
There is a conversation that happens at Cat Motors in Chiang Mai before anyone gets on a bike. Sometimes it is short. Sometimes it ends with the founder handing back the paperwork and saying no. The sign on the wall at the entrance to the rental lot sets the tone for all of it. It tells inexperienced riders to find another shop to commit suicide at.
It has been there for years. It is not going anywhere.
The sign went viral again recently, shared across social media by people who mostly got the location wrong. The updated signs at this scooter and motorbike rental in Chiang Mai have since cleared that up. What they have not changed is the message, because the message was never the problem.
“It’s blunt, and I understand it can sound harsh,” the founder said. “But we see first-time riders underestimate Thailand’s roads every week. The goal is to create a pause, a moment where a person asks themselves: do I really have the experience for this?” Cat Motors bike rental sometimes refuses rentals even when the paperwork is in order. Experience, in the founder’s view, is not something a licence proves. “We’ve had people hand us a licence, get on the motorcycle, ride five metres and go down with it. Then it turns out the licence was bought online.” The booking gets turned away. “We would rather lose the booking than send someone into traffic they are not ready for.”
Thailand is one of the most dangerous countries in the world to be on a road. The World Health Organization recorded 25.4 deaths per 100,000 people in 2021. In 2024, motorcyclists made up 82 percent of all road fatalities in the country. These are not numbers that belong to other people. They belong to tourists who thought they were ready, and were not.
The roads here do not announce themselves as dangerous. They look like roads. The traffic moves, the sun is out, everyone else seems to be managing fine. What you cannot see from the rental lot is what happens two kilometres down the road when the logic of the traffic shifts in a way you were not expecting, when a junction works differently from anything you have seen before, when you forget for one second which side you are supposed to be on.
The sign at the gate has seen all of it. It has been saying the same thing for years, in the same words, to anyone willing to read it. Thailand’s roads have their own language. Learning it takes more than a plastic card in your wallet.

