Nomad visa guide

Thailand nomad visa

Everything we know about the Destination Thailand Visa (DTV) — duration, income threshold, family inclusion, tax implications, and how it actually fits into a long-term nomad rotation.

Thailand operates one of the more notable remote-work visa programs available to digital nomads in 2026. The Destination Thailand Visa (DTV) is designed for non-citizens whose income comes from outside the country — typically employees of foreign companies, freelancers serving foreign clients, or self-employed founders running a business registered abroad.

Headline terms

  • Duration: 5-year multiple-entry visa, 180 days per stay
  • Income requirement: THB 500,000 (~$14,000) in savings
  • Tax treatment: Thai tax residency only if you stay 180+ days in a calendar year
  • Family inclusion: Yes

Why this program matters

Five-year multi-entry stamp is one of the most flexible long-term nomad options in Asia. For nomads weighing where to base for the next twelve months, the combination of length, family inclusion, and tax positioning makes Thailand one of the more serious options in its part of the world.

The realistic catch

Per-stay limit means you cycle in and out; not a continuous residence. Read this together with the official rules — application processes, paperwork translations, and consular interview availability vary widely from the headline terms.

Documents you should expect to provide

Specific document lists differ by consulate but the standard package for nomad visa applications typically includes: a valid passport with at least 12 months remaining, proof of remote employment or self-employment (contracts, business registration, or pay stubs), bank statements covering the previous 6 months meeting the income threshold, qualifying private health insurance for the full duration of the visa, criminal background check from your country of citizenship, and proof of accommodation in Thailand for the start of your stay. Many countries also require an apostille or legalisation step on civil documents — factor that timeline into your application planning.

How it fits into a nomad rotation

Approach the Destination Thailand Visa (DTV) as one piece of a multi-country year rather than a permanent move. The duration gives you genuine room to build a routine, sign a yearly lease without anxiety, and join the local community in a way short-stay tourist visas don't allow. If Thailand turns out to be the right long-term base, the renewal path often runs through standard residence routes once you have a year of presence on file.

Tax: read this section twice

Thai tax residency only if you stay 180+ days in a calendar year The single most expensive mistake nomads make is treating "the visa says I'm tax-exempt" as a complete answer. Your tax obligations also depend on your country of citizenship, your previous tax residency, where you spend more than 183 days, and whether your previous home country has a tie-breaker rule under a double-tax treaty. Hire a cross-border tax professional for the year you take up a new long-stay visa — the cost is small relative to the cost of getting it wrong.

Where to base in Thailand

The visa lets you live anywhere in the country, but the cities below are where Nomad Desk has full guides — they tend to be the destinations with the strongest combination of cafes, coworking, and a real long-stay rental market.

See all Thailand city guides →

How to apply

  1. Verify the current rules on the official immigration site: https://www.thaiembassy.com/
  2. Identify the consulate or visa application center responsible for your country of residence.
  3. Gather the document package — bank statements, employment proof, insurance, background check, and any apostille requirements.
  4. Book the appointment as early as possible; consular processing windows have been the most common bottleneck for new nomad visa programs.
  5. Plan a 60–90 day buffer between application and intended arrival.

Note: Nomad Desk is editorial — we do not process visa applications. The information above reflects publicly-available program details as of our last research pass; verify everything on the official site before submitting paperwork.