The five visas most foreigners actually use
Thailand has dozens of visa categories on paper. In reality, if you're a tourist, retiree, remote worker, or long-stay expat, you're looking at one of these five:
Tourist Visa (TR)
Eligible passport holders can enter Thailand visa-exempt for up to 60 days, or apply for a tourist visa (TR) at a Thai consulate for a 60-day stay. These are separate entry schemes with different rules.
Retirement Visa (Non-OA)
One year, renewable annually. Requires proof of income or funds in a Thai bank account. No age limit surprises — it's 50 and above.
LTR Visa (Long-Term Resident)
Thailand's newer visa for wealthy retirees, remote workers, and skilled professionals. 10 years, renewable. The most stable long-term option available right now.
DTV Visa (Destination Thailand)
Thailand’s visa for remote workers and digital nomads. Up to 180 days, extendable to 1 year. Multiple entry. Lower income requirement than LTR.
Thailand Privilege
Pay upfront for 5–20 years of hassle-free residency. No income proof, no Thai bank account required. Expensive but genuinely simple.
Tourist visa — what most people start with
Eligible passport holders can usually enter Thailand under the visa-exemption scheme for up to 60 days, with a possible 30-day extension at immigration. This is where most first-timers start. If you need longer, or your country isn't on the exemption list, a Tourist Visa (TR) applied at a Thai consulate also gives 60 days.
Extending your tourist visa
You can extend either a tourist visa or a visa-exempt entry once by 30 days at any Thai immigration office. Cost is ฿1,900 (~$58). You do this in person — bring your passport, a passport photo, the fee, and the TM.7 form (available at the office). Show up early. Immigration offices get busy.
How to extend your stay legally — the border run
Once your extension runs out, some people do a “border run” — exit Thailand into a neighbouring country (Laos, Cambodia, Malaysia) and re-enter to start a fresh visa-exempt period. This works, but Thai immigration has started scrutinising frequent border runners. If you’re doing this repeatedly, it’s a sign you need a proper long-stay visa.
Retirement visa — what you need to know
Thailand’s main retirement routes are the Non-O (retirement) and Non-OA (long stay) visas, depending on where and how you apply. You must be 50 or older. Both are issued for one year and are renewable annually as long as you meet the financial requirements.
The financial requirements — two ways to qualify
| Method | Requirement | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Income method | ฿65,000/month provable income | Pension, Social Security, investment income — must be documented with embassy letter |
| Deposit method | ฿800,000 in Thai bank account | Must be in a Thai bank — 3 months before application and maintained throughout |
| Combined method | Income + deposit = ฿800,000 (~$24,240) total | Income × 12 + bank balance must reach ฿800,000 |
Annual reporting requirement
On a retirement visa, you must report to immigration every 90 days to confirm you're still in the country. Miss it and you face a ฿5,000 (~$152) fine. You can do this online via the Thai Immigration app, in person, or by post — online is easiest once you're set up.
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LTR Visa — the best long-term option right now
Thailand's Long-Term Resident visa launched in 2022 and is genuinely one of the better visa options in Southeast Asia right now. It comes in four categories — wealthy retiree, wealthy global citizen, work-from-Thailand professional, and highly skilled professional.
For most foreigners reading this, the relevant categories are wealthy retiree (passive income of $40k/year + $250k in assets) and work-from-Thailand (employed abroad with $80k/year income for the past 2 years).
How to apply for the LTR
Check eligibility online
The Thailand Board of Investment (BOI) runs the LTR program. Apply through their online portal at ltr.boi.go.th — the eligibility checker is straightforward.
Prepare your documents
Passport, proof of income (tax returns or employment letter), proof of assets, health insurance with minimum $50,000 coverage. Everything needs to be in English or officially translated.
Submit and wait for approval
Processing takes 20 working days. Once approved, you get a certificate of eligibility which you take to a Thai consulate or immigration office to get the actual visa stamped.
Get your visa stamped
Take your eligibility certificate to immigration. Pay the ฿50,000 (~$1,515) fee. You're done for 10 years.
DTV Visa — for remote workers and digital nomads
The Destination Thailand Visa (DTV) is Thailand’s newest visa type, introduced in 2024 and aimed at remote workers, digital nomads, and people involved in approved soft-power activities (such as Muay Thai training, Thai cooking courses, or content creation about Thailand). It fills a gap the tourist visa and LTR don’t — legal stay for people who work remotely but don’t meet the LTR’s high income thresholds.
Key details
- Duration: 180 days, extendable once for another 180 days — up to 1 year total.
- Cost: ฿10,000 (~$285) application fee.
- Multiple entry: Yes. You can leave and re-enter Thailand during the validity period.
- Work: You can work remotely for a foreign employer or client. You cannot work for a Thai company.
- Who qualifies: Remote workers, freelancers, digital nomads, and participants in approved Thai soft-power activities. You’ll need to show proof of remote employment or activity enrollment.
How to apply
Apply at a Thai embassy or consulate before you travel. You’ll need your passport, proof of remote employment or freelance work (such as a contract or company letter), proof of funds, and documentation of your qualifying activity if applying under the soft-power category. Processing typically takes a few business days.
The mistakes that get foreigners in trouble
These come up constantly in expat groups. Learn them before you arrive, not after.
- Assuming your visa-exempt 60 days starts from when you land — it starts from the date stamped in your passport at immigration. Always check the stamp.
- Doing border runs indefinitely instead of getting a proper visa. Immigration officers flag passports with repeated back-to-back entries and can deny you entry at their discretion.
- Depositing ฿800,000 (~$24,240) into a Thai bank the week before retirement visa renewal and withdrawing it the week after. This is well-known and increasingly checked.
- Missing the 90-day reporting deadline. The fine is small but it shows up on your record and can complicate future renewals.
- Not having health insurance that meets Thai immigration requirements. The Non-OA retirement visa now requires health insurance — many people show up at renewal without it.
- Buying property in your own name. Foreigners cannot own land in Thailand. A condo is fine (up to 49% foreign ownership per building). Land is not. Get legal advice before signing anything.
- Working on a tourist or retirement visa. Even freelance work done online counts as working in Thailand if you're physically here. You need the right visa and a work permit.