When a British traveller strolls into a Thai 7-Eleven and turns a quick shop into viral theatre, the internet leans in. TikTok creator @middlenamemason — a cheeky Brit with nearly 800,000 followers — recently posted a short, infectious clip showing what just 110 baht (about £2.50) will buy you in Thailand’s ubiquitous convenience stores. The result? Close to 60,000 likes, a flurry of amused comments, and a fresh reminder that snack prices on the other side of the world are doing the rounds for all the right reasons.
The mini-haul that made Brits gasp
In under a minute, the traveller transforms a humble 7-Eleven visit into a lesson in comparative economics. With a grin and a running commentary, he pulls items from the shelves and tallies the cost aloud: a vitamin C drink for 20 baht (roughly 47p), a Sprite for 19 baht (about 46p), a tub of Skittles for 25 baht (59p), and a Kinder Joy at 33 baht — and that, he declares, is the lot. The total? That tidy sum of 110 baht — your pocket change cocktail of fizzy drinks, sweets and instant joy.
It’s the kind of clip that’s equal parts travel flex and gentle roast of life back home, where the same handful of treats would set you back significantly more. Watching his beaming reaction as he bags each bargain, viewers get the full tourist bliss: sun, cheap snacks and the tiny thrill of feeling like a savvy local for half an hour.
Why the video resonated
People reacted the way they always do when confronted with a stark price contrast: with laughter, incredulous comments, and an undercurrent of expatriate envy. “Cost about £20 in the UK,” one TikToker quipped. Another, half-joking, fantasised about early retirement: “Gonna save £100,000 and just go retire in Thailand.” And, because the internet is the internet, someone cheekily asked, “Happy ending?”
The clip tapped into two things: the ever-present conversation about rising living costs in the UK, and Thailand’s long-standing reputation as a budget-friendly haven for travellers and expats. Whether viewed as a taste of holiday hedonism or a flavour of everyday affordability, it made viewers re-evaluate what money buys in different corners of the world.
Beyond the snacks: a bigger story about lifestyle choices
The viral moment mirrors a broader trend. Across social feeds and news columns, you’ll find stories of Brits packing up and moving to Thailand — not just for a holiday, but for a different pace of life. The article that prompted this clip’s attention notes one couple who swapped hectic East Sussex for Chiang Mai’s calmer streets, citing long hours, sky-high rents and the general squeeze of UK living costs as their motivation. For them, and for many others, the math of daily prices adds up to a life choice.
That doesn’t mean Thailand is a utopia or that every expat move is effortless. But it does help explain why a 7-Eleven haul can spark more than a chuckle — it can spark a conversation about priorities, savings and whether greener (and cheaper) pastures are out there.
Comfort, convenience and character — the 7-Eleven experience
There’s something charming about how Thai 7-Elevens function as microcosms of modern Thai life. They’re not just convenience stores; they’re neighbourhood hubs where umbrellas, instant noodles, chilled drinks and midnight snacks coexist. Cheap, cheerful and impossibly practical, they also reveal local tastes: vitamin drinks lined up like health potions, imported candies sitting beside regional favourites, and friendly staff used to tourists doing double takes at price tags.
For the TikToker, the clip is a simple holiday snippet. For viewers in the UK, it’s a nudge to compare notes on living standards, a laugh at how far your money stretches abroad, and a reminder that sometimes the smallest purchases carry the biggest stories.
Whether you watch the video and crave a Sprite for 46p, dream of retiring under a Thai sun, or simply enjoy seeing someone delighted with a tub of Skittles, the takeaway is the same: sometimes the joy is in the little things. And if a quick 7-Eleven haul can brighten your day — or your perspective — that’s worth more than its price tag.
If you’re tempted to test the theory yourself, bring an open mind, a sense of humour and maybe an extra bag for all the bargains you’ll want to bring home.


















This clip makes me laugh but also feel annoyed at how messed up prices are back home. A packet of sweets and a drink for the price of a sandwich in the UK sounds unreal. I’m tempted to pack a bag and go tomorrow.
