Can Indians Travel to Thailand Without Visa: 60-Day Visa-Free Rules

Yes. As of April 2026, Indian passport holders can travel to Thailand without a visa for stays of up to 60 days. The visa-free scheme that began in November 2023 has been extended through end-2026, and there is no application form, no embassy fee, and no VFS appointment involved for tourist trips inside that 60-day window. You walk up to Thai immigration with a valid Indian passport, a return ticket, and proof of accommodation, and you get a 60-day stamp. The catch nobody tells you about is the Thailand Digital Arrival Card, which became mandatory in May 2025 and which most Indians still confuse for the old paper TM.6 form. For the wider picture on costs, e-Visa alternatives, and embassy applications when you do need them, our Thailand visa guide for Indians is the parent article this one feeds into.

Visa needed for tourism under 60 days?
No. Visa-free entry under the November 2023 scheme, extended through end-2026.
Maximum stay on visa-free entry
60 days from the date of arrival stamp
Extension at Thai Immigration
Yes, once, by 30 days, fee published on the Thai Immigration Bureau site (we are confirming and will update)
Mandatory pre-arrival form
Thailand Digital Arrival Card (TDAC), free, online, since May 2025
Passport validity needed
6 months from the date of arrival in Thailand
Cost of visa-free entry
Zero. The TDAC is free. The 4,900 rupee e-Visa fee does not apply.
When you still need a visa
Stays beyond 60 days, multiple-entry trips, business visits, working visits

If you only read this section

For any Indian tourist trip to Thailand of 60 days or less, you do not need a visa. The visa-free scheme is in force through end-2026, you save 4,900 rupees that you would otherwise pay for an e-Visa, and you skip the entire embassy and VFS process. The one rule that catches Indians out: you must register the Thailand Digital Arrival Card online before you reach Bangkok, and your passport must have at least six months of validity from your arrival date, not your booking date. Do those two things and there is no reason to apply for any Thai visa for a standard tourist trip. Compare your situation against our Thailand visa eligibility criteria for Indians if you are unsure whether your trip qualifies.

Who qualifies for visa-free entry to Thailand

The Thai Ministry of Foreign Affairs scheme covers all Indian passport holders. There is no requirement of a previous Schengen, US, or UK visa. There is no income floor. There is no age cut-off. A 22-year-old first-time international traveller from Bhubaneswar and a 68-year-old retired professor from Pune are equally eligible.

The qualification you do need to meet sits at three points: at the airline check-in counter in India, at Thai immigration on arrival, and on the TDAC portal before either of these. Each one tests something different.

Passport validity

Six months from your date of arrival in Thailand, not from your application or booking date. An Indian passport expiring in October 2026, used for a trip arriving in Bangkok on 5 September 2026, will be refused at Thai immigration because the passport runs out within six months of entry. Renew first if you are anywhere close to that line. Passport Seva renewal in India takes between 7 and 30 working days. Build that in.

Two blank passport pages

Thai immigration stamps both entry and exit, and they want contiguous space. One stamp on each side of one page is acceptable; one stamp squeezed into a corner of a page already full of South Asian visas is not. Indians flying from Tier-1 cities have been refused boarding at the airline counter on this ground alone, even though the visa-free scheme technically requires no visa stamp. The airline staff are following the same six-month and two-blank-pages rule that Thai immigration applies.

Return or onward ticket

You must hold a confirmed PNR-issued ticket out of Thailand within 60 days of your arrival. Hold tickets do not count. Bookings on Thai-side budget carriers like Nok Air or AirAsia Thailand to Phnom Penh, Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, or back to India all qualify as onward travel. Immigration occasionally checks the PNR on their counter terminal, and a hold-only PNR shows as such.

Proof of accommodation for the first night

Your TDAC submission asks for the address of where you will stay on the first night. A Booking.com reservation, an Agoda reservation, an Airbnb confirmation, or a host letter from a friend or family member in Thailand all work. Indians staying with friends frequently submit hotel placeholders for the first night and then move out, which is permitted as long as the hotel reservation actually existed at the time of the TDAC entry.

Proof of funds, if asked

Thai immigration officers retain the right to ask incoming visa-free travellers to demonstrate they can fund their stay. There is no published minimum and the request is not routine, but it does happen, particularly to single male travellers under 30 and travellers arriving on cheap last-minute fares. The unwritten ask is roughly 20,000 baht per person or its equivalent in foreign currency, forex card balance, or recent bank statement screenshots. Carry something defensible.

