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Seized Digital Assets in Thailand: How New AMLO Custody Rules Reshape Crypto Enforcement

The rules on seized digital assets in Thailand have changed. On 1 May 2026, Thai authorities published a new regulation. For the first time, it spells out exactly how the Anti-Money Laundering Office (AMLO) takes custody of crypto and other digital property after a seizure. Exchanges, custodians, token issuers, and the foreign investors behind them now face real duties. Those duties matter today, well before any enforcement order lands.

What Changed for Seized Digital Assets in Thailand

The new measure carries a long name: the Regulation of the Anti-Money Laundering Board on the Custody and Management of Seized or Frozen Assets (No. 3) B.E. 2569. It took effect on 2 May 2026. Above all, it closes a real gap.

AMLO has held seizure and freezing powers for years under the Anti-Money Laundering Act. Yet the office lacked a clear playbook for digital property. Once an order landed, officials had no settled method for crypto.

That gap mattered. Digital assets behave nothing like bank accounts, cars, or land. A private key can cross borders in seconds. Worse, the assets often sit with custodians far outside Thailand. The 2026 regulation tackles this reality head-on. In short, it gives officials a clear route to move seized digital property into secure state custody.

Key Takeaway Thailand now has its first formal procedure for the custody of seized digital assets. The framework favours fast transfer into state-controlled storage. It also reaches every party that might hold affected assets, from licensed exchanges to individual wallet holders.

How AMLO Now Takes Custody of Digital Assets

The regulation sets a clear three-step hierarchy. Officials apply each step in order. The right step depends on where the assets sit and whether a compliant route exists. This order matters, because it shapes exactly what a business or individual must do.

Step one: transfer to a licensed domestic operator

First, suppose the seized assets sit with a provider outside Thailand. In that case, AMLO moves them into an account it holds with a licensed domestic operator. As a result, the assets re-enter the Thai regulatory perimeter. There, local supervision and recovery rules apply directly.

Step two: AMLO’s own cold wallet

Next, suppose no licensed domestic operator supports that asset. AMLO then moves it into its own cold wallet. A cold wallet is offline storage, cut off from the internet. This design lowers the risk of theft. Crucially, it also gives the state direct control without a third-party platform.

Step three: escalation to the committee

Finally, suppose neither route works. The seizing official then reports the matter to the Anti-Money Laundering Committee for further instructions. A parallel hierarchy covers assets in a suspect’s private wallet or with any third party. Therefore, no category of holding escapes the framework.

Key Takeaway The custody sequence runs from a licensed Thai operator, to AMLO’s own cold wallet, to committee escalation. Digital asset businesses should expect transfer demands. They must stay technically and operationally ready to act fast.

A Broad New Definition of Digital Assets

The definition stands out as the most striking feature. It covers assets under Thailand’s existing digital asset business law. However, it goes much further. It also captures any other property that someone can store the same way as digital assets. In practice, that wording reaches emerging blockchain instruments and tokenised property. Many of these do not yet meet the usual statutory definition.

This flexible wording matters for two reasons. First, it future-proofs enforcement against fast change in tokenisation, DeFi, and new asset classes. Second, it widens the pool of parties who might suddenly face a custody demand. Notably, that pool includes platforms that never saw themselves as regulated digital asset businesses.

What This Means for Digital Asset Businesses

For licensed operators, the regulation turns an abstract risk into hard operational duties. Exchanges and custodians hold customer assets every day. Now they must expect to surrender those assets under an enforcement order. They must also execute transfers to AMLO accurately and on demand.

Forward-looking firms should treat the rule as a prompt. We advise clients to review four areas in particular:

  • Seizure-response protocols. Decide who can authorise and execute a transfer to AMLO. Then set a clear method to verify each request.
  • Customer agreements. Update your terms so they flag that a lawful order may move customer assets into state custody.
  • Technical readiness. Confirm you can transfer every asset type you custody. An inability triggers the cold-wallet route and may draw closer scrutiny.
  • Cross-border mapping. Track where customer assets actually sit. After all, foreign-held assets top the regulation’s repatriation list.

