Thailand runs the second-largest economy in Southeast Asia after Indonesia, and it hosts one of the region's largest foreign resident populations, spread unevenly across a country where Bangkok, Chiang Mai, and Phuket function almost as 3 separate expat markets with different jobs, different costs, and different rules of thumb. None of that changes the legal reality underneath it: working here requires a specific visa and a separate work permit, sponsoring a foreign employee has real financial thresholds a Thai company must clear, and the paperwork rewards patience over improvisation.

This guide covers the full path: which visa fits your situation, how the work permit process actually runs, what a Thai company needs to sponsor you, the occupations reserved for Thai nationals only, business setup rules under the Foreign Business Act, and real 2026 cost-of-living numbers for the 3 cities where most foreigners actually settle.

Author's note:

Thai immigration rules shift often enough that guides written even a year ago quote figures that no longer hold, visa-exempt stays dropped from 60 back to 30 days for many nationalities in mid-2026, for one example. Every visa category, fee, and threshold below is checked against the Thai Board of Investment, the Ministry of Labour's Alien Employment Act framework, and current legal-practice guidance as of June 2026. Confirm anything time-sensitive against an immigration lawyer or the official e-Visa portal before acting on it.

🇹🇭 Thailand for foreign workers, at a glance
🛂Work requires: A Non-Immigrant B visa plus a separate work permit; working on a tourist stamp is illegal
🏢Employer threshold: 2 million THB registered capital and 4 Thai staff per foreign work permit (waived for BOI/LTR)
🏗️Business ownership: Capped at 49% foreign by default; 100% possible via FBL, BOI, or the US Treaty of Amity
💰Minimum capital: 2 million THB for most foreign-owned businesses, 3 million THB for restricted List 2/3 sectors
📅Reporting: 90-day address reporting for most visa holders; annual reporting for LTR visa holders
💵Realistic budget: ~30,000-70,000 THB/month single in Bangkok ($850-2,000); Chiang Mai runs 20-30% less
🚫Reserved jobs: A published list under the Alien Employment Act bars foreigners from many trades and manual roles

Thailand's VISA System, at a Glance:

7 categories cover almost every reason a foreigner ends up staying in Thailand long-term. Which one applies depends entirely on your purpose, income, and whether a Thai entity is sponsoring you.

Visa Who it's for Length Allows work?
Visa exemption 60+ nationalities, short tourism 30 days (reduced from 60 mid-2026 for many countries) No
Tourist Visa (TR / METV) Longer tourism, ~$7,000 bank proof for METV 60 days, extendable 30; METV covers 6 months multi-entry No
Non-Immigrant B Employees of a Thai company, business owners 90 days initial, extendable to 1 year Yes, with a separate work permit
Non-Immigrant O Family reunification, marriage to a Thai national 90 days initial, extendable to 1 year Only with a separate work permit
Non-Immigrant O-A / OX Retirees aged 50+ 1 year, renewable annually No
LTR Visa High earners, remote professionals, retirees, skilled workers 10 years (5+5) Yes, via a streamlined Digital Work Permit
DTV (Destination Thailand Visa) Remote workers with foreign clients/employer, digital nomads 180 days per entry, renewable 5 years Remote work for foreign entities only, no Thai clients
Thailand Privilege (formerly Elite) Long-stay residency by paid membership 5-20 years depending on tier No; a separate Non-B is required to work
⚠️ The single most common mistake: Working while holding a tourist stamp or visa exemption. Thailand's Aliens Working Act B.E. 2551 defines "work" broadly enough to cover almost any paid activity performed inside the country, and enforcement has tightened, not loosened, over the past few years.

The work permit: the part most guides underplay

Getting a Non-Immigrant B visa is only step 1. Without the separate work permit issued by the Ministry of Labour, you legally cannot work, even with the right visa stamp in your passport.

The process runs in a specific order. Your prospective employer first files a WP.3, a preliminary work permit pre-approval, with the Ministry of Labour, a step that typically takes 1-3 weeks. Only once that clears do you apply for the Non-B visa itself, either at a Thai embassy abroad or, for some nationalities, through the e-Visa portal. Entering Thailand on the Non-B grants a 90-day stay, and within that window your employer applies for the actual work permit. You cannot legally start working until it's issued, no matter how urgent the job start date feels.

