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Can I return to Thailand for Songkran in April 2026 after staying in 2025-2026?

Feb 5, 2026
3 months ago
Christopher ********
ORIGINAL POSTER
Question. I was in Thailand from November 2nd 2025 to January 27th 2026 ( tourist visa on 30 day extension ). I am interested in going back to Thailand for 2 weeks in April 2026 to celebrate Songkran ( booked round trip tickets with hotel stay ). Will this be permitted? I am hearing different things about entry. Thanks for any help.
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TLDR : Answer Summary
The post discusses the user's interest in returning to Thailand for two weeks in April 2026 after a previous stay from November 2025 to January 2026 on a tourist visa with a 30-day extension. Community responses clarify that if the user obtains another tourist visa or qualifies for visa-exempt entry, they should be permitted to enter. However, there are concerns regarding how immigration officials may scrutinize frequent entries to prevent visa abuse. The conversation highlights the importance of providing evidence of genuine tourism and travel plans.
Jackie **********
Visited 3 times last yr longest stay was 2mths no issues
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Nongnuch ********
There are no new "visa rules" or a new law.

What has changed, mandated from above, is the strict scrutinizing of your number of visa-exempt entries and the thorough check on "visa runners" (actually they meant to say "back-to-back border runners").

The new approach taken by border officials is intended to ensure that the option to do a "visa run" is not abused.

There are no new rules.

There only is a more strict approach regarding already existing rules.

Now as far as regarding extensions on visa-exempt entries, it does appear that the Immigration offices are indeed only issuing 7-day extensions if you already got one previous 30-day extension on any visa exempt entry

It is totally up to the discretion of the immigration officer you are in front of when you apply for the extension and they will tell you if you can get the 30-days extension, or if you only get the 7-days extension.

The thing is right now it's totally subjective and up to the officer you are standing in front of when you go to stamp into the country for them to decide if you're a "real tourist" or if they think you're milking the visa exempt entry program.

There's just no real concrete clear directive as far as what's what.

Some people with a 30-days extension already on a previous visa exempt entry reported getting another 30-days extension without any issue, however some have reported they only got a 7-days extension issued. So your experience might vary.

60 + 30 + 60 + 7 = a maximum of 157 days per year... and it seems this is regardless of whether you arrived by air or across a land border (some say that for a land border visa-exempt entry, you cannot get any extension at all)

Visa-exempt entries themselves are not limited, even though some believe that unlimited visa-free entries are possible by air. This is simply not true.

Visa-exempt entries are not limited to two entries per “rolling 1-year” period

This is a misconception, and some agents and lawyers spread this information to make profit from panicked people.

Many agents and Immigration Volunteers are warning you should not believe those alleged news telling you that visa-exempt entries are limited to two per calendar year. It simply is not true.

The old rule that visa-exempt entries were limited to two across land borders, got discontinued on July 15th, 2024. On the paper, visa-exempt entries by air or across land and sea were “unlimited” after this date.

However this word “unlimited” did not describe the real stance of Immigration – THEY decide when your “personal limit” is up, not any text printed on the websites of Thai embassies.

Under certain circumstances, but always at the individual discretion of the border official, multiple visa-exempt entries are possible, like four, five or even more times, if you do not milk the system.

In this case, however, the entry history in your passport and on the immigration central computer must prove that your stays were short-term holidays (like only 2-4 weeks) and the total annual stay is not exceeding 157 days (some will say not exceed 180 days, some will say 150 days – it’s unclear)

And there should be several weeks (or months) abroad between each visa-exempt stay.

Your best proof of not misusing the system is when you can show that you returned to your home country between each visa-exempt stay, or stayed abroad for a long time. And when you show an onward travel proof

ATTENTION: an “onwardticket” can be scolded upon by Immigration and you can be accused of showing a faked ticket, denied entry and being forced to buy a ticket back to your origin.

The intended aim of the new approach was to prohibit "visa runs," where you only entered briefly a neighboring country and then immediately re-entered.

You must be able to prove the planned short stay at the immigration counter—for example, with proof of onward travel or a return journey, such as a flight ticket.

It seems that a border official would consider you being a "genuine" tourist based on such short holiday trips within a year.

In this case, they expect to see on their central computer that you never extended the 60-days visa-exempt stay permit – i.e. maximized – any of these short trips.

The 7-day extension is a REAL extension. It's not the same as the stamp "application for extension denied, you have 7 days to leave the Kingdom", even if to some people it looks like a “grace period”. I have already seen the stamp of a 7-days extension, it takes up half of a passport page. The original “you have 7 days to leave” stamp is smaller, takes something like a quarter up to one-third of the page

What has become clear, is that "per year" can be defined as "per one-year period.

Some people still say they meant “calendar year” but to me this doesn’t make any sense, and we have received several confirmations that nothing “resets in a new calendar year”. The count will be for a full one-year period, period.

Those who want to be on the safe side should obtain a single-entry tourist visa in advance for stays of up to 60 days, with the option to extend for 30 more days. You can do two stints on SETV within a 1-year period, no problem.
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Steve ***********
Have you been here in April before?
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Barry **********
I was the same got pulled up they said i spend to much time in thailand next time get a propper visa dont know what to do they only give me 7 days extention not 30
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Graham ******
Did you really pay for a Tourist Visa or enter on a Visa Exempt stamp with no visa? Do you have a history of Visa Exempt entries as that is what will determine whether you will have any issues with Immigration on entry?
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Christopher ********
ORIGINAL POSTER
Graham Seal But no problems. I always leave before my time ends.
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Graham ******
If you enter Visa Exempt and take extensions too often that is can be seen as abusing the sysyem, even if you leave on time i.e. before 90 days
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Graham ******
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Christopher ********
ORIGINAL POSTER
Graham Seal I think I made a mistake. I paid for nothing. I assume it is the Visa exempt stamp
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Christopher ********
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Atrustwor*********
If your passport allows visa exempt entry then no need to even buy a tourist visa
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Atrustwor*********
No reason why you can not. You are doing what tourist do. They are getting harder on those that border bounce straight back and use extension to try live in Thailand.
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Phil *******
No problem for you if you get another tourist visa.
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Phil *******
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