The Bangkok to Pattaya minivan wins on one thing the fare tables leave out, and it is not price or comfort. It is where the van sets you down. The shared vans and coaches on this route all leave from the same Ekkamai terminal, but they finish in different parts of Pattaya. The T Tour minivan ends at its own station in the center, near Walking Street and Bali Hai Pier. The cheaper Roong Reuang coach stops at the North Pattaya Road bus terminal, a songthaew ride short of the beach.

Here is the short version. It’s a run of about 147 km down Motorway 7 that takes 2 to 2.5 hours, and the van most central travelers want is the T Tour service from Ekkamai. Fares sit around THB 180 to 220 (about $5 to $6), a little above the coach and well below a private car. If your hotel is near the center and you travel light, the van’s drop point is worth the small premium. If you are moving with real luggage, the trade looks different. The terminals, operators, and the ride all break down below.

Pattaya waterfront at Bali Hai Pier, the arrival area for T Tour minivans from Bangkok near Walking StreetPhotographer: iMahesh. Source: Wikimedia Commons. License: CC BY-SA 4.0.
The T Tour minivan ends in central Pattaya near Bali Hai Pier, minutes from Walking Street and the central beach hotels.

Bangkok to Pattaya by minivan, the 147 km Motorway 7 run

This is a fast run east, not a long haul. The distance is about 147 km down Motorway 7, and a clear road puts you in Pattaya in 2 to 2.5 hours. Friday evenings, weekends, and public holidays stretch that toward 3 hours, and so does a van that waits to fill or stops for fuel partway (AsiaTransHub, 2026). Departures are frequent, so timing is rarely the problem. The choice that actually matters is which service you board and where it ends.

Book the shared van or coach on this route and the decision comes down to your drop point against your budget. The numbers that settle it are below.

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  • Distance: about 147 km, Ekkamai to central Pattaya via Motorway 7.
  • Duration: 2 to 2.5 hours, up to 3 on Friday evenings, weekends, and holidays.
  • Departures: roughly hourly from about 06:00 to 22:00.
  • Minivan fare: THB 180 to 220 (about $5 to $6) on the T Tour service from Ekkamai.
  • Coach fare: THB 131 to 160 (about $4 to $5) on Roong Reuang from the same terminal.
  • Private van: about THB 1,800 to 2,500 (around $50 to $70) for the whole vehicle, door to door.
  • Main pickup: Ekkamai Eastern Bus Terminal, under Ekkamai BTS on Sukhumvit.
  • Drop-off: T Tour station in central Pattaya near Walking Street and Bali Hai Pier.

Where you actually leave from, Ekkamai not Mo Chit

Get this wrong and you add an hour before you start. The Pattaya vans and coaches leave from Ekkamai Eastern Bus Terminal, which sits directly under Ekkamai BTS on Sukhumvit (AsiaTransHub, 2026). For anyone staying in central Bangkok, that is a short train ride, not a cross town taxi. Some guides still send you to Mo Chit by default. Mo Chit serves the north and northeast, and while a Pattaya van does run from that side, it is the wrong queue for most tourists.

The T Tour minivan and the Roong Reuang coach both board at Ekkamai. Buy your ticket at the counter, then wait at the numbered bay. Vans leave roughly every hour from about 06:00 to 22:00, so you rarely need to book ahead outside a holiday weekend.

Ekkamai area of Bangkok on Sukhumvit near the Eastern Bus Terminal where Pattaya minivans boardPhotographer: Don Ramey Logan. Source: Wikimedia Commons. License: CC BY 4.0.
Ekkamai Eastern Bus Terminal sits under Ekkamai BTS, which makes it the practical van queue for anyone starting in central Bangkok.

The T Tour minivan that drops you in central Pattaya

The T Tour minivan is the one to take if you want to end nearest the action. It runs from the Ekkamai bays to the T Tour station in central Pattaya, close to Walking Street and Bali Hai Pier (BusOnlineTicket, 2026). Departures cluster through the day, roughly hourly from early morning to late evening, and the 147 km run over Motorway 7 takes about 2 to 2.5 hours in clear traffic.

Fares land around THB 180 to 220 (about $5 to $6), a little above the coach. What that premium buys is location, not comfort. Riders describe the cabin as cramped, with knees close to the seat ahead and room for one small bag before you are paying for a second seat (TripAdvisor, 2026). The central drop is the reason to choose it, so reserve a seat on this route if that matters to you.

Mo Chit and airport minivan queues, when they make sense

Two other queues suit the right start point. If you are already up in northern Bangkok, a Pattaya minivan runs from the Mo Chit 2 area, so you skip the trip across to Ekkamai. If you land at the airport, fixed price transfer counters at Suvarnabhumi sell a seat straight to Pattaya.

The Mo Chit queue is less predictable than the T Tour bays. Vans often wait to fill and make a fuel or package stop partway, which can push the run toward 3 hours (Where The Road Forks, 2026). The airport counters solve the luggage and timing problem, but the fixed price climbs to around THB 2,000 (about $56) for what is still a shared vehicle. Convenience at the start is paid back later in slower timing or a higher fare.

The Roong Reuang coach the minivan is really competing with

The coach the minivan really competes with is the Roong Reuang service, and it leaves from the same Ekkamai terminal. It is the cheapest legitimate seat on the route at roughly THB 131 to 160 (about $4 to $5), on frequent departures from about 06:00 to 22:00 (AsiaTransHub, 2026). You get a wide reclining seat and a luggage hold, which the shared van cannot match. Thai riders on the forums name it as the operator most likely to run on time.