The employer side carries the real weight here. A Thai company sponsoring a foreign worker needs at least 2 million THB in registered capital per foreign employee, and must maintain 4 Thai staff for every 1 foreign hire, a ratio that has sunk more small-business sponsorships than any other single requirement. BOI-promoted companies and LTR visa holders are exempt from this ratio entirely, which is a major reason larger, foreign-investment-backed employers have an easier time hiring internationally than small local firms do.

🔑 What actually gets rejected: A generic employment contract without a specific job title matching the Ministry of Labour's approved position, an employer under the 2 million THB threshold, or a job title that doesn't match what's listed on the work permit itself. None of these are edge cases; they're the most common rejection reasons cited by Thai immigration lawyers.

What the Work Permit Actually Costs and Requires:

The permit itself is priced by duration: 750 THB for under a year, 1,500 THB for a full year, or 3,000 THB for a 3-year permit, with processing taking around 2 weeks once every document is in. Your employer compiles the company-side paperwork (the corporate affidavit, financial statements, and list of Thai employees), but the applicant side needs a valid passport with the correct visa, recent passport photos, the signed employment contract, a medical certificate issued within the last 3 months, proof of your Thai address, and copies of your educational and professional qualifications. The permit is tied to a specific job with a specific employer; changing roles, even inside the same company, requires a new one, not an amendment to the old one.

Retirement in Thailand: the Non-O and Non-O-A route

Anyone 50 or older can apply for a retirement visa without any employment angle at all. The standard path requires either a 800,000 THB deposit in a Thai bank account, held for at least 2 months before applying, or a monthly income of 65,000 THB, or some combination of both meeting the same total. The visa runs a year at a time and renews annually as long as the financial requirement is maintained, and it explicitly does not permit work; retirees who take paid local jobs on this visa are operating illegally regardless of intent.

Bringing Your Family:

A Non-Immigrant O visa covers spouses and dependent children of someone already working or residing in Thailand, following the same 90-day-then-1-year extension pattern as other Non-Immigrant categories. Passports for children should be issued in their own name, not added to a parent's, since Thai immigration processes each family member as an individual applicant regardless of age. The LTR visa's family provision goes further: eligible LTR holders can include a spouse and up to 4 children under 20 under the same long-term validity and multiple-entry terms as the primary applicant, with per-dependent government fees and insurance requirements applying on top.

International schooling is the line item that catches most relocating families off guard. British and IB-curriculum schools in Bangkok run 150,000-700,000 THB a year per child, with Phuket sitting in a comparable 200,000-450,000 THB range and provincial cities considerably lower. Health insurance is the other non-negotiable: expats who spend more than 183 days a year outside their home country typically lose access to state healthcare back home, making a dedicated Thailand-based policy, starting around 25,000 THB a year for someone in their late 30s to mid-40s, a real budget line, not an optional extra.

Long-Term options: LTR, Privilege, and Permanent Residency:

The LTR Visa, launched in 2022, is Thailand's strongest long-stay instrument for anyone who qualifies. It runs 10 years in a 5-plus-5 structure and splits into 4 categories: Wealthy Global Citizens ($1 million in assets plus $80,000 annual income, or $500,000 invested in Thailand), Wealthy Pensioners ($80,000 passive annual income, or $40,000 paired with a $250,000 Thai investment), Work From Thailand Professionals ($80,000 annual income from a foreign employer with 5+ years of experience, the main route for remote workers), and Highly Skilled Professionals working for Thai companies in targeted sectors like biotech, digital services, and EVs. LTR holders in the first 3 categories pay a flat 17% personal income tax rate on Thai-sourced income, a genuine discount against Thailand's standard progressive rate that tops out at 35%, and they report to immigration once a year instead of every 90 days.

Thailand Privilege, the rebranded Thailand Elite program, works differently. It's a paid membership, not a work visa, with 2026 fees ranging from 650,000 to 5,000,000 THB depending on the tier, buying 5 to 20 years of long-stay rights with no income or asset proof required. It grants none of the LTR's work authorization. A Privilege member who wants to work still needs a separate Non-B visa and work permit, and being a shareholder or director of a Thai company is fine while actively drawing a salary from one isn't, without that additional paperwork.

Permanent Residency and Citizenship:

Permanent residency is a distinct, harder-to-reach status from any of the visas above, and it's the required stepping stone if Thai citizenship is ever the goal. Eligibility opens after 3 consecutive 1-year visa extensions, or after holding a valid Thai work permit continuously for 3 years, whichever path applies to your situation. Income thresholds apply on top: roughly $900 a month if you're married to a Thai national, or $2,300 a month if applying as a single applicant. Permanent residents no longer need to renew a visa annually, which removes one of the biggest recurring administrative burdens long-term residents deal with. Naturalization to full Thai citizenship remains possible afterward, though it's a separate, longer process most long-term expats never pursue, generally reserved for those with deep, permanent ties to the country.

