication: LINE, email, or whatever works
Why hire me: No middlemen, fast iterations, I actually reply to messages. You get American work standards at Bangkok prices.
Other good solo devs to consider:
I won't name names since I don't know everyone's current availability, but here's how to find legitimate ones:
- Check Thai developer communities on Facebook
- Ask in expat business groups (lots of freelancers there)
- Look for devs with actual portfolios, not just claims
- LinkedIn works if you filter by location
Solo freelancer pros:
- Lowest overhead = better prices
- Direct communication with the builder
- Fast decision-making, no corporate process
- Personal reputation on the line = motivated
Solo freelancer cons:
- Limited capacity—can only take a few projects at once
- If they get sick or disappear, you're stuck
- Quality varies enormously
- May lack specialized skills (like dedicated UX or DevOps)
Best for: SMEs, startups, projects under 200k THB, clients who value direct communication.
Overseas/Remote Developers
Fiverr, Upwork, or direct hires from Vietnam, India, Philippines, etc. The budget option.
Pros:
- Cheapest rates (sometimes 50-70% less)
- Huge talent pool
- Can work while you sleep (timezone advantage)
Cons:
- Communication barriers (language, timezone, context)
- Quality is a lottery—lots of template resellers
- No local accountability
- Often requires detailed specs upfront (you become the PM)
- Support after launch is often nonexistent
Best for: Simple template sites, tight budgets, clients who can manage remote teams.
How to Choose
Ask yourself:
- What's your budget? Under 50k = overseas or simple freelancer. 50-200k = freelancer or small studio. 200k+ = studio or agency.
- How complex is the project? Landing page = anyone. Custom web app = vetted freelancer or studio.
- How involved do you want to be? Hands-off = agency. Collaborative = freelancer.
- Do you need ongoing support? Local developers are easier to reach long-term.
Red Flags (Any Developer)
- No portfolio or won't show past work
- Vague pricing ("it depends" without clarification)
- Promises everything, specializes in nothing
- Can't explain technical decisions in plain English
- Pushes for full payment upfront
- No contract or scope document
Bottom Line
Bangkok has solid options at every price point. The key is matching your needs to the right type of developer.
For most small-to-medium businesses, a vetted freelancer or small studio hits the sweet spot. You get quality work without paying for agency overhead.
Whatever you choose, check portfolios, ask for references, and get everything in writing.
Want to talk?
Tell me what you're building. I'll give you an honest assessment—even if I'm not the right fit.
Get in Touch