The Rabbit Card is Bangkok’s equivalent of Singapore’s EZ-Link — a reloadable, tap-and-go stored-value card that gets you through BTS gates faster and cheaper than buying single-trip tickets every time.
This guide covers everything: what the card is, whether tourists can use it, where to buy one (including at the airport), how much it costs, the app, expiry rules, and how to get your money back when you leave.
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TL;DR: Bangkok Rabbit Card at a Glance| Highlights | Details |
|---|---|
| Best for | BTS Skytrain travel in Bangkok |
| Tourist option? | Yes, standard Rabbit Card (stored-value) or BTS One-Day Pass (unlimited rides) |
| Where to buy | BTS station counters, Suvarnabhumi Airport (Phaya Thai BTS) |
| Price (standard card) | 200 THB (~S$7.50) — 100 THB card fee (non-refundable) + 100 THB stored value |
| Passport needed? | Yes — foreigners must register with passport (2025 policy) |
| Refundable? | Stored value only — card fee (100 THB) is non-refundable |
Table of Contents:Image credits: Sweet Escape Thailand
The Rabbit Card is a stored-value smart card issued by BTS Group Holdings — the company that operates Bangkok’s BTS Skytrain. Launched in 2012, the Year of the Rabbit, it works on the same principle as Singapore’s EZ-Link: load money on, tap in, tap out, fare deducted automatically.
No queuing for tickets at every station. No rummaging for exact change. Just tap and go.
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The primary use is riding the BTS Skytrain across two lines:
Beyond transit, the card is accepted at a growing number of partner merchants — convenience stores, coffee shops, and F&B outlets in and around BTS stations. Think of it as a transit card that doubles as a light payments wallet.
Important: Bangkok’s MRT (underground metro) uses a separate card system. The Rabbit Card does not work on the MRT Blue or Yellow Lines. You’ll need a dedicated MRT card or single-trip tokens for those journeys — more on that below.
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Yes, and it’s worth getting. Tourists have two options:
The One-Day Pass makes sense if you’re in Bangkok briefly and plan to hop between BTS stations all day. For longer stays or occasional rides, the Rabbit Card gives you more flexibility — top up as needed, use it across trips.
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Image Credits: Klook
A standalone paper ticket (not a Rabbit Card) that gives you unlimited BTS rides for one day, valid until midnight on the day you activate it.
Image Credits: Wikipedia
The standard stored-value card used by locals and tourists alike. You register it, load credit, tap in and out, and top up as needed.
Which one should you get? If you’re making 4+ BTS trips in a single day, the One-Day Pass pays off. For multi-day trips or regular Bangkok visitors, the Rabbit Card is the better long-term option.
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Image Credits: BTS
Buying a Rabbit Card requires registration with your passport (2025 policy). Head to a customer service counter — not just a machine — to complete this. The whole process takes about 5 minutes.
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Image Credits: Domestic Flights Thailand
Suvarnabhumi’s Airport Rail Link (ARL) is a separate system — it uses ARL cards or tokens, not the Rabbit Card. Once you transfer to the BTS network (the connection point is Phaya Thai Station), you can buy a Rabbit Card at the BTS customer service counter there.
In short: take the ARL from Suvarnabhumi to Phaya Thai, then buy your Rabbit Card at Phaya Thai’s BTS counter before continuing your journey.
Image Credits: www.donmueangairport.com
Don Mueang doesn’t have a direct BTS connection. Most travellers take a shuttle bus or taxi to the Mo Chit BTS station. Pick up your Rabbit Card at the Mo Chit customer service counter on arrival.
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For the Rabbit Card: yes, if you’re a foreigner.
Under Thailand’s 2025 AML regulations, all Rabbit Card holders must register their card. Foreigners (including tourists) must present their passport to buy or top up a Rabbit Card at any BTS station counter. You’ll also need an email address and phone number for registration.
For the BTS One-Day Pass: no.
The One-Day Pass is a single-use paper ticket — no registration, no passport, just pay and go.
| Option | Passport Required? |
|---|---|
| Rabbit Card (foreigners) | Yes — passport + email + phone required |
| BTS One-Day Pass | No |
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A standard Rabbit Card costs 200 THB (~S$7.50) at any BTS counter. This breaks down as:
The One-Day Pass costs 150 THB (~S$5.50) and gives you unlimited BTS rides from activation until midnight the same day. It covers the Sukhumvit and Silom Lines — the two main tourist lines.
