Key takeaways
* Thailand’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Ministry of Tourism and Sports have jointly agreed to cancel the 60-day visa-free stay introduced in 2024 for citizens of 93 countries.
* Once the Cabinet approves the change, the 30-day visa exemption for the original list of 57 countries returns as the default.
* Some nationalities may be moved to a stricter 15-day exemption at the government’s discretion.
* The reduction targets tourist entries only. Student, medical, retirement, and long-term residency programs are unaffected.
* Travelers who relied on 60-day visa-free entries to live, work remotely, or run businesses from Thailand will need to switch to a proper long-stay visa such as Thailand Privilege Card (formerly Thailand Elite Visa) or the Destination Thailand Visa (DTV).
On May 13, 2026, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Sihasak Phuangketkeow confirmed alongside Minister of Tourism and Sports Surasak Phancharoenworakul that the two ministries have reached a joint agreement to recommend the Cabinet cancel the 60-day visa-free stay policy, which has been in place since 2024 for citizens of 93 countries.
Once approved, Thailand will revert to its pre-2024 framework: a 30-day visa exemption for the original 57 countries, with the government reserving the right to apply a 15-day exemption for higher-risk nationalities.
The proposal is expected to be submitted to the Cabinet within the week. A formal implementation date will be confirmed shortly after Cabinet approval.
The proposal is expected to be submitted to the Cabinet within the week. A formal implementation date will be confirmed shortly after Cabinet approval.
“A 60-day visa exemption for tourists might be too long, and there may be individuals who do not enter for tourism purposes but utilize this channel instead. Therefore, we must manage this more strictly.”
— Sihasak Phuangketkeow, Deputy PM and Minister of Foreign Affairs
“Allowing too long of a stay does not serve the purpose of tourism. At the same time, it creates a loophole for ill-intentioned individuals to use Thailand as a base for criminal activities.”
— Surasak Phancharoenworakul, Minister of Tourism and Sports
Thai authorities have repeatedly raised concerns over how the 60-day exemption has been used in practice. Officials cite four recurring problems:
1. Overstays – visitors remaining beyond their permitted stay.
2. Illegal employment – foreigners working in Thailand without the correct work authorization.
3. Transnational criminal activity – call centers, online scams, and other illicit operations run by foreigners taking advantage of long visa-free windows.
The official framing is consistent: the change is not anti-tourism, but a recalibration toward quality tourism and national security. As Minister Surasak put it, the goal is to “strike a balance between national security and the tourism economy.”
The policy change has very different consequences depending on why you come to Thailand. Here’s a clear breakdown by traveler type.
If your trip is shorter than 30 days, nothing changes in practice. You will still enter visa-free under the standard scheme.
The 60-day exemption made Thailand uniquely attractive as a remote-work base — two months of legal stay with a free border run was enough for many. Under the new 30-day rule, that math no longer works. Continuous “visa runs” have always been technically grey-area, and Thai immigration has been actively cracking down on them since 2024.
Remote workers who want to stay legally for more than 30 days now have two real options:
1. The Thailand Privilege Visa (Thailand Elite), offering 5- to 20-year multiple-entry privileges without the income-verification step.
2. The Destination Thailand Visa (DTV), a 5-year multiple-entry visa for remote workers and “workation” travelers, with each stay capped at 180 days.
Many retirees under 50 who don’t yet qualify for the Non-Immigrant O-A retirement visa used back-to-back visa-free entries to live in Thailand for parts of the year. That route effectively closes under the 30-day cap.
For retirees, the practical alternatives are:
1. Non-Immigrant O-A or O-X retirement visas (age 50+, with health insurance and financial requirements).
2. Thailand Elite Visa – no age restriction, no income proof.
Investors scouting deals, property buyers managing assets, and entrepreneurs running regional operations often used the 60-day window to combine business with leisure. Under the new framework, anyone spending substantial time in Thailand for business should be on a proper visa.
The cleanest options:
1.Thailand Elite Visa – fastest, lifestyle-oriented, no work permit (but legal for personal business activities and remote work).
2. LTR (Long-Term Resident) Visa for high-income earners, wealthy global citizens, retirees, and remote professionals.
3. Smart Visa for startups, investors, and skilled professionals in targeted industries.
Based on the joint MFA / Tourism Ministry announcement, here is the sequence travelers should plan around:
| Stage | Status | Approximate Timing |
|---|---|---|
| Joint ministerial agreement | Complete | May 13, 2026 |
| Cabinet submission | Pending | Within one week of announcement |
| Cabinet approval | Expected | Days to a few weeks after submission |
| Implementation in immigration system | Expected | Shortly after Cabinet approval |
| 30-day rule fully in effect | Expected | Mid-to-late 2026 |
| Possible 15-day list review | Ongoing | Reviewed alongside the 30-day list |
The Tourism Minister has emphasized that the 57-country 30-day list will take effect immediately upon cancellation of the 60-day measure, with the government simultaneously reviewing the list of eligible countries to reflect current diplomatic priorities.