The Rules that Catch People off Guard:

Most non-LTR visa holders staying past 90 days must report their current address to Thai immigration every 90 days, a requirement that applies even if you haven't moved and resets each time you leave and re-enter the country. Missing the deadline carries a 2,000 THB fine, small enough that people forget it matters until it compounds with other paperwork issues. Leaving Thailand at all while holding a Non-Immigrant extension requires a re-entry permit beforehand; without one, your extension of stay is voided the moment you exit, regardless of how briefly you intended to be gone.

The Alien Employment Act reserves a published list of occupations for Thai nationals only, covering many skilled trades, most agricultural and manual labor, hairdressing, tour guiding, and street vending among others. Thai immigration and the Ministry of Labour also maintain a less formal but consistently enforced pattern around which office and professional roles get approved: software engineering, project management, business analysis, executive and financial officer positions, and specialist technical or teaching roles clear routinely, while roles in construction, agriculture, and several service trades face near-automatic rejection for a work permit regardless of the applicant's actual qualifications.

⚠️ Driving legally requires more than a work permit: A Thai driving license (or a valid International Driving Permit alongside your home license), vehicle registration, and, outside Bangkok, a residence certificate from your local immigration office are all separate documents from your visa and work permit. None of them are automatically issued alongside the others. A foreign driving license alone is generally not accepted.

Banking and Taxes once You're Here:

Opening a Thai bank account requires an in-person visit; no major bank offers this remotely. Standard requirements include your passport with a valid visa (a tourist stamp alone often isn't accepted), proof of a Thai address such as a rental agreement or a letter from your employer, and in some cases a work permit or a letter from your embassy confirming residency. Requirements vary noticeably by bank and even by branch, so calling ahead or bringing more documentation than seems necessary saves a wasted trip.

Foreign employees pay Thai personal income tax on Thailand-sourced income using a progressive scale from 0% to 35%, with your employer typically withholding the tax monthly and the first 150,000 THB of annual income exempt entirely. The top 35% bracket applies only above 5,000,000 THB a year. You'll need a Thai Tax Identification Number, which your employer usually arranges as part of onboarding, and keeping your own copies of tax payment records matters directly for visa extension applications later, since immigration officers ask for them. Spending more than 180 days a year in Thailand makes you a Thai tax resident, and since 2024, foreign-sourced income remitted into Thailand in the same year it's earned is subject to Thai tax as well, a rule specific enough that cross-border tax advice is worth the cost if your income situation is anything but simple.

Healthcare and the Safety Net:

Thailand's universal healthcare program has covered an estimated 99.5% of the population since 2002, and employees on a Thai payroll get enrolled in the national social security system automatically, with a set monthly deduction covering basic care. That system doesn't extend the same way to freelancers, remote workers, or anyone without a Thai employer, who need to arrange private coverage independently. Thailand's healthcare quality ranks well internationally, Numbeo's 2026 Health Care Index places it 8th globally, and private hospitals including Bumrungrad International, Bangkok Hospital, and Samitivej operate fully in English with JCI accreditation, delivering care comparable to leading facilities in Europe or North America at a fraction of the cost. A specialist consultation at one of these runs 1,000-3,000 THB.

Local Thai insurance policies are worth understanding before relying on one: they commonly exclude motorcycle-related accidents specifically, a significant gap given how much daily transport in Thailand runs on scooters and motorbikes, and policy documents are sometimes written only in Thai. LTR visa applicants must show health insurance coverage of at least $50,000 USD, or an alternative $100,000 USD deposit, as part of the visa's own requirements. On safety more broadly, Thailand ranked 86th globally on the 2025 Global Peace Index, comparable to several other popular expat destinations in the region, with the main practical risks for most residents being road traffic rather than crime.

Finding a Job in Thailand, by Region:

Bangkok, the Eastern Seaboard, Chiang Mai, and the southern tourist coast run on genuinely different job markets, not variations of the same one.

BangkokThe corporate center

Bangkok: multinational headquarters

Regional headquarters for finance, insurance, energy, and technology firms concentrate here, and a strong professional profile with a relevant degree or track record finds openings more easily than anywhere else in the country. English-language teaching remains reliably in demand for anyone without a specialized profile, particularly private tutoring and international school positions.

