Bangkok has become a serious digital hub. On the tech side, you'll find pretty much everything: experienced Next.js developers, UI/UX designers who've worked with European brands, cloud infrastructure operated in the Asia time zone, and costs that remain 2 to 3 times lower than Paris or London for an equivalent skill level.
But "digital agency in Bangkok" covers everything and nothing: a solo developer working from a co-working space, an 80-person shop subcontracting half the work abroad, or a tight studio of a few partners doing everything in-house. The choice is rarely obvious.
This guide breaks down how to filter, based on what we observe operating here.
1. Studio, agency, freelance — what these words actually hide
In Bangkok like elsewhere, the labels have blurred. Three broad categories in practice:
- The solo freelancer — often excellent in their discipline (code OR design), but limited as soon as a project needs both. No backup if the person gets sick or disappears.
- The "scale" agency — 30 to 100+ people, salespeople who close deals, project managers in the middle, then operators. Great for volume, less so for custom work. You rarely speak to the people producing.
- The compact studio — 2 to 8 partners, all hands-on. You speak directly to the people designing and coding your product. Limited capacity, maximum care.
None of these forms is better in absolute terms. The question is which one fits what you actually need to ship.
2. The real filtering criteria (beyond the portfolio)
The portfolio tells you what they can do visually. It tells you nothing about the rest. Here's what to dig into:
Who codes, who designs?
Ask for the names of the people who will work on your project. Check their profiles. If the answer is "our team" without naming anyone, that's a bad sign — either they subcontract, or they don't yet know who will pick up your project.
Hidden subcontracting
Many Bangkok agencies subcontract part of the dev work to India, Vietnam, or the Philippines to grow their margin. Nothing illegal about it, but it lengthens cycles, hurts coherence, and complicates iterations. Ask explicitly if the code and design are produced in-house.
Communication method
You'll work over Slack? Email? WhatsApp? At what frequency? Serious studios run on both async and sync, with a rhythm defined upfront. If the method stays vague before signing, it'll stay vague after.
Real iteration cycle
Ask to see a project "in progress" — a staging URL, a live demo. If all they can show you is shipped polish, it might be because they refuse to let you see the rough draft. But a web product lives during its build, not just after.
3. Real budgets in Bangkok, 2026
A few ranges to anchor your thinking (incl. Thai VAT 7%):
- Editorial landing page (Next.js + light CMS): €8 — €18k
- Premium brand site (custom, animations, design system): €18 — €40k
- Native or cross-platform mobile app (functional MVP, iOS + Android): €30 — €80k
- B2B SaaS (auth, billing, dashboard, infra, first release): €50 — €150k
- Custom e-commerce (Shopify Hydrogen or Medusa): €25 — €60k
Below those ranges, be cautious — either the scope is underestimated, or the work is being subcontracted at the cheap end. Above them, it's still possible but ask what justifies the delta.
4. Four questions to ask on the first call
- "Who is my main point of contact, and do they code or design?" — If the answer is a project manager who does neither, you're talking to a scale agency. Up to you to decide if that's what you want.
- "Which recent project are you most proud of, and why?" — The answer tells you a lot about their internal standards. If they name the most prestigious client rather than the best-executed project, you've got a trophy-oriented agency.
- "How do you handle a project that goes off track?" — Every project drifts a bit. The question is: who pays for the extra, and how do you get told.
- "Can we talk to a past client?" — A serious agency gives you 2 or 3 contacts without hesitation. If they refuse or stall, walk away.
5. Why Bangkok and not Paris/Berlin/Tel Aviv
Cost is the obvious argument, but there are two more interesting ones:
- Time zone overlap — For a European team, having a studio in Bangkok means a production cycle that runs almost 24/7 with morning overlap with Paris (8am–11am Paris = 1pm–4pm Bangkok).
- Anglo-Thai bilingual talent pool — The best Bangkok studios have mixed Thai/international teams. If your product targets Southeast Asia, that's a strategic advantage impossible to recreate from Europe.
The trade-off: fewer ultra-senior profiles on niche stacks. If you need a Rust or WebGPU expert, Bangkok is rarer. On mainstream stacks (Next.js, React Native, Postgres, Stripe), it's broadly comparable to Europe.
In short
Choosing an agency in Bangkok isn't about finding the cheapest — it's about finding the right shape for your project. A compact studio for product work that needs care. A scale agency for volume rollouts. A freelancer for a defined, bounded task.
The real quality signal in every case: are you going to talk to the people producing, or to a commercial layer that'll relay your messages?
Siam&co is an independent digital studio between Bangkok and Paris. Three partners, no middlemen. Web, mobile apps, SaaS, e-commerce. siamnco.com