Travel adapter from Nicaragua to Thailand

No Adapter Needed

You will not need a plug adapter — Nicaragua and Thailand share at least one common plug shape (Type A, Type B). Voltages differ (120 V at home vs 230 V abroad), so check the label on each device. Most modern dual-voltage chargers handle the swing without a converter, but heating appliances usually do not. The mains frequency is also different (60 Hz vs 50 Hz). This rarely matters for electronics but can affect motor-driven devices like clocks and shavers.

Nicaragua (home)

Type A
Two flat parallel pins
Type B
Two flat pins + round ground

Thailand (destination)

Type A
Two flat parallel pins
About Type A ↗
Type B
Two flat pins + round ground
About Type B ↗
Type C
Two round pins (Europlug)
About Type C ↗
Type O
Three round pins
About Type O ↗
Nicaragua
120 V
60 Hz
⚡ Differs
Thailand
230 V
50 Hz
Voltage converter may be needed. Check your device label — most modern electronics (phones, laptops) support 100–240 V and only need a plug adapter. Hair dryers, kettles, and older appliances may need a step-up or step-down converter.
〜 Frequency differs (60 Hz vs 50 Hz). Rarely an issue for most electronics, but can affect motor-driven devices like clocks and shavers.

More about plugs in Thailand

In Thailand, the standard power plug is Type A and Type B and Type C and Type O. The country runs on 230 volts at 50 Hz. That means wall sockets in Thailand can be one of 4 different shapes — Type A, Type B, Type C, Type O, and your plug needs to physically match the socket to fit.

Full Thailand plug guide →