These duties sit beside Thailand’s wider push on digital asset oversight. Therefore, operators should read this rule as one part of a coordinated effort. Our analysis of Thailand SEC digital asset enforcement and what cross-border platforms need to know adds vital context for any operator weighing its exposure.

Key Takeaway Compliance is no longer optional housekeeping. A slow or sloppy response to a custody demand invites regulatory criticism and operational chaos. A tested seizure-response capability now sits at the core of a compliant platform.

Practical Implications for Investors

The regulation does not target individual investors directly. Even so, it exposes them. Picture an investor whose assets sit with a platform under investigation. Or picture an order that reaches their own holdings. In either case, the state may move those assets into custody until proceedings end. The same risk applies to a private wallet that officials can clearly link to a crime.

Foreign investors should note two points. First, Thai jurisdiction can reach assets that started, or now sit, offshore. Second, recovery after a freeze hinges on documentation, a fast legal response, and a clean trail of ownership. These dynamics mirror a frozen bank account closely. We explore that scenario in our guide on how investors can protect their funds when a bank account is frozen in Thailand.

New entrants should also grasp the regulatory landscape from day one. Anyone weighing a Thai presence will value our overview of registering a digital asset company in Thailand. It offers a practical starting point for compliant structuring.

How to Prepare Before an Order Arrives

The strongest position starts before any enforcement contact. Businesses should document their custody arrangements. They should also formalise a response plan and seek legal guidance early. That guidance should cover how to validate and execute transfer demands. Investors, meanwhile, should keep solid records of source of funds and beneficial ownership for every major holding. This evidence proves decisive if a freeze ever hits.

One point deserves emphasis. This regulation does not stand alone. It forms one strand of a tougher anti-money laundering stance. Authorities have signalled clearly that digital assets now sit inside enforcement scope. Engage experienced Thai counsel early. That way, you align your operations with the framework rather than scramble under pressure.

Key Takeaway Preparation offers the only real protection. Whether you run a platform or hold assets as an investor, build your custody records, response protocols, and ownership evidence now. Do it before a seizure order ever arrives.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the new rules on seized digital assets in Thailand?
The new rule is the Regulation of the Anti-Money Laundering Board on the Custody and Management of Seized or Frozen Assets (No. 3) B.E. 2569. It took effect on 2 May 2026. It sets out how AMLO takes custody of digital assets seized during investigations. The hierarchy moves from a licensed domestic operator, to AMLO’s own cold wallet, and finally to committee escalation.
Which digital assets does the regulation cover?
The definition stays deliberately broad. It covers assets under Thailand’s existing digital asset business law. It also covers any other property that someone can store the same way as digital assets. As a result, it reaches emerging blockchain and tokenised instruments that fall outside the usual statutory definition.
How does Thailand store seized digital assets?
Where possible, AMLO transfers seized digital assets into an account it holds with a licensed domestic operator. If that operator cannot support the asset, AMLO moves it to its own cold wallet. A cold wallet is offline storage cut off from the internet. If neither option works, the matter goes to the committee for further instructions.
What must digital asset businesses do to comply?
Exchanges and custodians should prepare to transfer customer assets under a lawful order. First, set internal seizure-response protocols. Next, confirm you can transfer every asset type you custody. Then update customer agreements. Finally, map where customer assets sit, especially any held offshore.
Can foreign investors recover frozen assets?
Yes, investors can recover legitimately held assets. However, recovery depends on a prompt legal response and clear evidence of ownership and source of funds. Foreign investors should also note that Thai jurisdiction can reach offshore assets. Strong documentation remains the single most important factor in securing a release.

Navigating Thailand’s Digital Asset Enforcement Regime?

Lex Bangkok advises exchanges, custodians, token issuers, and international investors on anti-money laundering compliance and asset protection in Thailand. Our team helps you build defensible custody and response frameworks before enforcement ever begins.

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For official references, see the Anti-Money Laundering Office (AMLO) and the Securities and Exchange Commission of Thailand.