Eastern SeaboardThailand's manufacturing belt

Rayong, Chonburi, and the auto industry

Thailand is Southeast Asia's largest vehicle manufacturer, and the Eastern Seaboard around Rayong and Chonburi hosts major automotive, electronics, and petrochemical operations. Engineering, supply chain, and technical management roles cluster here, often through the same multinationals with a Bangkok head office and a factory floor an hour outside the city.

Chiang MaiRemote work and small business

Chiang Mai: remote-first, not employer-first

Chiang Mai's expat economy runs less on local employment and more on remote workers earning foreign income under a DTV or LTR visa, alongside a smaller pool of English teaching, hospitality, and small-business roles. Locally sponsored work permits here are considerably rarer than in Bangkok.

Phuket & PattayaTourism-driven

Phuket and Pattaya: hospitality and tourism

The tourist coast runs almost entirely on hospitality, diving and watersports operations, real estate, and property management. Wages for entry-level tourism roles are low relative to Bangkok, and competition from other foreign residents already on the ground is real; a specific, marketable skill matters more here than general enthusiasm for island life.

How to Actually Find Work:

A confirmed job offer from a company that already meets the 2-million-THB and 4:1 staffing thresholds is the cleanest path, since it removes the sponsorship question entirely before you apply for anything. Spontaneous applications work here the same way they do everywhere else: most go nowhere, but it takes only 1 to land, and Thai employers generally respond better to a direct, specific approach than a generic mass application. Word of mouth inside Thailand's expat and professional networks fills a genuine share of roles that never get formally advertised, particularly in Chiang Mai and Phuket's smaller business scenes, and LinkedIn plus sector-specific job boards cover most of Bangkok's corporate openings.

JobsDB Thailand is the largest general job board and lets you filter for roles open to foreign nationals. Ajarn.com specializes specifically in teaching positions, updated daily. JobThai, mostly in Thai, lists genuine openings that many foreign applicants never see simply because they don't look there. For management and specialist roles, recruitment agencies including Adecco Thailand, Robert Walters, and Michael Page place foreign professionals directly and generally handle the visa and work permit process as part of the placement.

What Foreign Professionals Actually Earn:

Salaries vary enormously by sector and experience, but these ranges reflect what recruiters and employers commonly advertise for foreign hires in 2026.

Sector Typical monthly range (THB) Notes
English teaching 35,000-120,000 Highest at private international schools; TEFL certification usually required
Software development / IT 60,000-200,000 Strong demand for full-stack, DevOps, and cybersecurity roles
Digital marketing / SEO 50,000-150,000 Highest at Bangkok tech startups and e-commerce companies
Hospitality management 45,000-180,000 Senior roles typically require 5+ years' relevant experience
Translation / interpretation 40,000-100,000 Japanese, Chinese, and Korean speakers in particular demand
Corporate training / consulting 80,000-250,000 Suits professionals with 10+ years in a specialization

A Thai CV runs longer and more detailed than a typical Western one, and including a professional photo, your age, and your nationality is standard practice, not something to omit. Thai workplace culture generally values hierarchy and harmony over direct confrontation; criticism gets delivered gently, and the concept of "saving face" (avoiding public embarrassment for yourself or others) shapes far more day-to-day interactions than most new arrivals expect. Employers also tend to favor candidates who signal genuine long-term interest in Thailand specifically, prior experience anywhere else in Asia and a stated intent to learn Thai both help distinguish an application from the pile of foreigners treating the move as a working holiday.

Internships and the Education VISA Route:

Thailand doesn't run a dedicated internship visa the way some countries do; the practical route is a Non-Immigrant ED (education) visa when the internship is tied to a recognized academic program, or, less commonly, a Non-B arrangement if a Thai company is willing to sponsor the placement directly under standard work permit rules. The ED route generally needs a letter from your home institution confirming the placement counts toward your degree, a host company or organization agreement in Thailand, and the same passport validity and financial-proof standards as other Non-Immigrant categories.

Multinational offices in Bangkok and BOI-promoted manufacturers on the Eastern Seaboard run the most structured internship pipelines, frequently through direct partnerships with specific universities, not open public postings. A spontaneous, well-targeted application to a company already known to take interns from your field beats a broad, unfocused search most of the time.

