Battery Shop listings: 2040 businesses across 68 Thai provinces — aggregated from Google Maps Platform data
#Battery Shop
A no-start on Monday morning is the signal that your car battery is past its useful life. Step one: check the manufacture sticker on the battery casing. If it has been more than 18 months and you are seeing slow cranking, dim headlights, or electrical glitches, replace it immediately rather than waiting for a roadside breakdown. Step two: choose the service type that fits the situation. If the car still starts, drive to a battery shop. In-shop battery replacement starts at 1,500 THB for a sedan with a 60Ah MF battery, 2,500 to 4,500 THB for an SUV or pickup with a 75 to 90Ah battery, and 5,500 to 12,000 THB for European cars using AGM or EFB batteries with start-stop systems. If the car will not start, call mobile battery replacement service. Service surcharge is typically 200 to 500 THB above the battery price, with urban response time of 30 to 60 minutes. Step three: pick the right brand for the car. Popular brands in Thailand: GS, 3K, Boliden, FB, and Yuasa for Japanese cars; Panasonic and Bosch for mid-range European cars; Varta and Amaron for premium European vehicles. Average battery life in Thailand is 18 to 30 months and depends heavily on driving pattern — short city trips with continuous AC use shorten battery life. Before paying, get a written warranty card listing the battery model and manufacture month. Standard MF batteries carry 12 months of warranty; premium batteries carry 24 to 36 months.