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🛂 Visa Guide · Updated June 2026

Do you need a visa for Thailand?
A tourist's guide to entering the country

For most visitors, getting into Thailand is easier than you might expect. Many nationalities enter visa-free, some use visa on arrival, and others apply in advance. This guide walks through every route in plain English — and is honest about the one constant: the rules change, so always verify with official sources before you fly.

The Short Version

Whether you need a visa depends on your passport and how long you'll stay

Good news for most travellers: entering Thailand for a holiday is rarely the hurdle people fear. Many nationalities can walk up to immigration and be admitted visa-free, with no advance application. Under the rule updated in 2024, a large number of countries get up to 60 days per visit. If your nationality is not on the exemption list, you can often still get a visa on arrival at the airport, or apply for a tourist visa in advance at a Thai embassy.

There is one thing worth stressing up front: entitlements differ by nationality, and they change. The list of visa-exempt countries, the number of days granted, and the conditions for visa on arrival are all revised from time to time. This page explains each route in plain terms — but before you book, confirm the current rule for your specific nationality with a Thai embassy or the official Ministry of Foreign Affairs website. We deliberately avoid naming exact day counts per country, because those are exactly the details that get updated.

Accuracy note: This page was compiled in June 2026 as a general overview and is not legal or immigration advice. Visa rules and stay lengths vary by nationality and change frequently. Always verify with official sources — the Thai Ministry of Foreign Affairs (mfa.go.th), Thai Immigration (immigration.go.th), or the Thai embassy in your country — before you travel.
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Visa exemption
Many nationalities enter visa-free; under the 2024 rule, up to 60 days per visit (varies by nationality)
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Visa on arrival
Available to certain nationalities at the checkpoint, typically around 15 days, for a fee
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Tourist visa (TR)
Applied for in advance at an embassy — for non-exempt nationalities or longer stays
Extensions
In many cases you can extend your stay at an immigration office, commonly by around 30 days
Three Main Routes

How travellers enter Thailand — and which route is yours

There are three main ways tourists arrive. Work out which group your nationality falls into, then confirm it with an official source.

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Visa exemption

Many nationalities — including a large share of European countries, the UK, the US, Australia and many more — can enter Thailand for tourism without applying for a visa in advance. Under the rule updated in 2024, a number of these get up to 60 days per visit. The list and day counts vary and can change, so check whether your nationality is currently included before you travel.

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Visa on arrival (VOA)

Some nationalities not on the exemption list can obtain a visa at the immigration checkpoint when they land. This typically permits a stay of around 15 days, carries a fee, and usually requires a passport photo, an onward ticket and accommodation details. The list of VOA-eligible nationalities is revised periodically — check the latest before flying.

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Tourist visa in advance (TR)

If your nationality is neither exempt nor eligible for VOA, or you simply want longer than the exemption allows, apply for a tourist visa (TR) in advance at a Thai embassy or consulate — or through the official e-Visa system where it is available for your country. Apply well before your departure date.

The Rules

Thailand entry conditions — the essentials in one place

The figures below are general guidance. Exact numbers depend on your nationality and can change, so confirm with an official source before you book.

Rule Detail
Visa exemption — how long? Up to ~60 days per visit for many nationalities, under the rule updated in 2024 (the exact figure varies by nationality)
Can you extend your stay? Often yes — commonly by around 30 days at an immigration office, for a fee
Visa on arrival For certain nationalities — typically around 15 days, for a fee, obtained at the checkpoint
Tourist visa (TR) in advance Applied for at a Thai embassy/consulate or via e-Visa, for non-exempt nationalities or longer stays
Passport validity required Generally at least 6 months remaining from the date of travel
Onward ticket You should hold a return or onward ticket — officers (and airlines) may ask to see it
Can you work? No — visa exemption and tourist visas are for tourism only. Working requires the correct visa and a work permit.
Arrival card (TM6) Rules change often — the paper TM6 was suspended for air arrivals, and a digital arrival-card system has been announced. Check the latest before travelling.
At Immigration

What to have ready when you reach Thai immigration

Not much, but it should be complete — officers can ask, especially for an onward ticket and accommodation.

