Delivery

The Pattaya food delivery guide

Which apps work in which neighborhoods, what to order, what to avoid, and how the math actually works.

The three main apps

Pattaya is well-served by three food delivery platforms. Each has slightly different restaurant coverage, fees, and bugs.

AppStrengthsWeaknesses
GrabFoodLargest restaurant network in Pattaya. Reliable English UI. Card payment works smoothly.Service fees can stack up. Surge pricing during rain.
FoodpandaOften has aggressive discount promotions. Strong cafe and bakery selection. The Pandapro subscription pays back fast for frequent users.Smaller pool of high-end restaurants. Customer service slower.
LineManWorks well for Thai-only restaurants that don't have English menus on other apps. Good for late-night.UI mostly in Thai. Card payment occasionally glitches with foreign cards.

Most independent Pattaya restaurants are on GrabFood and Foodpanda — usually both. The bigger international chains (Pizza Company, MK Suki, Sukishi, Coca, etc.) appear on all three. Smaller Thai noodle shops, Isaan grills, and morning porridge stalls are often only on LineMan.

How fees actually work

The total you pay = food price + delivery fee + service fee + (sometimes) small order surcharge. Here's the typical breakdown for a 300 baht order in central Pattaya:

So a 300-baht meal often lands at 350-410 baht delivered. Subscription tiers (Pandapro, Grab Unlimited) can bring delivery fees down to zero on most orders, paying back at around 4-5 orders per month if you order regularly.

What delivers well (and what doesn't)

Not all Pattaya food delivers equally:

Reality check: The food on a delivery app is often 10-20% worse than the same dish eaten at the restaurant. For Italian and Japanese especially, it's usually worth the walk if you're within 1 km.

When to order, when to walk

The fastest delivery times in Pattaya are 2-5pm and 9-11pm. Worst times are 12-1pm and 7-8pm — peak demand, longest waits, sometimes 60+ minutes for a 1km hop. Rainy days double everything; if monsoon's on, walking is faster.

The 1km test: if your destination is 1km or less, walking + eating in is usually better than delivery — the food's hotter, you don't pay fees, and Pattaya pavements are flat enough.

Tips that save real money

  1. Stack promos with subscription. Pandapro (free delivery on most orders) plus a 100-baht-off promo code is the cheapest way to eat in Pattaya for residents.
  2. Check both apps before ordering. The same restaurant often has different prices, different promos, and different delivery fees on GrabFood vs Foodpanda. The price gap can be 50-100 baht.
  3. For groups, order from one place. Splitting orders triples the delivery fees. One bigger order usually wins.
  4. Pay with promotional cards. Several Thai banks run cashback promotions for food delivery on weekends — check your card's app before checkout.
  5. Tip is optional but appreciated. Drivers earn ~30-50 baht per delivery. A 20 baht tip is generous and visible to them.