The catch is where it ends. Roong Reuang arrives at the Pattaya Bus Terminal on North Pattaya Road, not in the center (Pantip, 2026). From there a shared songthaew into town or down to Jomtien costs another THB 30 to 40 (about $1), plus the wait for it to fill. That transfer is the exact thing the T Tour van is sold to skip.

Private van transfer for luggage and families

For luggage and families, the answer is a private van booked door to door. A hotel or airport can arrange a whole vehicle straight to your Pattaya address, usually for about THB 1,800 to 2,500 (around $50 to $70) one way (GoThaiTransport, 2026). The gain is a real boot for the bags, a private cabin, and a confirmed drop at the hotel door. It is the seat for anyone traveling with small children or more than a carry on.

What it does not buy is speed. A private van runs the same Motorway 7 in the same traffic as the shared seat, so you pay for the cabin and the door drop, not a faster trip. If that fits your group, compare private transfer options before you travel.

What the 2 hour minivan ride is like

Plan the trip around an early boarding and a tight cabin. Most riders reach Ekkamai, buy at the counter, and wait at the bay until the van fills. It pulls into Sukhumvit traffic, clears the city, then settles onto Motorway 7 for the fast run east. Drivers work that motorway hard, and some passengers say the pace feels aggressive (TripAdvisor, 2026).

There is usually one stop partway for fuel or a package handoff. The seats stay cramped for the full 2 hours, so a small bag on your lap beats wrestling it under the seat. It is a quick and direct trip, not a comfortable one. Pack light, keep your valuables in reach, and treat the drop point as the payoff rather than the legroom.

Where you arrive in Pattaya and reach your hotel

The T Tour van ends at its own station in central Pattaya, a short ride from most of the beach hotels near Walking Street and Bali Hai Pier. From there a songthaew along Beach Road or Second Road costs a small local fare, usually THB 20 to 40 (about $1). If your hotel is on the central strip, you may be within walking distance of the drop.

One honest caveat sits at the end. Some drivers wander Beach Road looking for hotels, and a few leave you a short walk from your actual address rather than at the door (Where The Road Forks, 2026). For where to base yourself, our best SHA hotels in Pattaya guide and the 3 days in Pattaya itinerary both map the central beach against the quieter Jomtien and Wongamat ends.

Pattaya beach and city skyline along the central bay, the main destination for arriving minivan passengersPhotographer: iMahesh. Source: Wikimedia Commons. License: CC BY-SA 4.0.
Most riders are heading for the central beach strip, where the van drop saves the transfer the North terminal coach forces.

Minivan versus coach versus taxi, the honest call

Here is the honest call between the three. Take the T Tour minivan if you want the central drop near Walking Street and you can travel light, and accept a tight seat for the saving. Take the Roong Reuang coach if you want the widest seat, a luggage hold, and the lowest fare. You just accept a songthaew from the North Pattaya terminal. Book a private van if you have children, real bags, or want a fixed door drop and no waiting to fill.

A metered taxi or a ride hailing car covers the same road for a higher fixed price. It makes sense mainly for groups splitting the cost, or for late arrivals after the vans stop. On timing, none of them beats the others by much, because the traffic and the drop wandering eat most of the gap a van seems to promise. For two more routes worth comparing, see our Chiang Mai flights guide and Chiang Mai transport guide, where the math runs very differently.

Where to stay in central Pattaya near the drop

Because the van lands you in central Pattaya, it pays to book a base that matches the drop, close to the beach and the piers. These three sit across the price range, all a short ride from the T Tour station.

Frequently asked questions

How long is the minivan from Bangkok to Pattaya?
About 2 to 2.5 hours over the roughly 147 km via Motorway 7, stretching toward 3 hours on Friday evenings, weekends, and holidays or when the van waits to fill and makes a fuel stop. Minivans leave Ekkamai about every hour from 06:00 to 22:00.
How much is a minivan from Bangkok to Pattaya?
The T Tour minivan from Ekkamai runs about THB 180 to 220 (around $5 to $6) depending on seat choice, while the Roong Reuang coach from the same terminal is cheaper at roughly THB 131 to 160 (around $4 to $5). A private van booked door to door costs about THB 1,800 to 2,500 (around $50 to $70) for the whole vehicle.
Which Bangkok terminal has minivans to Pattaya?
Ekkamai Eastern Bus Terminal, directly under Ekkamai BTS on Sukhumvit, is the practical central pickup, used by both the T Tour minivans and the Roong Reuang coach. Minivans also run from the Mo Chit 2 area in the north and from airport transfer counters, but Ekkamai is easiest for central Bangkok.
Where does the minivan drop you in Pattaya?
The T Tour minivan ends at its own station in central Pattaya near Walking Street and Bali Hai Pier, close to most beach hotels. The Roong Reuang coach instead arrives at the Pattaya Bus Terminal on North Pattaya Road, from where a shared songthaew into town costs another THB 30 to 40 (around $1).
Is the minivan or the coach better from Bangkok to Pattaya?
Take the T Tour minivan if you want the central drop near Walking Street and can travel light. Take the Roong Reuang coach if you want a wider seat, a luggage hold, and the cheapest fare, and do not mind a songthaew from the North Pattaya terminal. The van costs a little more and rides tighter.
Do minivans from Bangkok drop you at your Pattaya hotel?
Shared minivans drop at a central station, not usually your door, and some drivers wander Beach Road looking for hotels and can leave you a short walk away. For a guaranteed drop at the hotel door, book a private van at about THB 1,800 to 2,500 (around $50 to $70) rather than a shared seat.