1
Valid passport — at least 6 months remaining
Passport validity · Critical

This is the most important thing to check before buying your ticket. If your passport has less than 6 months of validity left, the airline may deny boarding and Thai immigration may refuse entry. Check the expiry date now. If it is close, renew it in your home country before you travel — do not assume you can sort it out on arrival.

✅ Mandatory ⏳ 6+ months required
2
Onward or return ticket
Proof you'll leave within your permitted stay

Airlines and immigration officers may ask to see evidence that you will leave Thailand within your allowed window. Save your return or onward flight confirmation on your phone, or print a copy. The booking reference alone may not be enough — have the date, flight number and route clearly visible.

⚠️ Strongly recommended 📱 Screenshot on phone
3
Accommodation details
Hotel name, address, phone number

Officers may ask "Where are you staying?" Have the hotel name, address and phone number ready. A screenshot of your booking confirmation works fine. If you have not booked the whole trip yet, having at least the first night reserved makes the crossing smoother. Keep the details in your phone.

🏨 Hotel booking screenshot 📱 Keep in phone Notes
4
Proof of sufficient funds
Credit card or cash — rarely checked, but a rule

On paper, officers can ask for evidence that you can support yourself (a minimum amount per person is sometimes cited). In practice this is seldom checked, but it is worth being ready. A credit card and some cash — including a little Thai baht (฿) for the first taxi — cover you. The stated minimum can change, so check the latest if you want the exact figure.

💳 Credit card 💰 Some ฿ cash
Exceptions

When you do need a visa in advance — straight answer

Visa-free entry is for short tourism only. These cases fall outside it and need the correct visa.

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Staying longer than the exemption allows

Visa-free entry caps each stay (up to roughly 60 days for many nationalities under the 2024 rule). You can often extend at immigration, but if you are planning a long stay, apply for a tourist visa or the appropriate longer-stay visa before you travel.

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Working in Thailand

Any work — employment, freelance, or working remotely for an overseas employer while in Thailand — generally requires the correct visa and a work permit. Working on a visa-free entry or tourist visa is not permitted, and the legality of remote work on a tourist entry is a grey area you should not assume away.

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Studying or living long-term

Students, retirees seeking long-term residence, and anyone relocating need the visa that matches their purpose — for example an Education visa or a retirement visa — applied for in advance. These are not covered by tourist entry.

Simple rule: Coming for a short holiday = many nationalities need no advance visa. Working, studying, or staying long-term = you need the correct visa. If you are unsure what your nationality is entitled to, contact the Thai embassy in your country before booking.
Before You Fly

Six things to know before you land in Thailand

Beyond the visa itself, a few things sorted in advance will make your arrival far smoother.

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Check the rule for your nationality first
This is the single most important step. The list of exempt countries, day counts and VOA conditions all change. Verify with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs or the Thai embassy in your country before you book — don't rely on an old blog post or a fellow traveller's memory.
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Arrival card: the system keeps changing
Thailand suspended the paper TM6 arrival card for air arrivals, then announced a digital online version. At times travellers have had to complete details online before arrival. Check with your airline or the official Thai Immigration site for what applies when you travel.
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Sort your data before you land
Having mobile data the moment you arrive makes it easy to call a Grab, find your way, and show your accommodation details to immigration. See your options for an eSIM versus a tourist SIM bought at the airport in our Thailand eSIM and SIM guide — setting up an eSIM before you fly is the easiest route.
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Plan how you'll get around
Thailand has domestic flights, overnight sleeper trains, long-distance buses and ferries to the islands. Knowing your onward plan also helps you answer an officer's questions about your itinerary. See the overview in our getting around Thailand guide.
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Time your trip right
November to February is the best stretch overall — cool and dry. But the Gulf islands (Samui, Phangan, Tao) flip the script and are wettest late in the year. Match your dates to the region in our best time to visit Thailand guide.
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Count your days — don't overstay
Your stay is counted from the date of your entry stamp. Overstaying carries a daily fine, and a longer overstay can lead to a future entry ban. If you are near the end of your stay and want to remain, go to an immigration office and extend before your permitted date expires.
FAQ

Common questions about entering Thailand as a tourist

General answers — figures and the list of nationalities change, so always verify with official sources.