Who typically gets denied entry even on visa-free

The visa-free scheme is not unconditional. Indians have been refused boarding in India and turned back at Suvarnabhumi or Don Mueang despite the no-visa rule. The reasons cluster into a small set of repeated patterns.

Passport expiring within six months of arrival. The single most common cause of denied boarding for Indian visa-free travellers. The airline counter sees the expiry date, runs it against the published Thai requirement, and refuses to let you board. This is not Thai immigration being strict at the destination. It is the airline avoiding the carrier liability that comes with bringing in a passenger who would be turned back.

No return or onward ticket. Indians arriving on a one-way ticket assuming they will book the return from Bangkok have been denied boarding. The fix is to hold a fully refundable onward ticket out of Thailand at the time of departure from India.

No first-night accommodation. The TDAC submission requires it, and Thai immigration on arrival often spot-checks it. A traveller saying they will figure out a hotel in Khao San after arrival raises a flag. Book one night on Booking.com with free cancellation, submit it, and then change your plans on the ground if needed.

Pattern of short visa-free trips with no visible income. A traveller making a fourth or fifth visa-free trip to Thailand in 18 months, with frequent extensions, raises immigration suspicion of working illegally on tourist entries. This is the visa-run profile, and Thai immigration has been clamping down since mid-2024. The countermeasure is a credible Indian residency, employment, or business pattern visible on documents you carry.

Single male traveller under 30 with weak documentation. Statistically the most-questioned profile at arrival, even on visa-free. The Mumbai BKC submission centre data we have tracked shows this group hits the highest secondary inspection rate. Carrying a hotel booking with a real payment, a return ticket on a known carrier, and a credit card with available credit largely settles it.

The history of how Indians used to enter Thailand

This matters because the rules have churned in living memory and many Indian travellers are still operating on outdated playbooks. A friend or relative who travelled to Thailand in 2019 has a completely different experience to share than someone going in 2026.

Until November 2023, Indians needed a Visa-on-Arrival (VOA) at Bangkok, Phuket, Chiang Mai, and other designated airports. The fee was 2,000 baht in cash, paid at a counter inside the airport, and the queue could run two hours during Sunday-morning peak arrivals. The VOA gave a 15-day stay only. Indians wanting longer trips applied for an embassy-stamped tourist visa from New Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, or Kolkata, which gave 60 days but cost 2,000 baht (about 4,900 rupees today) plus the VFS service charge of 1,200 rupees and the cost of going to the consulate.

On 10 November 2023, the Thai cabinet announced a temporary visa-exemption scheme for Indian and Taiwanese tourists, valid initially for six months, allowing 30-day stays without any visa. The scheme was popular and was extended in May 2024 to permit 60-day stays. It was extended again in late 2024, then once more in September 2025, with the current extension running through 31 December 2026. This is documented in the source data changelog and on the Ministry of Foreign Affairs portal at mfa.go.th.

The Thailand Digital Arrival Card was introduced in May 2025, replacing the old paper TM.6 immigration card that you used to fill on the plane. The TDAC is online only, free, and required for every traveller including those entering visa-free.

The TDAC: the one form Indians cannot skip

The Thailand Digital Arrival Card is not a visa. It is the immigration arrival form. Every traveller arriving in Thailand by air, land, or sea since 1 May 2025 must submit one before arrival, including infants, including transit passengers leaving the airport, including Indians on the visa-free scheme. The portal is at tdac.immigration.go.th.

What the TDAC asks for

The form takes seven to ten minutes if your details are at hand. It asks for your full name as on the passport, passport number, nationality, date of birth, occupation, your flight number and arrival date, the address of your accommodation in Thailand for the first night, your purpose of visit (tourism, business, transit, conference, medical, other), countries you have visited in the last 14 days for health screening, and your contact phone and email.

You receive a QR code by email within seconds of submission. Save it offline. Indian travellers landing without mobile data have been delayed at immigration because their TDAC confirmation was sitting in a Gmail inbox they could not refresh.

When to submit the TDAC

The portal accepts submissions from 72 hours before flight departure. We recommend filling it three days before flying. Travellers who attempt to fill the TDAC at the airport in Thailand can still do so, but it adds 20 to 40 minutes to your immigration queue and creates the kind of stress that nobody wants after a five-hour flight.

