Who Pays Personal Income Tax in Thailand?
Liability for Thailand personal income tax depends on tax residency, not citizenship. Specifically, you become a Thai tax resident if you spend 180 days or more in Thailand during a single calendar year. As a result, a foreigner on a long-stay visa can become a tax resident just as easily as a Thai national.
Residency status drives two very different outcomes. On one hand, tax residents are assessed on Thai-sourced income and on certain foreign income they remit into Thailand. On the other hand, non-residents are taxed only on income earned from work performed or business conducted inside Thailand. Consequently, counting your days in the country is the first step in any tax assessment.
Thai-sourced income always falls within the net, regardless of residency. For example, salary for work performed in Thailand, rental income from Thai property, and profits from a Thai business all remain taxable. In addition, directors’ fees and consulting income connected to Thailand are assessable.
How Thailand Taxes Foreign-Sourced Income
The treatment of foreign income is the single biggest change affecting expat personal income tax in Thailand. Moreover, it is the area where most foreigners misunderstand their obligations. To plan correctly, you must understand how the rule evolved.
The pre-2024 position
For decades, Thailand applied a generous loophole. Foreign income was taxable only if a resident remitted it into Thailand in the same calendar year it was earned. Therefore, many expats simply waited until the following year to transfer funds, and the income escaped Thai tax entirely.
The current rule since 1 January 2024
The Revenue Department closed that loophole through Departmental Instruction No. Por. 161/2566, later clarified by Por. 162/2566. Under the current rule, foreign-sourced income that a Thai tax resident remits into Thailand is assessable in the year of remittance, no matter when it was earned. As a result, the timing trick no longer works for income earned from 2024 onward.
Importantly, the change protects income earned before 2024. Order Por. 162 confirms that pre-2024 foreign earnings remain outside the net when remitted. Consequently, accurate record-keeping of when income was earned has become critical for anyone with overseas assets.
The stalled 2025 relief proposal
In 2025, the Revenue Department drafted a relief measure to ease the burden. Under the proposal, foreigners could remit foreign income tax-free if they brought it into Thailand within the same year it was earned or the following year. However, the draft stalled when Parliament dissolved ahead of the February 2026 general election. Therefore, as of mid-2026 the relief is not law, and residents should still plan around the stricter Por. 161 framework.
Personal Income Tax Rates in Thailand for 2026
Thailand applies a progressive rate structure, and the bands remain unchanged for 2026. The more you earn, the higher your marginal rate climbs. The table below shows how net assessable income is taxed.
| Net annual income (THB) | Marginal tax rate |
|---|---|
| 0 – 150,000 | Exempt (0%) |
| 150,001 – 300,000 | 5% |
| 300,001 – 500,000 | 10% |
| 500,001 – 750,000 | 15% |
| 750,001 – 1,000,000 | 20% |
| 1,000,001 – 2,000,000 | 25% |
| 2,000,001 – 5,000,000 | 30% |
| Over 5,000,000 | 35% |
Because the rates are marginal, only the portion of income within each band is taxed at that band’s rate. For instance, a resident earning THB 800,000 does not pay 20% on the whole amount. Instead, each slice is taxed separately, which keeps the effective rate well below the top marginal figure.
Allowances and Deductions That Reduce Your Tax
Thailand offers a range of allowances that lower the amount of Thailand personal income tax you actually owe. Foreigners qualify for most of these on the same basis as Thai nationals. As a result, your taxable base is often far smaller than your gross income.
Common reliefs include a personal allowance of THB 60,000, a spouse allowance where the spouse has no income, and child allowances. In addition, residents can deduct qualifying contributions to provident funds, approved life and health insurance premiums, mortgage interest, and certain long-term investment funds. Employment income also attracts a standard expense deduction of 50%, capped at THB 100,000.
These deductions matter most for higher earners and for retirees structuring pension remittances. Therefore, careful planning around allowances can move you into a lower effective bracket. For a wider view of compliance and bookkeeping, see our guide to accounting and tax in Thailand for foreign businesses.
Filing Deadlines and Compliance Obligations
The Thai tax year follows the calendar year. Residents file the PND 90 or PND 91 personal income tax return for the prior year, and the paper deadline falls at the end of March. Helpfully, online filing through the Revenue Department’s e-filing system extends the window into early April.
Employers withhold tax monthly on salaries, yet that withholding rarely settles your full liability. Consequently, foreigners with rental income, dividends, or remitted foreign earnings must reconcile everything in the annual return. Failure to file on time triggers surcharges and penalties, and persistent non-compliance can affect visa and work permit renewals.
Anyone earning employment income in Thailand should also confirm their work authorization is in order. Our overview of Thailand work permit income requirements explains how salary thresholds interact with tax and immigration compliance.
Double Tax Agreements and Avoiding Double Taxation
Thailand has signed more than 60 double tax agreements (DTAs), and these treaties are powerful tools for foreigners. In short, a DTA allocates taxing rights between Thailand and your home country, which prevents the same income from being taxed twice. For example, tax already paid abroad may generate a credit against your Thai liability.
The interaction between DTAs and the remittance rule is nuanced. While a treaty can reduce or eliminate Thai tax on certain income, the relief is not automatic. Therefore, you generally need supporting documentation and, in many cases, professional advice to claim it correctly. This is especially relevant for pensions, dividends, and capital gains, where treaty wording varies significantly between countries.
Tax Planning Strategies for Foreigners in Thailand
Smart planning starts long before the filing deadline. First, track your days in Thailand carefully, since the 180-day threshold is the line between resident and non-resident status. Second, document the origin and earning date of all foreign funds, because pre-2024 income remains exempt when remitted.
Beyond residency, structure matters. Some foreigners separate capital from income in their overseas accounts, so that remittances of pre-existing savings are not confused with assessable income. Others time large transfers strategically or use treaty reliefs to manage exposure. Notably, certain visa categories carry favourable tax treatment, and our analysis of the Thailand LTR Visa and its tax perks explains how qualifying residents can benefit.
Above all, the rules are evolving and the penalties for getting them wrong are real. Consequently, a tailored review with qualified Thai tax counsel is the safest path for anyone with meaningful foreign income or assets. You can review the official rate tables and forms directly on the Thai Revenue Department website, and check treaty coverage through its list of double tax agreements.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do foreigners have to pay personal income tax in Thailand?
How many days make me a Thai tax resident?
Is foreign income taxed when I bring it into Thailand?
What are the personal income tax rates in Thailand?
When is the personal income tax return due in Thailand?
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