Do tourists need a visa to enter Thailand?
It depends on your nationality. Many nationalities can enter Thailand visa-free for tourism — under the rule updated in 2024, a large number of countries get up to 60 days per visit. Some nationalities use visa on arrival, and others must obtain a tourist visa in advance from a Thai embassy. Each nationality's entitlement can change, so always check with the official Ministry of Foreign Affairs website or a Thai embassy before you travel.
How long is Thailand's visa exemption?
Under the rule updated in 2024, many visa-exempt nationalities can stay up to 60 days per visit, and can usually extend by roughly 30 more days at an immigration office. The exact number of days varies by nationality and is subject to change, so confirm with an official source before travelling.
What is Thailand's visa on arrival?
Visa on arrival (VOA) is a visa you obtain at the immigration checkpoint when you land, available to certain nationalities not on the visa-exemption list. It typically allows a stay of around 15 days and carries a fee. You'll usually need a passport photo, an onward ticket and proof of accommodation. The list of eligible nationalities can change, so check the latest before you fly.
What documents do I need at Thai immigration?
The essentials: (1) a passport valid for at least 6 months from your travel date; (2) an onward or return ticket; (3) accommodation details — hotel name and address; (4) evidence of sufficient funds. Officers may ask to see these, though in practice not all are checked every time. Digital copies on your phone are generally fine. No visa label is needed if you are entering under the exemption.
Can I extend a tourist stay inside Thailand?
In many cases yes. Visitors who entered under the visa exemption or on a tourist visa can usually extend their stay at an immigration office — commonly by around 30 days, for a fee. The length and conditions depend on how you entered and can change, so confirm directly with Thai Immigration. Repeated back-to-back entries purely to reset the clock can also draw scrutiny from officers.
Do I still need to fill in an arrival card (TM6)?
Arrival-card rules change frequently. Thailand previously suspended the paper TM6 card for air arrivals, and later announced a digital online arrival-card system. Check with your airline or the official Thai Immigration website before you travel to confirm which arrival card, if any, you need to complete for your trip.
Complete Your Prep

Visa sorted — now plan the trip itself

From staying connected to picking the right month and where to begin — quick reads, all of them.

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Thailand eSIM & SIM Guide

Choose between an eSIM and a tourist SIM at the airport (AIS, dtac, TrueMove). Data from the moment you land.

eSIM Guide →
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Getting Around Thailand

Domestic flights, overnight sleeper trains, VIP buses and island ferries — when to fly, when to take the train.

Transport Guide →
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Bangkok First-Timer Guide

Where most visitors start — airport transfer, what to see, what to eat, and what to expect on arrival.

Bangkok Guide →
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Best Time to Visit Thailand

Season by season, region by region — North, Central, Andaman and the Gulf — plus what to avoid and when.

Timing Guide →
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Thailand 7-Day Itinerary

The classic first week — Bangkok, Chiang Mai and a taste of the coast, with the real transport legs between them.

See the 7-Day Plan →
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Full Thailand Travel Guide

Everything about visiting Thailand in one place — cities, islands, food, transport and what to know before you go.

Full Thailand Guide →
Plan Your Thailand Trip

Visa handled.
Now plan the trip itself.

From staying connected and getting around to the islands and where to go first — our complete Thailand guide has everything you need before you board.

🇹🇭 Thailand Guide 📱 eSIM Guide