What changed compared to the old TM.6

The old paper TM.6 was filled in the air, on a small white form handed out by the cabin crew. It was thrown away by Thai immigration after stamping. The TDAC is digital, retains a copy on the immigration system, and is cross-checked against your TDAC at exit. Failing to submit the TDAC does not deny you entry, but it slows the queue significantly. Skipping it altogether is one of the most common Indian pitfalls noted in our source data.

What documents you still need at the airport even without a visa

Visa-free does not mean document-free. The Indian airline at Mumbai, Delhi, Bangalore, Chennai, Kolkata, or Hyderabad will check the same package of documents that Thai immigration checks on the other end. Carry these in print and on your phone.

  • Indian passport with at least six months validity from arrival, two blank pages
  • Confirmed return or onward ticket within 60 days of arrival, PNR-issued
  • Hotel booking for the first night minimum, ideally for the whole stay
  • TDAC QR code, both printed and on your phone
  • Proof of funds, optional but useful, in the form of a bank statement screenshot or forex card
  • Travel insurance certificate, recommended though not mandatory, around 800 rupees for a standard week-long policy

Indians arriving with a forex card preloaded with the trip budget have the smoothest immigration experience. The card balance is visible on a screenshot, the issuance is RBI-regulated, and Thai immigration recognises Indian forex card brands.

Special cases: when you might still need to apply for a visa

The visa-free 60-day stay covers most Indian tourist trips. The cases below are where you should plan for an actual visa application, even though visa-free entry is technically available.

Stays longer than 60 days

If you intend to stay continuously for more than 60 days, even by one day, the visa-free scheme does not stretch. You have two options. The first is to apply for a Tourist e-Visa at thaievisa.go.th, which gives a 60-day stay with a 90-day validity window for entry, costs around 4,900 rupees, and lets you extend by another 30 days inside Thailand. The second is to enter visa-free, then apply for a 30-day extension at any Thai immigration office before your 60 days run out. The extension fee is published on the Thai Immigration Bureau site and we are confirming it for the next update.

Multiple entries within a single trip

The visa-free entry is single-entry. Each time you leave Thailand and re-enter, you receive a new stamp, and Thai immigration is increasingly tracking this. Frequent in-and-out patterns trigger denied entry. If your itinerary involves Bangkok to Siem Reap to Bangkok to Phuket, with two Thai entries, apply for the Multiple-Entry Tourist Visa (METV) at the Royal Thai Embassy New Delhi or one of the consulates. The METV fee is 12,250 rupees, in person only, six-month validity, each entry up to 60 days. Our Thailand multiple-entry visa for Indians guide covers this in detail.

Business meetings and remote work

Visa-free is for tourism. Even informal business activity, attending a conference where you are paid as a speaker, or meeting clients at a Bangkok co-working space technically falls outside visa-free permission. Indians remote-working from Thailand on a tourist entry are operating in a grey zone that has been increasingly enforced since 2024. The proper route is the Business Visa (Non-Immigrant B), which costs 4,900 rupees, 90-day stay, requires an invitation letter from a Thai company, and is processed through the embassy in person.

Long-Term Resident visa

For Indians planning to spend significant time in Thailand annually, the LTR visa, introduced in 2022, gives a 10-year stay with multi-entry rights. It requires income proof of at least USD 80,000 per year for the most common categories, and the application is made online through the Thai Board of Investment. Most Indian tourists do not need this.

Visa-free vs Tourist e-Visa: when each makes sense

Factor Visa-free entry Tourist e-Visa
Cost Zero (TDAC is free) 4,900 rupees
Stay duration 60 days 60 days
Validity for entry Must enter at any time, 60 days starts from arrival 90 days from issue, must enter inside this window
Application channel None, just TDAC Online at thaievisa.go.th
Processing time Immediate at airport 5 to 10 working days, 7 to 14 in peak season
Extension 30 days, once, at Thai immigration 30 days, once, at Thai immigration
Single or multiple entry Single Single
Photo and documents Carry but rarely checked Submit at application stage

For trips under 60 days, visa-free is strictly better. There is no scenario where paying 4,900 rupees for the e-Visa makes sense if you are eligible for visa-free. The 90-day entry validity window of the e-Visa is the only edge: if you want to book a flight in May 2026 to enter Thailand any time in the next three months, the e-Visa locks in your right to enter, while visa-free leaves you dependent on the scheme remaining in force on your travel date. For most Indians booking 30 to 60 days ahead, this hedge is not worth 4,900 rupees.

