In Thailand, you are considered a tax resident if you stay for 180 days or more within a single calendar year (January 1 – December 31). This threshold triggers an obligation to report your Thai-source income to the Revenue Department of Thailand.
The 180-Day Rule: What Does It Mean?
The Revenue Code of Thailand (Section 41) establishes a straightforward rule: any individual present in Thailand for at least 180 days in a calendar year is classified as a tax resident for that year. These 180 days do not need to be consecutive — they are cumulative.
💡 Good to Know
Thailand uses the calendar year (January–December) rather than a rolling 12-month period. A stay of 90 days at the end of year N and 90 days at the beginning of year N+1 does not trigger tax residency in either year.
How to Count Your Days of Presence?
The calculation is made by counting each calendar day spent in Thailand, based on the following principles:
- Arrival and departure days: in practice, each counts as a full day (confirmed by Thai administrative jurisprudence).
- Airport transits: if you do not pass through immigration control, the day does not count.
- Visa runs and short exits: each day outside Thailand interrupts the count but does not reset the tally for days already accumulated.
- Reference source: your passport stamps and records from Thai immigration (TM6 / TM30) serve as official proof.
Concrete Calculation Example
Youssef arrives on February 15 and departs on June 30 (135 days). He returns on September 1 and leaves on October 31 (61 days). Total: 196 days — he is a Thai tax resident for this calendar year. Conversely, Sophie takes a 3-week trip in July, bringing her total to 155 days: she remains non-resident.
What Tax Obligations Arise from Residency in Thailand?
Since the tax reform of January 2024, the rules have changed significantly:
- Thai-source income: still taxable for both residents and non-residents.
- Foreign income repatriated to Thailand: as of January 1, 2024, any foreign income transferred to Thailand by a tax resident is taxable, regardless of the year it was earned.
- Progressive tax rates: ranging from 5% to 35% based on net income brackets.
- Annual declaration: to be submitted by March 31 of the following year (or mid-April for online submissions).
⚠️ Attention
Even if you are a tax resident in Thailand, your home country may continue to tax you according to its own rules. Check if a double taxation agreement exists between your country and Thailand — over 60 countries have signed one, including France, Belgium, Switzerland, Canada, and Morocco.
How to Prove or Contest Your Tax Residency Status?
The Revenue Department can issue a Tax Residency Certificate upon request, useful for invoking a tax treaty with your home administration (DGFiP, SPF Finances, AFC, Canada Revenue Agency, DGI, etc.). To obtain this certificate, you will generally need to provide:
- A copy of your passport with entry/exit stamps
- Proof of residence in Thailand (lease, TM30)
- Your Thai taxpayer number (Tax ID)
✅ Practical Tip
Keep a log of your entries and exits from your first day in Thailand. A simple spreadsheet with dates and scanned stamps is sufficient to anticipate crossing the 180-day threshold before it’s too late to plan.
For a comprehensive view of Thai taxation, check out our detailed guide: Taxation in Thailand for Expatriates (2026).
⚠️ Disclaimer
This article is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or tax advice. Laws and regulations vary by country and change regularly. Consult a qualified professional for your specific situation.
Need on-the-ground assistance?
A lawyer or local expert available in under 5 minutes, 24/7, in 197 countries.