Skip to main content

Thailand Anticorruption Procurement 2026: New Rules for THB 300M+ State Projects

The Thailand anticorruption procurement framework has been substantially tightened, and the new rules take effect today. From 10 May 2026, every private contractor bidding on a Thai state project worth more than THB 300 million (roughly USD 9.3 million) must satisfy a wider set of compliance obligations under the Anti-Corruption Cooperation Committee’s Announcement re: Procurement Limits and Minimum Anticorruption Standards (No. 2), gazetted on 10 April 2026. The amendments expand the scope of conflicts of interest, mandate continuous compliance through final payment, and impose qualification duties on state agencies themselves. For foreign investors, joint ventures, and multinational contractors that compete for Thai government work, the message is direct: a renewed Thailand anticorruption procurement compliance programme is no longer optional — it is the gateway to high-value state revenue.

What the New Thailand Anticorruption Procurement Rules Change

The 2026 announcement replaces several core provisions of the previous standard issued on 25 September 2024. It does not abolish the prior framework; instead, it raises the floor. Three structural shifts deserve immediate attention from any company that already bids on, or expects to bid on, large Thai state projects.

First, the reach of the rules is anchored at THB 300 million, but the design assumes that bidders operating at this scale already maintain a documented compliance regime. The 2026 text is therefore prescriptive about what that programme must include, how long it must remain effective, and how a bidder must prove compliance to the contracting state agency.

Second, the regulator has shifted from a “snapshot” model to a “continuous-coverage” model. Under the 2024 standard, certifications could lapse during contract performance without an automatic compliance failure. Under the 2026 rules, any lapse between bid submission and the final payment under the contract is itself a breach.

Third, state agencies must now actively verify compliance by embedding the anticorruption requirements in their procurement documents. This converts the standard from a contractor-side obligation into a procurement-stage gating mechanism.

Key Takeaway: The 2026 rules apply only to projects above THB 300 million, but they redefine what a credible Thai compliance programme looks like for any bidder — large or small. Companies should treat the standard as the new market benchmark, not as a niche regulation for big infrastructure deals.

Expanded Conflict of Interest: Who Now Counts as an “Involved Party”

The 2024 standard limited conflicts of interest to direct kinship and basic business relationships. The 2026 announcement is materially broader. A conflict of interest now arises wherever a person uses a position of authority to seek a benefit for themselves, a group, close associates, or businesses, including through:

  • direct or indirect business relationships;
  • kinship ties;
  • relationships with spouses; and
  • relationships with individuals living together as partners without marriage registration.

The unmarried partner concept is a notable Thai legal development. Beneficial-ownership disclosures and corporate-governance policies that previously focused only on registered spouses must now capture cohabitation arrangements where they create a procurement-related conflict.

The announcement also lists illustrative scenarios that did not appear in the 2024 text. Holding shares in a similar business that also bids on the same project, or submitting a proposal for a project in which a relative or unregistered partner is an “involved party,” each constitutes a disqualifying conflict. For multinational contractors with regional sister entities or shared shareholder structures, this creates a clear due-diligence risk that must be screened at the bid-team level.

What this means for bidders

Internal disclosure forms, ethics policies, and bid-eligibility checklists should be redesigned to ask the broader set of relationship questions the 2026 rules implicitly require. Sales, business-development, and project-finance teams must train on the expanded definition before tendering on any THB 300M+ project. For corporate groups, common-control screening across affiliated bidders is now a mandatory pre-bid filter rather than a best practice.

The “Final Payment” Rule: Continuous Compliance, End to End

One of the most operationally significant changes is the new “final payment” rule. Anticorruption policies and certifications must remain valid from the date the bid is submitted until the contractor receives the last payment installment under the contract. If a certification is set to expire before the final payment, the contractor must lodge a fresh self-audit form and supporting evidence with the state agency before the original document expires.

For multi-year construction, IT systems, and concession projects, this rule has three immediate implications. The expiry date of every anticorruption document becomes a critical contract milestone. Project management teams should track it alongside delivery dates and payment milestones. A lapse cannot be cured retroactively; it must be prevented through forward-looking calendar management.

State agencies will also expect a renewal evidence pack — not just a renewed certificate. The 2026 form (discussed below) is the new evidentiary baseline.

Key Takeaway: Treat your anticorruption certification expiry as a hard contractual deadline. Build a renewal trigger into your project management tools at least 90 days before each expiry date, and assign owner-level responsibility for the refreshed self-audit documentation.

New Mandatory Qualification Requirements in the TOR

The 2026 rules impose a duty on Thai state agencies to embed minimum anticorruption standards directly into their procurement documents. Each Terms of Reference (TOR) and procurement announcement must specify the anticorruption qualification criteria, and bidders must attach an updated Entrepreneur Information Check Form together with supporting evidence as part of the bid package. Failure to satisfy any item on the qualification checklist disqualifies the bid at the qualification stage — before any technical or commercial evaluation begins.

This converts the standard into an enforceable threshold rather than a post-award promise. Bidders that historically completed compliance paperwork in parallel with contract negotiation must now front-load the work. The procurement document itself becomes the single source of truth for the qualification rules, and bid teams should review each TOR carefully because the way an agency drafts its anticorruption section can vary in scope and severity from project to project.

The Updated Self-Audit Form: Four Confirmations Every Bidder Must Make

The self-audit form attached to the 2024 announcement is no longer valid. The 2026 announcement issues a new version that requires specific confirmation of the following compliance pillars:

Required ConfirmationWhat Bidders Must Demonstrate
Written, current anticorruption policyA board-approved policy that is in force at the time of bid submission, dated, and circulated internally with sign-off records.
Designated compliance ownersNamed units or individuals (not generic role descriptions) responsible for anticorruption oversight, with documented reporting lines.
Whistleblowing system and training planA functioning whistleblower channel that protects anonymity, plus an annual training plan covering all relevant employees.
Three-year policy review cycleEvidence that the anticorruption policy is reviewed at least every three years, with version-control documentation that the regulator can audit.