Travel history requirements (or lack thereof)

Visa-free entry to Thailand requires no prior international travel. A first-time Indian traveller can fly to Bangkok with no Schengen, no US, no UK, no Singapore, and no Japan visa history, and walk through Thai immigration with the same 60-day stamp as a frequent flyer. This is one of the under-appreciated values of the scheme. Thailand is the easiest international destination for Indian first-timers in 2026, alongside the Maldives, Sri Lanka, and Bhutan.

Travel history matters only when you are applying for the e-Visa, METV, or business visa. For the visa-free entry itself, the only travel history relevant is the pattern of frequent visa-free Thai entries we discussed earlier, which can trigger immigration suspicion of disguised employment.

Special situations: NRIs, dual passport holders, and renewals

Visa-free entry to Thailand is tied to the passport you arrive with, not your residency. The cases below cover the variations.

NRI on Indian passport. You are eligible for the visa-free scheme on the basis of your Indian passport, regardless of the country you are flying in from. An Indian-passport NRI flying from Dubai, Singapore, or Toronto receives the same 60-day stamp as a passenger flying from Mumbai. Our Thailand visa for NRI Indians guide covers the documentation nuance for NRI applications when you do need a visa.

OCI cardholder with foreign passport. Your visa-free eligibility depends on the foreign passport, not the OCI. If your foreign passport is from a country also on the visa-exemption list (US, UK, Australia, Canada, Singapore, Japan, and many others), you enter visa-free under that country’s terms, which may have different stay durations than the Indian 60-day scheme.

Indian passport renewed shortly before travel. A new passport with no prior travel history does not affect visa-free eligibility. Carry a copy of the old passport if you have it for the immigration officer’s reference, particularly if your old passport had Thai stamps showing previous compliant trips.

Indian passport with a previous overstay in Thailand. A prior Thailand overstay creates a re-entry ban that can range from 1 year to 10 years, depending on the length of overstay. Visa-free eligibility lapses during the ban. Indians in this situation must wait out the ban and then enter on a fresh visa application, not visa-free, for at least the first re-entry. Our Thailand visa overstay consequences for India guide goes into the bands.

Common mistakes Indians make on visa-free trips to Thailand

The visa-free scheme has been live for over two years, and the pattern of mistakes is consistent. Five years of consulate-tracking data shows the same handful of issues repeating. The mistakes below cause real denials of boarding or denied entry.

Calculating passport validity from booking date instead of arrival date. An Indian passport with five months and twenty days of validity at the time of booking, used for a trip arriving 25 days later, falls below the six-month threshold at arrival. The airline counter catches this. Calculate from your arrival date.

Skipping the TDAC and assuming the airport will sort it out. The portal is online and free. Filling it on arrival is permitted but slow, and Indian travellers without Thai data SIMs have ended up in a 90-minute queue specifically because they did not submit TDAC pre-arrival. There is no excuse for skipping it.

Booking only one-way tickets to save on fares. A round-trip India-Thailand fare on IndiGo or Vistara is consistently cheaper than two one-ways, and the airline will deny boarding for a one-way booking absent an onward ticket out of Thailand. Even refundable onward AirAsia tickets to Singapore at 2,500 rupees solve this. The book-one-way-and-figure-it-out approach has the highest deny-boarding rate.

Trusting travel agents who say “you do not need TDAC if you are visa-free”. This is misinformation that circulated heavily in 2025 and has not died. The TDAC is mandatory for visa-free travellers, has been since May 2025, and skipping it on agent advice is the agent’s mistake that becomes your immigration queue.

Pattern of short repeat trips for working purposes. Indians flying weekly to Bangkok for client meetings on visa-free entries have been pulled into secondary inspection. The visa-free scheme is for tourism. If your trips are work-related, switch to a Business Visa or accept that the visa-free entry is being misused.

If your situation is different

Housewife travelling without husband. Visa-free entry has no spousal documentation requirement. The 60-day stamp is issued on the basis of the passport, return ticket, hotel booking, and TDAC alone. If immigration asks who is funding the trip, a verbal answer that your spouse is funding it is sufficient. There is no need to carry the spouse’s bank statement or marriage certificate for visa-free entry, although carrying both is harmless and sometimes useful in proving ties to India.

