Climate · Asia
Hua Hin climate, year-round
Thailand · Tropical maritime (Gulf of Thailand) · Updated May 2026
Best months
Dec · Jan · Feb · Mar · Apr
Best for: Gulf-of-Thailand royal-resort nomads who base in the cool dry winter and avoid the late-year monsoon.
Year at a glance
Cells coloured by typical daytime average temperature. ★ = best months for nomads.
Jan
25°C
72%
2mm
Feb
26°C
72%
2mm
Mar
27°C
72%
3mm
Apr
28°C
72%
4mm
May
28°C
76%
8mm
Jun
28°C
76%
8mm
Jul
27°C
76%
7mm
Aug
27°C
76%
8mm
Sep
27°C
78%
12mm
Oct
26°C
80%
14mm
Nov
25°C
78%
8mm
Dec
25°C
72%
3mm
Summer peak
28°C
April · 72% humidity
Winter low
25°C
January · 72% humidity
Climate type
Tropical maritime (Gulf of Thailand)
Moderate summers, Moderate winters
Field notes
Tropical maritime (Gulf of Thailand) — meaningfully drier than the Andaman coast because of the rain-shadow effect from the central Thai mountain range. Cool dry winter (November–February, 25–26°C average) is the postcard working window. Wet season (May–October) brings afternoon thunderstorms. The October–November stretch is the wettest.
Visa for nomads
High nomad-friendlyPathway
Digital nomad visa
Program
Destination Thailand Visa
Typical max stay
60 months
Same Thai DTV. Royal Thai resort town 200km from Bangkok with direct rail access.
Editorial summary, not legal advice. Verify with the relevant consulate before applying — visa programs change with little notice.
Cost of living in Hua Hin: ~$1,560/mo
Mid-tier monthly across rent, food, transport, utilities, and coworking.
Cities with a similar climate
Useful while you’re in Hua Hin
- Travel insuranceLong-term, nomad-friendly cover that travels with you to Hua Hin
- Multi-currency bankingAvoid the 4% conversion fees foreign cards rack up in Thailand
- eSIM data planDay-one connectivity in Thailand without local-SIM friction
- Coworking & colivingDay passes, monthly memberships, and verified workspaces in Hua Hin
- Flight dealsCheapest routes in and out of Hua Hin
The weekly nomad digest
One email a week with new visa launches, fresh city data, and the moves that actually matter. Free, no spam, unsubscribe in one click.
Editorial estimates aggregated from public climatological summaries — typical monthly averages, not forecasts. Treat as order-of-magnitude. Microclimate, altitude, and recent extreme weather can swing these values significantly.