Starting a Business in Thailand:

The Foreign Business Act B.E. 2542 (1999) caps foreign ownership at 49% in most commercial and service sectors by default. A Thai company, one where non-Thai shareholders hold under 50%, faces far fewer restrictions than a "foreign" one under Thai law, which is why the standard structure for smaller foreign-founded businesses pairs a foreign minority stake with genuine Thai shareholders holding the majority. Since January 2026, those Thai co-shareholders must supply 3 months of bank statements demonstrating the capital behind their share subscription actually belongs to them, a rule introduced specifically to curb nominee shareholding, an illegal practice where a Thai national holds shares on a foreigner's behalf without genuine ownership. Penalties for nominee arrangements include company dissolution and criminal liability for both parties.

3 legal routes lift the 49% cap for businesses that need majority or full foreign ownership. A Foreign Business License from the Ministry of Commerce covers case-by-case approval for restricted activities. Board of Investment promotion, available for eligible sectors including advanced manufacturing, digital services, and technology, grants full ownership plus corporate tax exemptions running up to 13 years and simplified work permit processing exempt from the standard 4:1 ratio. The US-Thailand Treaty of Amity gives American nationals and companies ownership rights close to a Thai company's, though communications and transportation stay restricted even under the treaty. Minimum registered capital sits at 2 million THB for most foreign-owned businesses, rising to 3 million THB for activities under the FBA's more restricted List 2 and List 3 categories, and foreign-owned companies generally cannot own land outright.

🔑 2026 update: In May 2026, Thailand's Cabinet approved draft measures removing the Foreign Business License requirement entirely from 9 specific business categories, part of a broader push through 2026-2027 to reduce duplicate regulatory layers on sectors already overseen by dedicated agencies. The 49% default cap itself hasn't changed; these are targeted carve-outs, not a general liberalization.

The Honest Downsides:

The paperwork is genuinely heavy, and the 4:1 Thai-to-foreign staffing ratio has ended more small-business sponsorship attempts than any visa rule itself. Corruption and inconsistent enforcement at the local level remain real complaints among long-term residents, even as digital systems like the new DBD Biz Regist platform push registration processes online. Air quality in Chiang Mai and northern Thailand deteriorates sharply during the February-April burning season, a genuine health consideration for anyone planning to base there. Bangkok's traffic remains a daily tax on time regardless of income level, and healthcare, while excellent at private hospitals, gets expensive fast without insurance: a single uninsured surgical procedure at a top Bangkok facility can run into hundreds of thousands of baht.

Foreign Companies Already Established Here:

Thailand's Eastern Seaboard earned its "Detroit of Asia" nickname honestly: Toyota, Honda, Ford, and Isuzu all run major manufacturing operations in the Rayong-Chonburi corridor, alongside electronics manufacturers including Western Digital and Seagate, both major hard-drive producers with large Thai plants. The BOI reported a 10-year high in investment applications in 2024, over 1.14 trillion THB, with digital and electronics sectors leading the momentum into 2026. For job seekers, this concentration matters practically: multinational employers already running Thai operations understand the work permit and Non-B process from the sponsor side, which generally makes their hiring process smoother than a small Thai firm sponsoring its first foreign employee.

What Long-Term Expats Consistently Report:

A few patterns show up repeatedly across long-term expat accounts, more useful here than any single testimonial. Bangkok and Chiang Mai get described as almost different countries: Bangkok rewards career-focused professionals with real corporate infrastructure and traffic that eats hours of every week, while Chiang Mai suits remote workers and retirees who prioritize cost and pace over career density. People who arrive expecting Thailand to run on Western timelines for paperwork adjust faster once they stop expecting that and build in slack. And the recurring warning across immigration lawyers and expat forums alike is the same one repeated throughout this guide: work permit and visa mistakes are the single most common reason people have to leave Thailand and restart the entire process from outside the country.

Cost of living: Bangkok, Chiang Mai, Phuket, and Hua Hin:

City choice affects your budget more than almost any other single decision, with a 20-30% swing between Bangkok and Chiang Mai for a comparable lifestyle.