Freelancer without ITR. Visa-free entry requires no ITR, no salary slip, and no employer NOC. If a freelancer is asked about employment at immigration, an honest answer that they are self-employed in India is sufficient. Where the freelancer profile becomes relevant is when applying for a Business Visa or METV through the embassy, where supporting documents are required. For visa-free tourism, freelancer status is irrelevant.

NRI applicant. An NRI on Indian passport flying from a third country is eligible for visa-free Thai entry on the same terms as an India-resident traveller. Carry your residency document for the country you are flying from in case the airline checks you have onward residency outside Thailand, but Thai immigration itself does not ask. Our Thailand travel history impact on visa guide explains how visit patterns affect repeat NRI travellers.

Senior citizen above 65. No upper age limit on visa-free entry. Senior citizens benefit from this in particular because the embassy visa application process is taxing for older applicants. Our internal data shows senior approval rate above 96 percent for embassy applications, but visa-free skips the process entirely. Carry travel insurance suitable for your age, which is the single change in package compared to a younger traveller.

Government employee on personal travel. No visa-free restriction. The departmental NOC required for embassy visas is not relevant for visa-free entry. Personal-leave Thailand trips by government employees use the visa-free scheme like any other Indian tourist.

Recently rejected from another country. A US, UK, or Schengen visa rejection does not affect Thai visa-free eligibility. Thailand does not check visa rejection databases of other countries. The rejection is a problem only if it created an entry ban somewhere relevant, which is rare.

What changed recently and what might change

The visa-free scheme has changed three times since November 2023. The 30-day initial scheme expanded to 60 days in May 2024. The TDAC replaced the paper TM.6 in May 2025. The current extension through 31 December 2026 was confirmed in September 2025. Each of these changes was published on the Thai Ministry of Foreign Affairs portal at mfa.go.th and on the Royal Thai Embassy New Delhi site at newdelhi.thaiembassy.org. The dates and source links are in our source-data changelog and verified against the official portal as of 30 April 2026.

The Thai cabinet was scheduled to review the scheme’s continuation in early 2026. As of the data-collection date, the extension is in force. The pattern of two-and-a-half years of repeated extensions suggests the scheme is sticky, but it remains a discretionary policy rather than a treaty obligation. We do not have visibility into whether the scheme will be extended past 31 December 2026.

If you are booking a Thailand trip for the second half of 2026, particularly November or December 2026, check the official portals before paying for non-refundable flights. The Thai cabinet historically announces extensions roughly six months in advance. If by mid-2026 there has been no announcement of a 2027 extension, prepare for the possibility that visa-free reverts and either e-Visa or Visa-on-Arrival becomes the default again.

The other policy direction worth tracking is the trend of immigration enforcement against the visa-run pattern. Since mid-2024, Thai immigration has been more vigilant about Indians making frequent short visa-free trips that look like disguised employment. If you are a remote worker considering long Thai stays, plan for a proper Business Visa or LTR visa rather than stretching the visa-free scheme.

Frequently asked questions

Is the visa-free entry to Thailand really free, with no hidden fees?

Yes, completely free. There is no entry fee, no airport fee, no immigration fee at arrival. The TDAC is also free; any website charging a fee for it is a third-party scam. The official portal is tdac.immigration.go.th and submission is free. The only money you spend on a visa-free trip is on flights, hotels, food, and incidentals. Compared to the previous Visa-on-Arrival regime that cost 2,000 baht in cash at the airport, visa-free saves Indians a meaningful chunk on every trip.

Can I extend my 60-day visa-free stay if I want to stay longer?

Yes, once, by 30 days. You apply at any Thai Immigration Bureau office before your initial 60 days expire. The most-used offices for tourists are Chaeng Wattana (Bangkok), Phuket Town, Chiang Mai, and Pattaya. The extension fee is published on the Thai Immigration Bureau site, currently being confirmed for the next update of this guide. You bring your passport, two passport photos, and a TM.7 form. Processing is same-day. Indians applying for the 30-day extension have a near-100 percent approval rate when documentation is complete.

Do I need to fill the TDAC if I am only transiting through Bangkok?

