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Community content is moderated. Always verify legal and financial decisions with official sources.
HomeTopicsWork and Legal Basics

Bangkok

Work and Legal Basics

Contract checks and legal onboarding essentials.

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AI summary · assistance only

You'll find that understanding your visa and work permit renewal cycle is crucial in Bangkok, as a standard Non-Immigrant B visa only gives 90 days. Most newcomers are surprised to learn that Thai work permits are issued per employer and per location, so changing jobs or moving offices can complicate the process. Watch out for the need to specify severance pay clearly in your employment contract, as Thai Labour Law mandates pay based on length of employment. To get started, you can visit the Bangkok Immigration Division on Chaengwattana Road to extend your visa year by year. Today, take a concrete step by researching the requirements for a work permit at the Department of Employment in Din Daeng, which will cost you time and effort, but is essential for any paid work in Thailand.

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Understand your visa and work permit renewal cycle — it comes up fast

Trust L3Updated Apr 16, 2026

Bangkok Immigration Division (Chaengwattana Road) · Experience date Apr 5, 2026

A standard Non-Immigrant B visa gives 90 days. You then extend it year by year at the Bangkok Immigration Division. Both your visa extension and work permit renewal must be done — they are separate documents. Most companies have an HR person managing this but verify the dates yourself. Missing the visa extension date by even one day results in an overstay fine of 500 THB/day and potential deportation.

Contributor: Amira

Work permits in Thailand are issued per employer and per location

Trust L3Updated Apr 16, 2026

Department of Employment (Din Daeng) · Experience date Apr 7, 2026

A Thai work permit is tied to a specific employer and a specific address. If you change jobs or your company moves office, you need a new or amended work permit. Never work before the permit is issued — working without a valid permit carries a fine of up to 100,000 THB and deportation. Your employer applies at the Department of Employment; bring your Non-B visa, passport-size photos, and educational certificates.

Contributor: Sample User

Thai employment contracts should specify severance pay clearly

Trust L2Updated Apr 16, 2026

City-wide · Experience date Apr 3, 2026

Thai Labour Law mandates severance pay based on length of employment — from 30 days pay (under 1 year) to 400 days pay (over 20 years). Make sure your contract explicitly references Labour Protection Act B.E. 2541 for severance provisions. Some contracts include clauses waiving statutory severance — these are not enforceable under Thai law, but inexperienced employees often don't dispute them. Know your rights before signing.

Contributor: Liam

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Business registration in Thailand — for foreign entrepreneurs

Apr 20, 2026

Silom · Experience date Dec 24, 2025

Foreign-owned Thai Limited Company: minimum 3 shareholders required, 49% maximum foreign ownership (51% must be Thai) under general rules. Foreign Business Act exceptions allow 100% foreign ownership in some sectors or with BOI promotion. Process: 10,000–25,000 THB minimum registered capital, company name reservation (Department of Business Development, DBD), memorandum of association, tax registration. Full setup: 2–4 weeks, cost 30,000–80,000 THB with a Thai law firm. American Treaty of Amity: US citizens can own 100% of Thai company under this treaty — consult a lawyer.

Contributor: David Okonkwo

BOI (Board of Investment) visa — the premium option for eligible companies

Apr 14, 2026

Bang Na · Experience date Jan 1, 2026

If your employer is BOI-promoted (many tech companies and manufacturers in Thailand are), the BOI Smart Visa streamlines your work permit and visa process significantly. BOI Smart Visa (Type T — Technology): no work permit required, valid 4 years, no 90-day reporting. Requires: salary of at least 100,000 THB/month, degree in technology/STEM field, employment at BOI-promoted company. Apply at the One-Stop Service Center at Chamchuri Square. Check if your employer has BOI promotion status — it changes the bureaucratic equation completely.

Contributor: Fatima Al-Rashid

Thai company accounts and invoicing — for registered business owners

Apr 8, 2026

Sathorn · Experience date Feb 6, 2026

If you've registered a Thai company: accounting is mandatory. Thai companies must: file monthly VAT returns (PP.30 form) if revenue exceeds 1.8 million THB/year, pay Corporate Income Tax (20% rate), submit financial statements annually to DBD. Accounting services in Bangkok: 3,000–8,000 THB/month for a basic package from a Thai accounting firm. Recommended for English-speaking expat business owners: Acumen (English-language accounting firm in Bangkok), Starboard Advisory, or the big four firms for larger companies. DIY accounting is possible but tax compliance in Thailand is complex — mistakes carry penalties.

Contributor: Carlos Rivera

90-day reporting — how to do it without going to immigration

Mar 26, 2026

Phloenchit · Experience date Nov 18, 2025

Non-Immigrant visa holders must report address to immigration every 90 days. Online method (easiest): imm.immigration.go.th — open from 15 days before due date to 7 days after. Requires TM30 to have been filed first. In-person: Chaeng Watthana Immigration (northern Bangkok, MRT Si Rat or BTS nearby), or any immigration office in Thailand. By mail: send TM47 form + passport copy + previous acknowledgment slip to Chaeng Watthana — processing 7–10 days. Fine for missing: 2,000–5,000 THB. Most expats use the online system — takes 5 minutes.

Contributor: Ivan Petrov

Visa runs from Bangkok — borders and process

Mar 18, 2026

Bang Na · Experience date Feb 23, 2026

Common visa run options from Bangkok for tourist/exemption renewal: Poipet, Cambodia (4-hour bus from Mo Chit, 150 THB, cross border, immediate re-entry — but enforcement has tightened, some travelers denied re-entry for frequent runs). Sadao/Padang Besar, Malaysia (12-hour sleeper train from Hua Lamphong, then cross). Vientiane, Laos (1-hour flight, get Non-Immigrant B visa from Thai embassy while there). Best long-term solution: convert to proper Non-Immigrant visa at Thai embassy in your home country or Laos/Vietnam rather than doing tourist visa runs indefinitely.

Contributor: Kenji Nakamura

Work permit in Thailand — required for any paid work

Mar 5, 2026

Silom · Experience date Nov 29, 2025

Thailand requires a work permit (ใบอนุญาตทำงาน) for any foreigner doing paid work in Thailand, including remote work technically. Work permits are tied to a specific employer and job description. Process: your employer applies at the Department of Employment with: your Non-Immigrant B visa, 3-year business license copy, employer documentation (company registration, financial statements, list of Thai employees), and your credentials (degree certificates, CV). Cost: 3,000 THB for 1-year permit. Processing: 3–7 business days. Working without a permit: fines up to 100,000 THB.

Contributor: Nadia Dubois

Thailand Elite Visa — for wealthy digital nomads and long-stayers

Feb 22, 2026

Bang Na · Experience date Dec 2, 2025

Thailand Privilege Card (formerly Thailand Elite Visa) gives 5–20 year residency visas starting from 900,000 THB one-time payment (5 year 'Easy Access' membership). No work permit included — for passive income earners or investors. Benefits: 1-year stamp each entry (vs 90 days), VIP immigration lanes at all airports, concierge service. Does NOT authorize working in Thailand — technically remote workers earning from abroad are in a grey zone but the program is designed for this use case. Widely used by high-net-worth digital nomads.

Contributor: Priya Sharma
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