BANGKOK– Once the engine of the country’s economic miracle, Thailand’s middle-class households are now borrowing just to survive. Economists are now asking, “Can the government stop the bleeding before it derails the broader economy?”
For decades, the story of Asia was one of an unstoppable, rising middle class. They were the undisputed engine of rapid economic growth—the eager consumers who bought new cars, moved into modern condominiums, and fueled a booming domestic tourism industry. Thailand was long considered a shining example of this success. But today, the narrative has taken a troubling turn. The very middle class that once powered the Thai economy is now facing severe growing pains, squeezed tightly by an invisible but suffocating force: household debt.
In Thailand, borrowing has quietly transitioned from a tool for building wealth into a desperate survival mechanism. During the darkest days of the global pandemic in 2021, Thailand’s household-debt-to-GDP ratio hit a staggering peak of over 95%. While recent data from the Bank of Thailand shows the ratio has slightly eased to 86.7% by the end of 2025, it remains one of the absolute highest in Asia and the developing world.
What do these numbers actually mean for everyday people? It means that roughly seven in ten borrowers are struggling with a limited ability to service their loans. Families are finding it harder and harder to keep their heads above water.
With Thailand’s economic growth already lagging far behind its Southeast Asian neighbors, the central bank and international economists are deeply worried. They fear that this debt crisis will act as a massive anchor, dragging the economy down for years to come.
How did the Thai middle class find themselves so heavily indebted? And will the recent measures introduced by the government to ease this massive financial burden actually work? To understand the depth of this crisis, we have to look past the flashy shopping malls of Bangkok and examine the real balance sheets of ordinary citizens.
The Anatomy of a Trillion-Baht Problem
To grasp the scale of the issue, you have to look at the raw numbers. By the fourth quarter of 2025, total household debt in Thailand had climbed to an eye-watering 16.44 trillion baht —roughly $504 billion. For a country of just over 70 million people, this is a colossal burden.
Economists often say that not all debt is created equal. In wealthier, developed nations, high household debt is often tied to long-term wealth-building assets. Families take out large mortgages to buy homes, or they take out business loans to start a company. Over time, these assets appreciate, offsetting the debt.
However, Thailand’s debt profile tells a very different and much more alarming story.
According to data from the National Statistical Office , nearly 70% of Thai household debt goes toward daily expenses rather than income-generating investments. Of the 16.44 trillion baht total, over 12.7 trillion baht is personal consumption debt. People are not borrowing to buy houses; they are swiping credit cards to buy groceries, pay utility bills, and cover basic personal loans.
Financial experts have likened this situation to trying to fill a leaking bathtub. No matter how much money is poured in, the water level never rises because the funds are instantly drained by daily survival needs. When people borrow money just to eat and commute, they are essentially pulling money from their future to survive the present.
Here is a quick breakdown of where the financial pressure points are most severe:
- Personal Consumption and Credit Cards:This is the fastest-growing segment of debt. As the cost of living has outpaced wage growth, families lean on credit cards and high-interest personal loans to bridge the gap at the end of the month.
- Vehicle Loans:Millions of households carry car and motorcycle loans. Unlike a house, a vehicle is a depreciating asset. Borrowers are paying interest on something that loses value the minute it drives off the lot.
- Housing:While housing debt exists, it makes up a much smaller slice of the pie compared to Western nations. Yet, for the nearly 1.69 million households burdened by mortgages, the high interest rates are severely stifling their ability to save.
Decades in the Making: How Did We Get Here?
The current crisis did not happen overnight. It is the result of decades of economic shifts, cultural changes, and global shocks.
Historically, Thai households operated largely on cash. But as the economy modernized and expanded in the 2000s, access to credit became significantly easier. Banks and financial institutions aggressively marketed credit cards and personal loans to a newly emerging middle class eager to enjoy a modern lifestyle.
For a while, incomes were rising fast enough to keep pace with the borrowing. But over the last decade, Thailand’s economic growth has slowed. The country has struggled to transition from a manufacturing and agriculture-based economy to a high-tech, knowledge-based economy. Wages stagnated, but the desire for a middle-class lifestyle did not.
Then came the COVID-19 pandemic.
The global health crisis was an absolute earthquake for the Thai economy, which relies heavily on tourism and exports. Millions of jobs were lost, and small businesses were shuttered. Without adequate savings to fall back on, families turned to debt. By early 2021, the household-debt-to-GDP ratio surged past 95% .
While the pandemic eventually subsided, the financial scars did not. Inflation spiked globally in the years that followed, driving up the cost of food, fuel, and electricity. Because wages remained flat, households that had borrowed to survive the pandemic found themselves unable to pay down those loans. Instead, they had to borrow even more to cope with the rising cost of living.
Furthermore, financial literacy remains a persistent challenge. Many borrowers do not fully understand the long-term consequences of compound interest. A common practice is paying only the minimum monthly balance on credit cards, which keeps the debt alive and growing for years.
The Generational Divide: Young Thais Under Pressure
If you want to see the human face of this crisis, look at Thailand’s younger generations. Gen Z and millennials are bearing the brunt of this financial squeeze.
Young adults entering the workforce today face a very different reality than their parents did. They are stepping into an economy with slow growth, high inflation, and fiercely competitive job markets. Yet, they are constantly surrounded by the pressures of social media, which heavily promotes a lifestyle of travel, trendy cafes, and designer brands.