It’s funny until you remember there are trade-offs like wages and social services, but yeah the snacks are a steal.
I genuinely just wanted to show the little joys — didn’t expect everyone to start booking flights though!
Some of you treat this like a travel brochure and ignore structural issues. Cheap snacks don’t automatically equal better quality of life.
Fair point Harold, I didn’t mean to suggest everything’s perfect, just that small pleasures can highlight big debates about affordability.
I could retire if I only ate Skittles and Sprite apparently. The retirement-doom fantasy is silly but also kind of tempting.
Retiring to somewhere cheaper is great until the visa, healthcare and pension math arrives like a storm cloud.
True, I wasn’t serious — just daydreaming after a long week. Still, it gets you thinking about priorities.
Thanks for the love, everyone — it was just a light-hearted bit of travel content but I’m glad it sparked a conversation. I paid full price and left a cheeky tip for the cashier.
You seemed genuinely delighted, which is wholesome. But don’t those prices vary between touristy and local areas?
As an economist I’d caution against generalising from a single convenience store haul; PPP adjustments and regional price indices tell a more nuanced story.
Totally agree, but small anecdotes like this can still illustrate lived experience even if they aren’t hard data.
Absolutely, Sophie — I wasn’t trying to publish research, just share a moment. Dr Ahmed makes a solid point about broader context though.
This kind of content glosses over exploitation and inequality. Cheap goods often depend on cheap labor and complex supply chains.
That’s too bleak. People enjoy cheaper everyday items and that has real benefits. Discussions about labor are important but don’t erase the joy.
I’m not saying we can’t enjoy anything, just that we should be honest about trade-offs and not romanticise everything.
I want a Sprite for 46p! That’s cheaper than my school lunch.
This video taps into comparative advantage and cost-of-living discrepancies, which are driven by wages, taxation and social provision differences. It’s illustrative but superficial if taken as evidence for mass migration decisions.
But when housing and daily costs diverge so sharply people will still move, regardless of academic caveats.
Indeed Ben, microeconomic incentives matter — but policy and long-term integration outcomes should temper romanticised narratives.
Thai 7-Elevens are a special kind of magic; lived there for a year and those vitamin drinks saved many hangovers. Small things like this make daily life brighter.
Or they normalise consumerism and tropicalise poverty into a brand tourists can buy into. Not all nostalgia is harmless.
I get that, Sam, but my experience was mostly local friendships and convenience — not a sanitized tourist consumption.
Both perspectives matter: convenience stores can be community hubs and also symbols of global capitalism.
Love seeing local retail culture get the spotlight. 7-Eleven in Thailand seems woven into everyday life more than in some other countries.
They really were everywhere, Maya — felt like each one had its own personality and staff who knew regulars by name.
That local familiarity is what I envy; it’s less about price and more about community vibe for me.
But remember some of those chain outlets are franchised and contribute to homogenisation of local retail scenes.
Tourists posting these clips push a narrative that encourages gentrification and tips off others to cheap living without acknowledging long-term impacts. That can be harmful.
I hear you, Ravi, but isn’t the more pressing issue how home countries handle affordability rather than blaming a TikTok video?
Both are true. The clip is fine as a snapshot, but we shouldn’t ignore larger patterns of displacement that can follow.
Fair play to the guy for making me crave Skittles at midnight. Purely selfish takeaway: sweet shop run incoming.
This is classic cherry-picking: picked the cheapest items on show and assumed the whole country operates like that. Food for thought, literally.
Cherry-picking or not, small snapshots can still shift perceptions and open conversations about money and happiness.
Sure, perceptions matter, but policy and wages matter more for long-term decisions like moving abroad.
I think these conversations should include on-the-ground voices, not just tourists making sweeping statements.
Moved to Chiang Mai two years ago and can confirm pockets of affordability exist, but you trade that for different stresses like visa renewals. It’s not a fairytale.
Could you share practical tips for someone seriously considering the move? The video made me curious but I’m clueless about logistics.
Start with visa rules, healthcare insurance, and a trial visit of at least a few months. Also, budget beyond snacks — rent is the big variable.