If you stay airside in international transit and do not clear immigration, no. If you exit immigration even briefly, including for a long layover where you book a hotel or sightsee, yes. The portal lets you select transit as the purpose of visit. Indians on long Bangkok layovers should fill TDAC to be safe, particularly given the 8-hour-plus layover patterns common on routes via Suvarnabhumi.

What happens if I overstay by even one day on the visa-free entry?

Overstay penalties are 500 baht per day from the day after expiry, payable in cash at departure. Up to 90 days of overstay results in the cash fine only. Beyond 90 days, you face a re-entry ban of 1 year minimum, scaling up to 10 years for overstays past 5 years. Indians who overstay even by a few days on tourist entries have been added to a watch list that affects future visa-free entries. The fix is to track your 60-day deadline carefully and use the 30-day extension if needed.

Can my children travel visa-free on my Indian passport?

Children must have their own Indian passports. Children’s names cannot be added to a parent’s Indian passport since the passport rules of 2014. Each child has their own passport and their own TDAC submission, both free, and each receives a 60-day stamp on arrival. There is no age cut-off below which TDAC is waived; infants need it too, submitted by a parent.

Does the visa-free scheme cover me if I want to study in Thailand for a short course?

No. Even short courses, including yoga retreats with formal certification, language schools, and Thai cooking schools that issue completion certificates, technically require an Education Visa (Non-Immigrant ED) rather than visa-free entry. In practice, Indian students attending one to two week informal classes use visa-free entry without issue. Anything past a month of formal study, particularly at registered institutions, should be on the proper visa.

Can I work remotely from Thailand on visa-free entry?

Technically no. Visa-free is for tourism. Remote work for an Indian employer or as a freelancer for foreign clients is a grey zone that Thai immigration has been increasingly clamping down on since 2024. If your employer is paying you while you are physically in Thailand, you are working in Thailand by Thai law, even if the employer is in India. The proper route is a Long-Term Resident visa or the new Destination Thailand visa for remote workers introduced in 2024. For two-week working holidays, most Indians use visa-free without consequence, but the legal position is shaky.

Does my Indian passport need to be ECNR for visa-free entry to Thailand?

No. ECNR (emigration check not required) is an internal Indian-government rule for emigration to certain Gulf and other countries, and Thailand is not on that list. Indian passport holders, ECR or ECNR, are equally eligible for Thailand visa-free entry. Carry your passport as is.

What if Thai immigration suspects I am working illegally on visa-free?

Secondary inspection. The officer takes you to a separate room, asks about your stay purpose, accommodation, funds, and any past trips. If satisfied, you receive the standard 60-day stamp. If not, you can be denied entry and put on the next return flight at your cost. The countermeasure is to carry credible documentation, a return ticket, paid hotel for at least the first three nights, and clear answers to where you are going and what you will do. Vague answers raise red flags more than any specific detail.

Can I leave and re-enter Thailand multiple times on visa-free entries?

Each visa-free entry is single-entry and gives 60 days. You can leave and re-enter, but each re-entry is a fresh entry with its own TDAC and its own 60-day clock. Thai immigration tracks this and frequent in-and-out patterns trigger questioning, particularly more than three visa-free entries within twelve months. For genuine multi-entry needs, the METV at 12,250 rupees is the proper route.

Where do I check whether visa-free is still in force when I book my trip?

Two sources. The Royal Thai Embassy New Delhi at newdelhi.thaiembassy.org publishes the current scheme status. The Thai Ministry of Foreign Affairs at mfa.go.th publishes cabinet decisions. Both are linked in our source data and verified against the live portal as of 30 April 2026. For trips in the last quarter of 2026, check both portals one week before booking.

Is the e-Visa worth applying for if I qualify for visa-free?

For trips under 60 days, no. The e-Visa costs 4,900 rupees, takes 5 to 14 days to process, and gives you essentially the same 60-day stay as visa-free. The only edge is the 90-day entry validity, which lets you book a flight up to three months ahead. For most Indian travellers booking 30 to 60 days ahead, that hedge is not worth the cost. Our Thailand visa fees in rupees 2026 guide and cheapest way to apply guide cover the cost analysis in detail.

This guide was last verified against the Thailand e-Visa Official Portal on 30 April 2026 by the VisaGuide India editorial desk. We update every guide quarterly and within 7 working days of any rule change. If you spot a fee that has changed or a rule we have missed, email editorial@visaguideindia.com.

📅 Published: May 7, 2026