Many young professionals start their working lives already saddled with debt, whether from education loans or early credit card use. With starting salaries often barely covering rent and basic living expenses in major cities like Bangkok, saving for a down payment on a home or putting money away for retirement feels like an impossible dream.
This financial strain has profound social impacts. It stifles personal aspirations, delays marriages, and contributes to Thailand’s rapidly declining birth rate. When young people cannot afford to support themselves, they certainly cannot afford to start families.
The Economic Drag: A Slower Thailand
The impact of this debt mountain extends far beyond individual households. It is a structural weakness that is actively dragging down the entire Thai economy.
When a family uses a large percentage of their monthly income just to pay off interest and service old debt, they have very little money left over to spend. This metric is known as the Debt-Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR). In Thailand, the DSCR is currently hovering around 22%, which is alarmingly high compared to the average of roughly 9% in other major economies.
Because consumers are not spending, domestic businesses are not selling. When businesses do not sell, they do not expand, and they do not hire new workers or raise wages. It is a vicious, downward cycle.
The banking sector is also feeling the heat. Fearing that borrowers will default on their loans, commercial banks have significantly tightened their lending standards. In the fourth quarter of 2025, overall loan growth in the banking system actually contracted by 1.1%. Banks are simply too scared to lend money, which means even healthy small businesses cannot get the capital they need to grow.
Kris Chantanotoke, the chief executive of Siam Commercial Bank, recently described the situation as a structural weakness in Thailand’s economy. He warned of a “self-fulfilling prophecy”—a psychological phenomenon where consumers and businesses expect the economy to be bad, so they stop spending and investing, which directly causes the economy to perform poorly.
As a result of all these factors, Thailand’s economic growth is heavily muted. The Bank of Thailand and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) forecast GDP growth of just 1.5% to 1.6% for 2026. If accurate, this would be the Thai economy’s weakest performance in three decades outside of major global crisis years.
Government Measures: Will They Work?
The Thai government is acutely aware of the crisis and has not been sitting idle. Since taking office, the current administration has rolled out a series of interventions under a “Quick Big Wins” agenda aimed at providing relief.
But dealing with a debt crisis is a delicate balancing act. If you forgive too much debt, banks could fail, and people might borrow recklessly in the future. If you do nothing, the economy grinds to a halt.
Here are some of the key measures the government and the Bank of Thailand have implemented:
- The Debt Clinic Program:This initiative is designed to help borrowers who have non-performing loans (loans that are in default) across multiple banks. The program consolidates their debts and restructures them with longer repayment periods and significantly lower interest rates, making the monthly payments manageable.
- Tackling Informal Debt:A major issue in Thailand is loan sharks. Because traditional banks have tightened lending, many desperate people turn to unregulated, informal lenders who charge extortionate interest rates. The government has aggressively stepped in to mediate these disputes, successfully resolving thousands of cases and converting informal debt into regulated, low-interest bank loans.
- Relief for Vulnerable Groups:Targeted financial assistance has been directed toward farmers, small and medium enterprises (SMEs), and low-income households who were hardest hit by recent economic shocks.
While these programs have successfully helped hundreds of thousands of people, economists warn that they are largely band-aid solutions. They treat the symptoms of the debt crisis, but they do not cure the underlying disease: low incomes and slow economic growth.
Restructuring a debt makes it easier to pay off, but if a borrower’s salary never increases, they will eventually find themselves right back in the same hole.
The Path Forward: Breaking the Cycle
Fixing Thailand’s household debt crisis will require more than just debt restructuring. It requires a fundamental shift in how the country’s economy operates.
International experts, including the IMF, have outlined several crucial steps Thailand must take to break the cycle of debt and return to healthy, sustainable growth:
1. Boosting Incomes Through Upskilling
Thailand can no longer compete on cheap labor alone; neighboring countries like Vietnam and Indonesia have taken over that role. To raise wages, Thailand must invest heavily in education and training programs to reskill its workforce for high-tech industries, digital services, and advanced manufacturing. Higher incomes are the only permanent way to reduce the debt burden.
2. Comprehensive Financial Education
Stricter lending policies are necessary, but they must be paired with widespread financial literacy campaigns. Consumers, starting from high school, need to be taught the dangers of over-borrowing, how compound interest works, and the importance of emergency savings.
3. Shifting from Consumption to Investment
The culture of borrowing must change. Policies should incentivize borrowing for wealth-building activities—like starting a small business or buying a home—rather than for immediate consumption.
4. Broadening the Social Safety Net
Many Thai families fall into debt because a single medical emergency or a bad harvest wipes out their savings. By strengthening basic social assistance schemes and improving the targeted welfare systems, the government can provide a safety net that prevents vulnerable people from turning to credit cards just to survive a bad month.
Thailand’s middle class is standing at a critical crossroads. The rapid growth and rising living standards of the past few decades were remarkable, but they have been increasingly financed by borrowed money. The bill has finally come due, and it is acting as a heavy drag on the nation’s future.
The decline of the household-debt-to-GDP ratio from 95% to roughly 87% is a small step in the right direction, but it is far from a victory. With 7 in 10 borrowers still struggling, the human cost of this crisis is immense.
The recent government measures to restructure loans and tackle informal debt are providing essential, immediate relief. However, long-term success will require hard structural reforms. Thailand needs to transition into an economy where wages grow, people save, and debt is used as a tool to build a brighter future, rather than just a way to survive the present.
If the country can make this pivot, the Thai middle class will find its footing once again. If not, the debt trap will only continue to tighten.


















