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Thailand Visa & Entry Requirements (2026)

Thailand Visa & Entry Requirements (2026)

Home Thailand Practical InfoThailand Visa & Entry Requirements (2026)
Gate8 Global Team

There's no single answer — it depends on your passport. As of mid-2026, most Western nationalities (US, Canada, UK, EU, Australia, New Zealand) get up to 60 days visa-free, pending a Cabinet-approved cut to 30 days still awaiting Royal Gazette publication. Gulf states and South Africa share that 60-day rule; China, the Philippines, Malaysia and Indonesia sit at 30 days; Brazil keeps 90. All arrivals must also file the free TDAC online within 72 hours.

Visa questions are the one place a generic travel-blog answer can actually cost you money or get you turned away at check-in. Here's the real breakdown by nationality, plus the one change worth watching before you book flights.

Visa-free stay by nationality (as of mid-2026)

PassportCurrent visa-free stayNotes
United States, CanadaUp to 60 daysNo pre-application, no fee at the border. Extendable by 30 days at an Immigration office for a fee.
United KingdomUp to 60 daysSame terms as US/Canada — no visa application required.
EU / Schengen countriesUp to 60 daysCovered under the same visa-exemption scheme; confirm your specific country is on Thailand's current list.
Australia, New ZealandUp to 60 daysSame terms as above.
ChinaUp to 30 daysCovered by a separate bilateral agreement with Thailand (in place since March 2024), not the 60-day scheme — already at 30 days, so it's unaffected by the pending change.
Gulf states (UAE, Saudi Arabia)Up to 60 daysCurrently on the same 93-country scheme as the US/UK/EU list — faces the same pending revert to 30 days.
South AfricaUp to 60 daysAlso on the 93-country scheme; same pending 30-day change applies.
Brazil / Latin AmericaBrazil: 90 days. Most other Latin American countries: up to 60 daysBrazil (plus Argentina, Chile, Peru) has a separate, long-standing 90-day bilateral deal, untouched by the pending change. Other Latin American nationalities generally fall under the standard 93-country scheme and face the same pending revert to 30 days.
Southeast Asia (Philippines, Malaysia, Indonesia)Up to 30 daysCovered by a separate ASEAN bilateral exemption, already at 30 days — not part of the 60-day scheme, so the pending change doesn't affect it. Land-border entries are capped at 2 per year, except for Malaysia, Indonesia, Brunei, and Singapore, which are exempt from that cap.
Other nationalitiesVaries — 15 to 60 days, or a visa required in advanceSome get a shorter 15-day exemption (Maldives, Mauritius, Seychelles); Visa on Arrival is being cut from 31 countries to just 4 (India, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Serbia); others need a visa or e-visa arranged before arrival. Check Thailand's official list for your specific passport.
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A Thai Cabinet decision approved on 19 May 2026 would cut the visa-exemption period from 60 to 30 days for roughly 54 nationalities (the ones marked '60 days' in the table above), with three island nations — the Maldives, Mauritius, and Seychelles — dropping to a 15-day exemption. Visa on Arrival eligibility is also being slashed from 31 countries to just 4 (India, Azerbaijan, Belarus, and Serbia). As of mid-2026 this still hasn't taken effect: it kicks in 15 days after publication in the Royal Gazette, no publication date has been confirmed, and the 60-day stamp is still being issued at the border. Check the current rule for your passport within a week or two of booking, not months in advance.

The Thailand Digital Arrival Card (TDAC)

Every foreign traveler, regardless of nationality or visa status, must complete the Thailand Digital Arrival Card online before arrival — it's free, takes a few minutes, and must be submitted within 72 hours of your flight. Do this yourself on Thailand's official immigration website; skip any third-party site charging a 'processing fee' for what is a free government form.

Other entry basics

  • Your passport must be valid for at least 6 months from your date of entry.
  • Immigration officers occasionally ask for proof of an onward or return flight, and sometimes proof of funds — have a printed or digital copy of your return ticket ready.
  • If you overstay your visa-exempt period, there's a daily fine (paid at the airport or an immigration office) — it's not worth risking; plan an extension in advance if you need more time.

Extending your stay

Visa-exempt entries can typically be extended once, by 30 days, at an Immigration office in Bangkok, Chiang Mai, or most tourist hubs, for a fee (roughly $70). Bring a passport photo, a filled extension form, and your TDAC confirmation.

Questions people actually ask

Do US citizens need a visa for Thailand?
As of mid-2026, US passport holders get a visa-free stay of up to 60 days, with no advance application or fee at the border. A Cabinet-approved change to 30 days is still pending Royal Gazette publication with no confirmed effective date — check the current status before you fly.
Do UK citizens need a visa for Thailand?
No advance visa is required — UK passport holders currently get the same visa-free entry as US and Canadian travelers, up to 60 days as of mid-2026, subject to the same pending 30-day change, still awaiting Royal Gazette publication.
Do Chinese citizens need a visa for Thailand?
No — Chinese passport holders get a visa-free stay of up to 30 days under a separate bilateral agreement with Thailand, in place since March 2024. It's unrelated to the pending 60-to-30-day change for other nationalities, since China's exemption is already at 30 days.
Do Brazilian citizens need a visa for Thailand?
No — Brazilian passport holders get a 90-day visa-free stay under a long-standing bilateral agreement (shared with Argentina, Chile, and Peru), untouched by the pending change affecting most other nationalities.
What is the Thailand Digital Arrival Card (TDAC)?
A free, mandatory online arrival form every foreign visitor must submit within 72 hours before landing in Thailand, regardless of nationality or visa type. Only use Thailand's official government site — third-party sites that charge a fee for it are not necessary.
What happens if I overstay my visa in Thailand?
You'll be charged a daily fine when you leave (and could face bigger issues for longer overstays). If you might need more time, apply for a 30-day extension at an Immigration office before your current stay expires.

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