City Modest single budget Comfortable single budget 1BR rent (central)
Bangkok 30,000-35,000 THB (~$850-1,000) 45,000-70,000 THB (~$1,300-2,000) 15,000-35,000 THB
Chiang Mai 24,000-28,000 THB (~$700-800) 35,000-50,000 THB (~$1,000-1,450) 10,000-16,000 THB
Phuket 33,000-40,000 THB (~$950-1,150) 50,000-80,000 THB (~$1,450-2,300) 12,000-25,000 THB
Hua Hin 28,000-32,000 THB (~$800-925) 35,000-50,000 THB (~$1,000-1,450) 10,000-18,000 THB

A few costs sit outside the headline rent-and-food numbers: private health insurance from around 25,000 THB a year for someone in their late 30s, international school fees of 150,000-700,000 THB a year per child in Bangkok, and fiber internet at roughly 700-900 THB a month for 500 Mbps connections widely available across all 4 cities. Anyone spending more than 180 days a year in Thailand becomes a Thai tax resident, and since 2024, foreign income remitted into Thailand in the same year it's earned is subject to Thai tax, a rule specific enough that professional cross-border tax advice is worth the cost for anyone with significant foreign income.

Which Neighborhood, Not Just Which City:

In Bangkok, Sukhumvit between BTS Asok and On Nut holds the largest international community with the widest choice of restaurants and schools, Sathorn and Silom run more corporate and business-district in character, and Ari offers a trendier, more local feel at lower rents, with all 3 areas on direct BTS or MRT lines. In Chiang Mai, Nimman is the default for cafes and coworking density, while Santitham just north of the old city draws longer-term residents with lower rents and an easy scooter or Grab ride into downtown. In Phuket, Rawai and Nai Harn in the south suit anyone prioritizing a calmer pace over nightlife, and Hua Hin's appeal is almost entirely about being 2.5 hours from Bangkok by road while running noticeably slower and cheaper than the capital.

🔑 A hidden rental cost: Many landlords charge 7-9 THB per kWh for electricity, well above the government rate of roughly 4.2 THB. With air conditioning running most of the day, that markup alone can push a studio's monthly electricity bill past 3,000 THB. Negotiate the per-unit electricity rate explicitly before signing any lease; it's rarely offered upfront.

For stays longer than 2-3 years, buying instead of renting starts to make financial sense for some. Foreigners can own condominium units outright under the freehold foreign quota, capped at 49% of units in any single building, though land ownership itself remains off-limits without going through a company structure or long-term lease arrangement. A studio in Phuket starts around 2.5 million THB, with gross rental yields commonly cited in the 5-8% range for owners who rent the unit out during time spent abroad.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ's):

Q. Can I work in Thailand on a tourist visa or visa exemption?
No. Thailand's Aliens Working Act B.E. 2551 defines work broadly, covering any occupation or activity performed for wage or benefit inside the country. Working on a tourist stamp is illegal and immigration actively enforces this. You need a Non-Immigrant B visa and a separate work permit before starting any paid role with a Thai employer.
Q. How much does a Thai company need to sponsor a foreign work permit?
The employer generally needs at least 2 million THB in registered capital per foreign work permit, and must employ 4 Thai staff for every 1 foreign employee, though this ratio is waived for BOI-promoted companies and LTR visa holders. Small Thai businesses below this threshold cannot legally sponsor a foreign worker.
Q. Can a foreigner own 100% of a business in Thailand?
Not by default. The Foreign Business Act caps foreign ownership at 49% in most sectors. Full or majority ownership is possible through 3 routes: a Foreign Business License from the Ministry of Commerce, Board of Investment (BOI) promotion in eligible industries, or the US-Thailand Treaty of Amity for American nationals and companies.
Q. What's a realistic monthly budget for an expat in Thailand?
A single person can live modestly in Bangkok on roughly 30,000-35,000 THB (about $850-1,000) a month, or comfortably on 45,000-70,000 THB ($1,300-2,000). Chiang Mai runs about 20-30% cheaper for a comparable lifestyle, while Phuket typically costs 15-20% more than Bangkok due to housing.
Q. Does Thailand have a visa for remote workers with foreign income?
Yes, 2 main options. The Destination Thailand Visa (DTV) allows up to 180 days per entry, renewable, for remote workers and digital nomads with no Thai-client work involved. The LTR Visa's Work From Thailand Professional category offers a 10-year residency track for remote workers earning at least $80,000 a year from a foreign employer with 5+ years of experience, including a Digital Work Permit.
Q. What jobs are foreigners not allowed to do in Thailand?
The Alien Employment Act reserves a list of occupations for Thai nationals only, including many skilled trades, agricultural labor, tour guiding, hairdressing, and street vending. Roles that consistently get work permit approval include software engineering, project management, business analysis, executive positions, and specialist technical or teaching roles.