Single BTS fares typically run 17–59 THB (~S$0.63–S$2.20) depending on distance. At 150 THB for the day pass, the break-even is roughly 4–5 trips. If you’re moving between neighbourhoods (Chatuchak, Asok, Silom, On Nut), you’ll hit that easily in a day.
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Time needed: 5 minutes
Registration is mandatory for foreigners
Top-up machines are at every BTS station. You can also top up at the customer service counter if the machine gives you trouble.
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Tap your card on the reader at the entry turnstile, ride to your destination, and tap again on exit. The fare deducts automatically based on the number of zones travelled.
The Rabbit Card does not work on the Bangkok MRT (Blue or Yellow Lines), which are operated by a separate company (MRTA). You’ll need an MRT stored-value card or single-trip tokens for underground metro journeys.
This is one of Bangkok’s ongoing transit frustrations — no single card covers everything. If you’re using both networks regularly, carry separate payment for each or budget for the mild inconvenience.
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The Rabbit LINE Pay app (available on iOS and Android) is BTS Group’s digital platform. Key features include:
The app is most feature-complete for holders of the Rabbit LINE Pay card (a separate financial debit product). Standard transit Rabbit Card holders can use it for balance checks and history, though some features may require account registration with your card number.
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As of early 2026, Apple Wallet support for the Rabbit Card has not been confirmed — Bangkok is not on Apple’s supported transit card list. Check the BTS website before your trip.
The physical card does not expire, but stored value can become inactive if the card goes unused for an extended period. The general rule:
For Singaporeans who visit Bangkok annually, the remaining balance should stay valid between trips — but if you’re returning after a longer gap, check the card at a counter before loading more credit.
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Head to any BTS customer service counter to return your card and get your money back.
What you get back:
How long it takes:
What to bring: The physical card. If you bought a tourist card, bring your passport too.
Where to go: Any BTS customer service counter — Siam, Asok, and Mo Chit are the most accessible.
If you’re heading to the airport, sort the refund before you leave. Queues at busy stations can be slow during peak hours — give yourself 15–20 minutes.
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The Rabbit Card handles your BTS fares — but for everything else (restaurants, shopping, hotels, ATMs), use a card that won’t eat into your budget with foreign transaction fees.
YouTrip converts at the wholesale exchange rate with no FX markup, which typically beats the hotel counter rate and the standard Singapore bank card surcharge of 3.25-3.5%. Load THB before you fly or let it convert automatically when you spend.
Yes. Tourists use the same standard Rabbit Card as locals. You’ll need your passport to register under Thailand’s 2025 AML rules.
If you want to skip registration, the BTS One-Day Pass (150 THB) gives unlimited rides for one day with no ID required.
Go to any BTS customer service counter at a major station — Siam, Asok, Mo Chit, and Victory Monument all have them.
Bring your passport, pay 200 THB, provide your email and phone number for registration, and you’re ready to tap. Takes about 5 minutes.
At BTS customer service counters at major stations — you’ll need to register in person with your passport, so the counter (not the machine) is the right stop.
The BTS One-Day Pass can be bought at counters and ticket machines.
At Suvarnabhumi, take the Airport Rail Link to Phaya Thai station and buy a Rabbit Card at the BTS counter there. For Don Mueang, head to Mo Chit BTS station — there’s a customer service counter on arrival.
Yes, if you’re a foreigner. Thailand’s 2025 AML regulations require Rabbit Card registration with valid ID — foreigners must present their passport plus an email and phone number.
The BTS One-Day Pass has no registration requirement.
The Rabbit Card costs 200 THB (~S$7.50) — 100 THB non-refundable card fee plus 100 THB loaded stored value.
The BTS One-Day Pass (a separate unlimited-rides ticket) costs 150 THB (~S$5.50).
No. The MRT Blue and Yellow Lines use a separate payment system and require their own stored-value card or single-trip tokens.
Yes — return the card at any BTS customer service counter to get your stored value back, minus a small processing fee.
Note: the 100 THB card issuance fee is non-refundable. Balances over 250 THB take up to 15 days to process.
Yes — the Rabbit LINE Pay app (iOS and Android) lets you check your balance and transaction history. Some top-up features may require account registration.
Whether you’re heading to Siam for shopping, Asok for nightlife, Chatuchak for weekend markets, or Silom for rooftop bars, the Rabbit Card makes getting around the BTS a breeze. Don’t forget to bring along your YouTrip card for the best THB exchange rates with zero FX fees!
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Happy travels!
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