The social media landscape in Thailand: 2026 snapshot

Thailand’s digital landscape is unique. The country has 71.6 million people, over 91% of whom are online, and nearly 80% maintain at least one social media identity. Thai internet users spend an average of almost 8 hours online daily, with roughly 3 of those hours on social platforms. That’s among the highest in the world.
What makes Thailand particularly interesting is the diversity of platforms that matter. Unlike Western markets where Meta and Google dominate almost everything, Thailand’s social ecosystem includes a strong presence from LINE (54 million users), TikTok (46 million users), and a deeply engaged Facebook community (50 million users). Each platform plays a distinct role in the consumer journey.
Platform | Users in Thailand | Best for |
|---|---|---|
~50 million | Community building, Marketplace, ads for all demographics, local business pages | |
TikTok | ~46 million | Short-form video, Gen Z/millennial reach, TikTok Shop, entertainment-driven discovery |
LINE | ~54 million | Direct messaging, CRM via LINE OA, loyalty programs, conversational commerce |
~18 million | Visual storytelling, Reels, lifestyle and fashion brands, influencer partnerships | |
Youtube | ~42 million | Long and short-form video, tutorials, brand storytelling, YouTube Shorts |
~6.5 million | B2B marketing, professional services, employer branding, thought leadership |
Choosing the right platforms for your brand

A single-platform strategy is no longer enough in Thailand. Research shows that Thai consumers juggle five or more apps daily, and they discover brands through a mix of social feeds, search, and video. The key is not to be everywhere, but to be strategic about where you invest.
For B2C brands targeting Thai consumers
Facebook remains the utility layer of the internet for most Thais — it’s where they browse, join groups, and check Marketplace. Pair it with TikTok for discovery and awareness (especially if your audience skews younger), and LINE Official Account for direct engagement and retention. Instagram adds value if your brand has strong visual content.
For B2B and professional services
LinkedIn is growing in Thailand with 6.5 million members, making it increasingly valuable for B2B lead generation and thought leadership. Combine it with targeted Facebook ads (which still reach business decision-makers) and Google Ads for search-intent capture.
For international brands entering Thailand
Don’t assume your home-market social strategy will translate directly. LINE is far more important in Thailand than in Western markets, and TikTok plays a bigger role in product discovery. Localise your content, adapt to Thai humour and cultural nuances, and consider working with local creators who understand the audience.
Key trends shaping social media marketing in 2026

1. Short-form video dominates everything
TikTok, Instagram Reels, and YouTube Shorts continue to drive the highest engagement rates. Brands that consistently create short, authentic video content see significantly higher visibility than those relying on static images or long-form posts. This isn’t a trend anymore — it’s the baseline expectation.
2. Creator-led content outperforms brand content
Thai consumers trust creators over brand accounts. Over 70% of Thai marketers report that influencer campaigns now deliver measurable ROI, with native-style content outperforming polished brand ads. The shift is from one-off sponsored posts to long-term creator partnerships where the creator genuinely understands and advocates for the brand.
3. Social commerce is mainstream
Thailand is one of the largest social commerce markets in Southeast Asia. TikTok Shop is now outperforming traditional marketplaces in some lifestyle and beauty categories. Facebook Marketplace and Instagram Shops also drive significant sales. The line between content and commerce has essentially disappeared — consumers discover, evaluate, and purchase all within the same platform.
4. AI is reshaping content creation and ad targeting
Meta’s AI improvements have led to a 12% increase in ad quality on Facebook and a 3% rise in conversion rates on Instagram in early 2026. Generative AI tools are enabling brands to produce diverse creative variations at scale. However, with AI-generated content flooding platforms, authenticity and human creativity become differentiators. The winning approach is hybrid content that combines AI efficiency with genuine human storytelling.
5. Conversational commerce through LINE and messaging
LINE Official Accounts remain the backbone of customer communication in Thailand. Smart brands are using LINE for personalised marketing, loyalty programmes, automated responses, and even direct sales. The combination of chat-based selling, rich menus, and broadcast messages makes LINE a full CRM tool — not just a messaging app.
6. First-party data and privacy-first strategies
With cookies declining and privacy regulations tightening, brands are shifting to first-party data strategies. This means building your own audience through email lists, LINE followers, loyalty programmes, and owned communities. Brands that invested early in building direct relationships are now seeing stronger, more predictable performance from their social campaigns.
Building your social media strategy: a practical framework