Each confirmation must be supported by primary evidence: dated policies, signed minutes, training logs, whistleblower reports, and review memoranda. Generic group-level templates without local Thai adoption records are unlikely to satisfy the new form. For multinational groups, this often means localising parent-company compliance frameworks into a Thai entity-level policy with its own review history.

Foreign Investors, Joint Ventures, and the Practical Compliance Roadmap

The Thai government procurement market remains one of the most attractive segments for foreign-invested contractors, particularly in infrastructure, energy, healthcare, defence-related technology, and digital services. The 2026 announcement does not change market access; it changes the cost of staying eligible. Foreign investors and joint ventures should treat the next 90 days as a compliance sprint.

Begin with a gap analysis against the four self-audit pillars. Whatever group-level compliance documentation already exists must be mapped to a Thailand-specific policy with named owners, evidence of dissemination to Thai employees, and a documented three-year review schedule. Where a Thai joint-venture vehicle is the bidding entity, its compliance programme must stand on its own and not borrow exclusively from the foreign parent.

Run a beneficial-ownership and relationship review across the bid team and the Thai legal entity. The expanded conflict definition reaches into shareholder structures, sister-entity holdings, and personal cohabitation relationships, and a conflict identified during the bid stage is far less damaging than one identified after contract award.

Calendar the “final payment” rule. Build certificate-renewal triggers, evidence-refresh windows, and bid-attachment templates into your project management system before the next THB 300M+ tender opens. For comprehensive Thai market context, our Foreign Business Act compliance guide and regional headquarters structuring guide remain essential reading for any group preparing to bid in Thailand.

Key Takeaway: Treat the 10 May 2026 effective date as a hard deadline for refreshing your Thai entity’s compliance programme. A foreign parent’s group policy is not a substitute for a localised, board-adopted Thai anticorruption framework with audited evidence and named compliance owners.

Why the Reform Matters Beyond Procurement

The 2026 announcement sits within a broader Thai compliance trajectory. The Anti-Corruption Cooperation Committee, the National Anti-Corruption Commission, and the procurement regulator are converging on a clear standard: Thailand’s largest state contracts will go to bidders that can demonstrate live, evidenced, and continuously monitored anticorruption controls. This is consistent with Thailand’s commitments under international conventions and with global trends in procurement integrity. Authorities such as the Transparency International network and the Office of the National Anti-Corruption Commission publish guidance that aligns closely with the new Thai standard, and bidders that already meet international benchmarks will find the 2026 form straightforward to complete.

For BOI-promoted entities and foreign multinationals competing for Thai state projects alongside their commercial work, the reform also signals a maturing compliance environment. Contractors who invest now in upgraded systems will not only secure THB 300M+ project eligibility — they will also build a defensible record for cross-border investigations, internal audit cycles, and group-level governance reviews. Investors evaluating their broader Thailand strategy should pair the procurement review with our 2026 BOI investment guide for a complete view of the regulatory landscape.

Frequently Asked Questions

When do the new Thailand anticorruption procurement rules take effect?
The Anti-Corruption Cooperation Committee’s Announcement re: Procurement Limits and Minimum Anticorruption Standards (No. 2) was published in the Government Gazette on 10 April 2026 and takes effect on 10 May 2026. It applies to Thai state procurement projects valued at more than THB 300 million (approximately USD 9.3 million).
Do the new rules apply to projects below THB 300 million?
The mandatory framework applies only to projects above the THB 300 million threshold. However, state agencies often adopt similar standards for smaller projects, and bidders that wish to remain eligible across the full range of Thai government work should align their programmes with the new requirements regardless of project size.
What conflicts of interest must be disclosed under the 2026 announcement?
Conflicts arising from direct or indirect business relationships, kinship ties, registered spouses, and unregistered cohabitation partners. Specific examples include holding shares in another business that bids on the same project, or submitting a proposal for a project in which a relative or unregistered partner is an “involved party.” Indirect group structures are within scope.
What is the “final payment” rule and why does it matter?
Anticorruption certifications must remain valid from the date of bid submission until the contractor receives the final payment under the contract. If a certificate is set to expire before final payment, the contractor must submit a renewed self-audit form and supporting evidence to the state agency before the original certificate lapses. Any gap in coverage is itself a breach.
What does the new self-audit form require?
Bidders must confirm a written and current anticorruption policy, designated units or persons responsible for compliance, whistleblowing systems with annual training plans, and policy reviews conducted at least every three years. Each item must be supported by primary evidence such as dated policies, training logs, and review memoranda.
Can foreign-invested joint ventures rely on the parent company’s group-level compliance policy?
A group-level policy is a starting point, but the Thai bidding entity must adopt and document its own localised compliance framework with a Thai-language version, a board-approved policy, named local compliance owners, and locally generated evidence. Group templates without Thai entity-level adoption records are unlikely to satisfy the 2026 form.

Bid With Confidence Under Thailand’s New Procurement Rules

The 2026 procurement reform raises the bar for every contractor competing on Thai state projects above THB 300 million. Lex Bangkok advises foreign investors, multinational contractors, and joint ventures on the full procurement lifecycle — from compliance programme design and self-audit documentation to bid eligibility, conflict-of-interest review, and post-award certificate management. Our team builds Thailand-specific frameworks that international clients can defend in any audit or investigation.

Schedule a Consultation