Motorbike rental prices in Bangkok swing wildly depending on where you book and what you ride. A small commuter scooter starts at around 90 THB per day at budget-friendly shops, while a 300cc maxi-scooter can run 210 THB or more. Prices vary because shops set their own rates, bike size and engine class matter, and the rental length you choose can cut the daily cost almost in half. Quick answer for the impatient: expect 90 to 210 THB per day, 540 to 1,260 THB weekly, and 1,800 to 4,200 THB monthly. This guide breaks down real 2026 prices, hidden fees other shops slip into the bill, and which rental tier makes sense for your trip.
Bangkok Motorbike Rental: Quick Price Summary
Here is the full RentLab price list for every bike in the fleet, with daily, weekly, and monthly rates side by side. These are the actual rates you pay, not teaser prices. Insurance, two helmets, a phone holder, and a USB charger are included on every rental. No cash deposit, no passport held at the shop.
| Bike | Daily | Weekly | Monthly |
|---|---|---|---|
| Honda Zoomer X 110 | 90 THB | 540 THB | 1,800 THB |
| Yamaha Fino 115 | 95 THB | 570 THB | 1,900 THB |
| Honda Click 125 | 119 THB | 720 THB | 2,400 THB |
| Yamaha Aerox 155 | 126 THB | 760 THB | 2,500 THB |
| Yamaha NMAX 155 | 133 THB | 800 THB | 2,650 THB |
| GPX Drone 150 | 140 THB | 840 THB | 2,800 THB |
| GPX GR200R 200 | 140 THB | 840 THB | 2,800 THB |
| Honda Forza 300 | 210 THB | 1,260 THB | 4,200 THB |
Most other shops in Bangkok charge similar daily prices but mark up monthly rates aggressively, often by two to three times. If you want the full lineup with bike specs and booking details, see our motorbike rental in Bangkok page where every model is listed with photos and current availability.
Daily Motorbike Rental Prices in Bangkok
Daily rentals are the right pick for short trips, weekend escapes, or test rides before committing to a longer booking. RentLab daily prices fall into three tiers based on engine size and bike class.
Cheapest Daily Options (90 to 119 THB)
The Honda Zoomer X at 90 THB per day is the lightest and most budget-friendly option. It is a 110cc city scooter that handles Bangkok traffic easily, sips fuel, and is small enough to thread between taxis on Sukhumvit. Great for solo riders who just need a quick way to get around town.
The Yamaha Fino at 95 THB has a similar profile but with a slightly more comfortable seat and retro styling. It is a 115cc bike with the same easy ride characteristics. A favourite with riders who want something stylish on a small budget.
The Honda Click 125 at 119 THB is the most popular rental in Bangkok, full stop. The 125cc engine has more pull on bridges and flyovers, fits two riders without struggling, and crosses into motorcycle license territory legally. If you only book one bike for a city trip, this is the safe pick.
Mid-Range Daily (126 to 140 THB)
The Yamaha Aerox 155 at 126 THB is the sporty option in this tier. Quicker acceleration, a more aggressive riding position, and 155cc of power make it fun on open roads. Best for riders who want a bit more bite than a commuter scooter.
The Yamaha NMAX 155 at 133 THB trades sport for comfort. Bigger underseat storage that fits a full helmet, a roomier two-up seat, and smoother suspension over Bangkok potholes. Couples and longer-day riders pick this one.
The GPX Drone 150 and GPX GR200R 200 both rent at 140 THB per day. These Thai-built bikes are an alternative to the Honda and Yamaha standards. The GR200R gives you a bigger 200cc engine for the same price as a 150cc, making it the better value if you want manual transmission feel and stronger acceleration in city traffic.
Premium Daily (210 THB)
The Honda Forza 300 at 210 THB sits in its own category. A maxi-scooter with a 300cc engine, ABS brakes, and huge underseat storage. Comfortable for long city riding days and two-up riding within Bangkok. Like all current RentLab bikes, the Forza is restricted to Bangkok metropolitan area. You need a full motorcycle license to ride it legally. If you want the most comfortable two-up bike in the current fleet for Bangkok city riding, the Forza is worth the extra spend. For trips to Pattaya or Hua Hin, the current fleet is not permitted outside Bangkok. A touring fleet with Honda Rebel 300cc and similar affordable touring bikes is launching this year for trips outside the city.
Weekly Rental Saves 15 to 20 Percent
Weekly rates are roughly six days at the daily price, which means you get the seventh day free. The longer you stay above six days, the more you save. Here are real examples from the price list above.
Honda Click example: 7 days at 119 THB daily comes to 833 THB. The weekly rate is 720 THB, saving you 113 THB. That is roughly 14 percent off and the bike is yours for an extra day at no charge.
Yamaha NMAX example: 7 days at 133 THB daily comes to 931 THB. The weekly rate is 800 THB, saving you 131 THB. About the same percentage discount but a bigger absolute saving on a larger bike.
Honda Forza example: 7 days at 210 THB daily comes to 1,470 THB. The weekly rate is 1,260 THB, saving you 210 THB. The premium tier saves the most because the daily rate is highest.
When does weekly make sense? Any trip 6 days or longer. Below 6 days, just book daily and enjoy the flexibility. The weekly threshold is best for stays in the 6 to 15 day range. Some riders book two consecutive weekly rentals for 14-day trips, which is fine, but check the monthly rate first because it is often cheaper for anything 16 days and up.
Monthly Rental Cuts Daily Cost in Half
Monthly is where the real savings live. The daily cost effectively drops by 33 to 35 percent compared to paying day by day. If you are staying in Bangkok for a few weeks or longer, monthly is almost always the right call.