Here’s the process we follow at Asia Media Studio when developing social media strategies for our clients:
Define clear objectives: Are you building brand awareness, driving website traffic, generating leads, or boosting online sales? Each goal requires different platforms, content formats, and metrics.
Understand your audience deeply: Go beyond demographics. What platforms do they use most? What type of content do they engage with? When are they most active? Use platform analytics and Thai consumer research to inform your decisions.
Choose 2–3 primary platforms: Don’t spread yourself thin. Pick the platforms where your audience is most active and where your content format naturally fits. Excel on two platforms before expanding to a third.
Create a content calendar: Plan 4–6 weeks ahead. Mix content types: educational posts, behind-the-scenes, customer stories, product highlights, and trend-driven content. Aim for consistency over volume — 3 quality posts per week beats 7 mediocre ones.
Invest in video production: Even simple smartphone video works. The key is authenticity and value. Show your process, your team, your happy customers. Polish helps but isn’t essential — real and relatable wins on social.
Set up paid amplification: Organic reach alone won’t cut it. Allocate budget for boosting top-performing content and running targeted ad campaigns. Start small, test different audiences and creatives, and scale what works.
Measure what matters: Track engagement rate, click-through rate, cost per result, and conversion rate — not vanity metrics like follower count. Review performance monthly and adjust your strategy based on data.
Build community, not just audience: Respond to comments and messages quickly. Create content that invites participation. The brands that succeed on social are those that treat it as a two-way conversation, not a broadcast channel.
Common mistakes brands make on social media

Reposting the same content across all platforms without adapting format or tone. What works on LinkedIn won’t work on TikTok.
Focusing on follower count instead of engagement quality. A smaller, engaged audience is far more valuable than a large, passive one.
Posting inconsistently. Social algorithms reward regular activity. Disappearing for weeks and then posting five times in one day confuses both the algorithm and your audience.
Ignoring negative comments or reviews. Transparent, empathetic responses build more trust than deleting criticism.
Not investing in paid social. Organic reach on Facebook and Instagram continues to decline. Without ad budget, even great content won’t reach enough people.
Skipping analytics. If you’re not reviewing what’s working and what isn’t, you’re guessing. Data should drive every strategic decision.
In-house vs. agency: what makes sense?
Managing social media well requires a surprising range of skills: strategy, copywriting, design, video editing, community management, paid advertising, and data analysis. Many businesses underestimate the resources needed.
For small businesses with limited budgets, starting in-house is perfectly reasonable — especially if someone on your team is genuinely enthusiastic about social media and willing to learn. Focus on one or two platforms and do them well.
For growing businesses and established brands, partnering with an agency brings strategic depth, creative resources, and the ability to run sophisticated ad campaigns. The best agencies don’t just post content — they develop strategy, produce creative, manage paid media, and optimise based on performance data.
A hybrid model also works well: maintain in-house control of community management and day-to-day posting while partnering with an agency for strategy, creative production, and paid campaigns.
See it in action: 3 social media projects by Asia Media Studio
Theory is valuable, but results tell the real story. Here are three recent projects where we put these social media strategies to work — each with a different industry, audience, and challenge.
SANTAS — Premium Home & Lifestyle Brand
Industry: Lifestyle | Services: Social Media Marketing, Brand Awareness Campaigns, Visual Consistency
SANTAS is a well-known Thai brand offering premium bedding, bath linen, and home essentials. We partnered with them to strengthen their digital marketing performance across social platforms — managing end-to-end campaign development focused on brand awareness, audience engagement, and visual consistency. All campaign visuals were aligned with SANTAS’s premium identity, ensuring a cohesive brand presence that reflected their quality standards across every touchpoint.
→ View the full project: asiamediastudio.com/portfolio/santas
TWOOAK Thailand — D2C Contact Lens Brand
Industry: Health & Eyecare | Services: Full Social Media Management (Monthly Retainer)
TWOOAK (“Two of a Kind”) is a Singapore-founded contact lens brand expanding into Thailand, offering premium daily lenses at accessible prices. Asia Media Studio was brought on to own their social media presence end-to-end — from content strategy and creative production to community management and paid amplification. A great example of building a brand’s entire social footprint in a new market from scratch.
→ View the full project: asiamediastudio.com/portfolio/twooak-thailand
Wa Ale — Private Island Resort, Myanmar
Industry: Hospitality | Services: Website, UX/UI, SEO, Digital Marketing, Social Media
Wa Ale is an exclusive eco-luxury resort set within a remote archipelago in southern Myanmar. Asia Media Studio delivered a comprehensive digital overhaul — including website redesign, visual refinement, SEO, and social media strategy. The project focused on elevating the resort’s premium positioning through immersive photography, minimal design, and a social presence that captures the magic of the destination while driving bookings from international travellers.
→ View the full project: asiamediastudio.com/portfolio/wa-ale
Ready to level up your social media presence?
Asia Media Studio has been helping brands connect with their audiences across digital channels since 2007. From social media strategy and content creation to paid campaigns and performance reporting, we’re here to help you grow.



