An Honest Review from a Long-Term Rider: Why I Trust the rental shop with My Life (and My Trips) I'll start by saying this: I am not the type of person who leaves reviews for every coffee shop or hotel I visit. Life is busy, and "good enough" usually doesn't move the needle for me. However, when you find a business that operates with genuine integrity-especially in a rental industry that can sometimes feel like a minefield-it deserves to be recognized. I've lived and ridden across Thailand for years, and for the last 2+ years, the rental shop has been my only choice. I've put thousands of kilometers on their fleet, from two-week stints on the ADV150 and ADV160 to month-long expeditions on the ADV350 and the Honda CL300. The True Test: When Things Go Wrong Anyone can rent you a motorbike that works on day one. The true measure of a rental shop is what happens when you're 600km away from Bangkok and things go sideways. On a recent trip to Chiang Mai and the Mae Hong Son Loop on the ADV160, I had a rider's nightmare: I dropped the key fob while riding into Lampang. I was stranded, hours from help, and potentially looking at a ruined trip. I called the rental shop, and instead of a "sorry, that's your problem" response, they went into full-on support mode. They walked me through the keycode overrides remotely, ensuring I could keep moving without losing a single day of my journey. When I finally made it back to Bangkok, they didn't just take the motorbike back-they personally connected me with an expert locksmith to replace the top box key, saving me the headache of navigating that alone. That's not just "customer service"; that's one rider looking out for another. The Bikes & The Routes I've taken these motorbikes on serious round-trips: --The ADV160: Conquered the 1,864 curves of the MHS Loop without a hiccup. --The CL300: Spent over a month on this beast, riding through the mountains of Chiang Rai and the incredible roads of Nan. The mechanical state of the motorbikes is always "tight." No loose mirrors, no fading brakes, no "tired" engines. When you're leaning into a mountain hairpin in Northern Thailand, you need to trust the machine under you. With the rental shop's motorbikes, I never have a second thought. The Verdict If you are looking for the cheapest, "no-name" scooter shop in Bangkok, keep looking. But if you are a serious rider who values safety, mechanical reliability, and a business owner who actually has your back, this is the only place to go. The rental shop is a straight shooter. No "tourist pricing," no shady deposit games-just fair, honest business. Whether you're a local or a traveler planning a massive northern loop, do yourself a favor and book here. I don't give out 5 stars lightly, but the rental shop has earned every single one of them.
Niloy CFeb. 15, 2026