Honda Click for 30 days: paying daily would be 119 THB times 30, or 3,570 THB. The monthly rate is 2,400 THB. You save 1,170 THB, roughly 33 percent. That works out to 80 THB per day, which is barely the price of two Bangkok coffees.
Yamaha NMAX for 30 days: 133 THB times 30 is 3,990 THB. The monthly rate is 2,650 THB. Savings of 1,340 THB. The effective daily cost drops to about 88 THB.
Honda Forza for 30 days: 210 THB times 30 is 6,300 THB. The monthly rate is 4,200 THB. Savings of 2,100 THB, the largest absolute discount across the fleet.
For a deeper breakdown of long-term packages, deposits, and what to look for in a multi-month rental, see our guide to monthly motorbike rental Bangkok.
When does monthly make sense? Any stay 16 days or longer. The sweet spot is digital nomads on 30-day visa-exempt entries, expats settling into a new neighbourhood, and long-stay tourists who want the freedom of their own bike without paying tourist daily rates the whole time.
How RentLab Pricing Compares to Other Bangkok Shops
Bangkok has dozens of motorbike rental shops, from international chains to family-run operations near the BTS. Here is how the headline numbers stack up.
Daily Rates (Roughly Similar)
Daily prices are close across the city for the same bike. A Honda Click rents for around 200 to 300 THB at smaller shops, 250 to 350 THB at premium tourist-area shops, and 119 THB at RentLab. The bigger the shop name, the higher the daily. Independent shops in Sukhumvit or Silom often quote 250 to 300 THB for the exact bike RentLab rents at 119. The savings only get bigger once you book longer.
Monthly Rates (Big Difference)
Monthly is where the gap shows up. Fatboy’s charges around 5,500 THB per month for a Honda Click. BSR Bike Shop quotes 5,900 THB monthly on a Yamaha NMAX, plus a 2,000 THB cash deposit held during the rental. MadBike sits in similar premium territory. Most independent shops fall between 5,000 and 7,000 THB monthly with a 2,000 to 5,000 THB deposit on top.
RentLab Honda Click monthly is 2,400 THB. RentLab NMAX monthly is 2,650 THB. That is roughly 50 to 60 percent cheaper than the competition for the same bike, and you keep your passport and your deposit money in your own pocket.
Hidden Costs That Add Up
The sticker price is only part of the story. Other shops often layer on extras that quietly raise the total. Cash deposits of 2,000 to 5,000 THB tied up for the whole rental. Passport held at the shop, which costs nothing but carries real risk if the shop closes early or has a dispute. Helmet rental fees of 50 to 100 THB on some bookings. An “extra insurance” upcharge sprung on you at pickup. Late fees triggered by even a 30-minute return delay. Damage charges with no documentation of the bike’s condition before you took it.
RentLab pricing is final. Insurance, two helmets, a phone holder, and a USB charger are bundled into every rental. No cash deposit. No passport held. The price you see is the price you pay. For a complete look at scooter-specific rates and packages, check our breakdown of scooter rental prices in Bangkok.
Other Costs to Budget For
Rental price is only one piece of the total cost of riding in Bangkok. Here is what else realistically lands on your daily spend.
Fuel
Most scooters return 35 to 45 kilometres per litre. Bangkok pump prices sit around 35 THB per litre in 2026. Average city use is 1 to 1.5 litres per day, so daily fuel is 35 to 50 THB. Weekly fuel works out to roughly 200 to 350 THB depending on how much you ride. Fill up at PTT or Bangchak stations, or pop in at the small roadside bottle stalls if you only need a litre to get home.
Police Fines (If You Are Unlucky)
Riding without a helmet is a 500 THB fine. Riding without a valid licence is 400 to 1,000 THB. Phone use while riding is a 1,000 THB fine. Police checkpoints are most common at major intersections in the morning and evening. Wear your helmet, keep your phone in the holder, carry your licence, and you almost always avoid the whole issue.
Parking
Most condos, malls, and BTS stations have free or near-free motorbike parking. Some BTS lots charge 5 to 10 THB. Major shopping malls usually validate the first few hours for free. Parking is essentially negligible as a cost line.
Toll Roads
Note that all current RentLab bikes are restricted to Bangkok metropolitan area. The touring fleet launching this year will handle expressway riding for trips outside Bangkok. Inside Bangkok proper, motorbikes are not allowed on most expressways anyway, so you stick to surface streets and pay nothing. Tolls only matter if you plan a long out-of-town day.
Which Bike Gives the Best Value?
The right bike depends on how long you stay and what you want to do. Honest picks based on the price list above.
For 1 to 3 day trips: Honda Click 125 daily at 119 THB. Best balance of price and capability, fits two riders, and crosses into motorcycle territory if you have the licence. Hard to beat for a quick city stay.
For 4 to 15 day trips: Honda Click weekly at 720 THB. That averages out to about 103 THB per day. Cheaper than booking two daily blocks and gives you the same bike for a full week.
For 16 to 30 day trips: Honda Click monthly at 2,400 THB. That works out to 80 THB per day, less than two Grab rides across town. Unbeatable for digital nomads and long-stay tourists.
For two riders or extended Bangkok city riding: Yamaha NMAX or Honda Forza. The bigger seat, suspension, and storage are worth the extra cost when you spend full days on the bike around the metro. All current RentLab bikes are restricted to Bangkok metropolitan area only. A touring fleet (Honda Rebel 300cc and similar affordable touring bikes) is launching this year for trips outside Bangkok.
Bangkok motorbike rental ranges from 90 THB to 210 THB per day depending on the bike, with significant discounts at weekly and monthly tiers. RentLab keeps prices roughly half of what most Bangkok rental shops charge monthly, with all-inclusive packages and no cash deposit required. Compare bikes and book online to lock in your dates.