If you are currently planning a 35–60 day trip on visa-free entry, book travel insurance with date-change flexibility and confirm your entry rules with the Thai embassy before you fly.
It’s worth emphasizing what this policy adjustment does not affect, because misinformation will inevitably spread:
The Foreign Minister was explicit: this change is only about visa-free tourist entries.
For travelers who have built a life or a business around the ability to spend months at a time in Thailand, the Thailand Privilege Card (still widely known as Thailand Elite Visa) is the most straightforward way to stay compliant under the new framework.
| Visa | Length | Stay per Entry | Income Proof | Age Limit | Work Allowed |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Visa exemption (new rules) | 30 days | 30 days | No | No | No |
| Tourist Visa (TR) | 60 days | 60 days (+30 ext.) | No | No | No |
| Destination Thailand Visa (DTV) | 5 years | 180 days | Yes (THB 500,000) | 20+ | Remote work only |
| Thailand Privilege Visa | 5–20 years | 1 year | No | 20+ | Personal/remote only |
| LTR Visa | 10 years | 1 year | Yes (varies) | Varies | Yes, with permit |
| Retirement Visa (O-A) | 1 year (renewable) | 1 year | Yes (THB 800,000) | 50+ | No |
If your priority is flexibility, speed, and not having to re-qualify financially every year, the Thailand Elite Visa is usually the answer.
When exactly does the 60-day visa-free rule end?
The Cabinet must formally approve the proposal before the change takes effect. The Ministry of Tourism and Sports has indicated submission within one week of the May 13, 2026 announcement, with implementation expected in the weeks following Cabinet approval. We will update this article as a confirmed date is published.
Will the 30-day visa-free rule apply to my country?
The original 30-day exemption list of 57 countries will be reinstated as the baseline. The government is concurrently reviewing the list and may add countries with new diplomatic ties or move higher-risk nationalities to a 15-day exemption. Check the Royal Thai Embassy website for your country before you travel.
Can I still extend a visa-free entry inside Thailand?
Yes. Visa-exempt entries can typically be extended by 30 days at an Immigration office for a fee of THB 1,900. After the rule change, that means a maximum of roughly 60 days total (30 + 30) the same total length you used to get on entry alone.
What’s the difference between Thailand Elite Visa and Thailand Privilege Card?
They are the same program. “Thailand Elite” was the original brand name; the program was relaunched in late 2023 as the Thailand Privilege Card with restructured tiers. People in the expat community still use both names interchangeably.
Do I need to leave Thailand if I’m already inside on a 60-day exemption when the rule changes?
No. Your existing permission to stay is honored until its original expiry date. The new rule applies to new entries after the implementation date.
Can I still buy property in Thailand on a visa-free entry?
You can sign contracts and purchase a condominium during a short stay, but managing the purchase, transfers, and any future business activities is far easier on a proper long-stay visa. Most foreign property buyers who spend significant time in Thailand hold either the Thailand Elite Visa or LTR Visa.
1. Audit your current Thailand presence. Add up how many days you actually spend in the country per year. If it’s more than 30 consecutive days or more than 90 cumulative days, the visa-free route is no longer the right structure.
2. Match your profile to a visa. Use the comparison table above as a starting point. Age, income, work setup, and family situation all change the right answer.
3. Get legal advice before you apply. Thailand’s visa rules are layered with reporting obligations, tax residency considerations, and FBA implications.
4. Apply early. Demand for long-stay visas typically surges every time Thailand tightens entry rules. The Elite Visa application takes 1–3 months to process.
We help digital nomads, retirees, investors, and global families secure the right long-stay visa for Thailand — and structure their stay so it stands up to immigration and tax scrutiny.
Get a free 15-minute consultation on the Thailand Privilege Card / Elite Visa:
https://www.thailandelitevisas.com/contact-us/
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Line: https://line.me/R/ti/p/~phuketelitevisa
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This article was prepared by the legal team at Hawryluk Legal Advisors, a Thailand-based law firm advising international clients on long-stay visas, property acquisition, corporate structuring, and tax residency. Our advisors are licensed in Thailand and have advised hundreds of foreign nationals on the Thailand Privilege Card (Elite Visa), DTV, LTR, and retirement visa programs.
Published: May 18, 2026. We will update this article as the Cabinet finalizes the 30-day rule and the official country list is reissued.