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Can I return to Thailand within the same year after leaving with a tourist visa?

Mar 10, 2026
2 months ago
Dena ********
ORIGINAL POSTER
If we stay in Thailand for 90 days with appropriate tourist visa, and we leave for several months to travel to other countries, can we return to Thailand the same year or do we have to wait a certain amount of time to return and visit again? TIA.
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TLDR : Answer Summary
You can generally return to Thailand within the same year after leaving for several months, as there are no strict limits on the number of times you can enter Thailand on a tourist visa. However, immigration officials may scrutinize your entry history, especially if you have frequent entries in a short period. It's advisable to show proof of accommodation, an onward flight, and sufficient funds when re-entering. While there are guidelines, the final decision is at the discretion of the immigration officer on duty.
Kim ******
Ask Thailand
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James **********
you will get told a load of BS from clueless neverbeens or miserable old (s)expats trying telling you all sorts and trying put you off. The truth is if you are a genuine tourist on extended travels and buy a tourist visas you shouldn't have any issues, thats what 1000's of backpackers do all the time. immigration were clamping down on people doing multiple border bounces on 60 day VOAs, and basically living here illegally. you shouldn't have any issues if you are traveling legitimately.
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Isa *****
2 fois, sur une période de 12 mois de date à date, en comptabilisant pas plus de 157 jours au total avec les extensions.
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John *******
No
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Dharmesh ********
Many visa exempted countries have a rule, generally 90 days visa exemption is valid in period of I.e. 6 months. It means if you have consumed that 90 days, you can come back after 6 months to have benefit of visa exemption.
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Graham ******
Dharmesh Gandhi but there is no such written rule
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Dharmesh ********
Graham Seal Agree but if there is a such rule, it must be written somewhere which generally not focused in information.
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Dharmesh ********
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David ********
Get the METV! That’s what it’s for and if you work it correctly, timing your reentries correctly, you can get close to 9 months in Thailand out of it.
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Mike *******
No one has a clue this immigration

Come up with a different idea Every month we are all confused best go to India buy a fake Indian passport

You can come to Thailand as often as you want
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Ah ********************
It is believed apply an appropriate visa is not a problem for your stay as a tourist.
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Alexander ******
2 ENTRIES PER YEAR, 2ND TIME ONLY 7 DAY EXTENSION IS ALLOWED (67 DAYS)...
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Alan **********
Alexander Ross If you'd have SHOUTED "2 CONSECUTIVE ENTRIES PLUS EXTENSIONS FOR EACH", you'd have at least been closer. 🤣
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Graham ******
Alexander Ross without returning "home" maybe
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Graham ******
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Steven **********
there is no clarity,but i feel doing 2 x 2 months arriving may/june and nov/dec should be safe,im not going to extend to 90 days myself,just want to relax and not worry about denied entry when im doing nothing wrong and they cant or wont create clarity to the whole situation
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Ralph *******
Steven Eastwood You can do this for one year. The next year you could hit problems.
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Ralph *******
Steven Eastwood You can do this for one year. The next year you could hit problems.
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Graham ******
Ralph Tyson why, what tells you this (link please to a valid government website)?
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Graham ******
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Alan **********
One would think the answer is "Yes". But the reality is nobody here can tell you to a certainty. Nobody.
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Sammy *********
An do it twice in one year
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Santana *********
The maximum number of days that one can stay on a (paid) tourist visa is 180 days or 6 months. If one applies again for the same year, the acces wil be denied.
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Graham ******
Santana Khamsuk Rubbish unless you can provide a valid government link
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Graham ******
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Yosafe ********
2 times a year, excuse my typo
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Sylvia ********
@Jason *******
not sure you can view this but see the comments
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Jordan *********
Currently spent 1 year of the last 2 years in thailand on tourist visa. 160 days in the last 6 months. I arrived in December got the 60 days. Extended 30. Then visited Kuala lumpa for 3 days. Came back 2 days ago and got a 60 day exempt no problem. On my experience you have nothing to worry about and will be granted the 60 day exempt
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Alan **********
Jordan Hadgett You sound pretty self-satisfied, my friend.

But your story is not clear. "160 days in the previous 6 months" ? Since you arrived in December, and it hasn't been 6 months SINCE then, does that mean you were in Thailand BEFORE this past December, earlier in 2025 ?

If so, visa-exempt ? For how long ? Dates ? # of days. What ?

Because your current stay, 60+30, out for 3 days and back in (v-e) for ANOTHER 60+(ext) is still kinda sorta acceptable sans a stay prior to your December entry.

It would be your FOLLOWING v-e entry, your 3rd counting Dec and March entries, AFTER THIS 150+ days stay, that will be questioned, and your entrance likely denied - now THAT would surprise those of us here.

Of course, if Thailand reduces the 60-day v-e stay to 30, who knows WHAT will be true or not,,,,,,,,, 😂
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Fra *****
I heard different stories! It seams like you are lucky
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Jordan *********
@Fra ****
maybe lucky. But returning to UK after every visit probably helps
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Jordan *********
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Hans *********
You can stay in Thailand for 157 days per year on visa exempt, but not in a row. When you arrive first time You get 60 days that you can extend 30 days, total 90 days. after that you have to leave Thailand. If you enter Thailand again in the same year you get another 60 days that you can extend 7 days, then it's a stop.
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Ralph *******
Hans Leander Do this too frequently and they stop you.
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Hans *********
Ralph Tyson as long as you don't exceed 157 days per year it's ok.
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Hans *********
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Ruby *******
Hans Leander who told you that? Curious to know where people are getting these numbers from?
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Greg ***********
Ruby Jones he actually is right. If the total number of visa-exempt days within a one-year period has reached 157 days, you will most likely be refused another visa-exempt entry. Everything is in the computer, and they actually are counting your visa-exempt days
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Hans *********
Ruby Jones Thailand immigration.
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Graham ******
Hans Leander show the Immigration link then
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Graham ******
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Jan ********
So stupid to ask here. Ask your thai embassy instead and get the right answer.
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Driving*******
Jan Staehr did you read the name of this group? Also, the Thai embassy and immigration will give different advice.
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Jan ********
Anyway. Dont expect to get an answer here on Facebook.
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Jan ********
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Ralph ********
Jan Staehr it is hard sometimes to get answer from different Embassy,s. So its different around the world. So it is not so stupid question.
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Graham ******
Jan Staehr Thai Embassy have nothing to do with Immigration, they are different government ministries ;)
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Ralph *******
Jan Staehr The embassy don’t know your travel history so can’t advise.
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Jan ********
Ha, ha, ha - so stupid.
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Ralph *******
Jan Staehr Is that right? I have done this. Asked the embassy and they said I can get 60 day visa exemption. Arrived at BKK where immigration gave me a hard time and said I must have a visa next time. I told them about the embassy and they said “the embassy doesn’t know your travel history”. So, you are just ignorant and shouldn’t be giving advice.
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Ralph *******
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Ant ***********
People from Most countries get

60 days Visa exempt

Which

You can extend for another 30 days

If Coming back again in the same year

You will most likely to get another visa exempt for 60

Days

However beyond that its up to immigration

Make sure you have

- proof of accommodation

- proof of onward flight

- money to the value of 700usd / 20,000 baht
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Ralph *******
Ant W Tailor It’s not a calendar year but a rolling year.
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Ralph *******
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Abey ******
60 plus 30 days extension first time, 60 plus seven days second time, total 157 days within 12 months, the 7 days extension is for you to pack up and leave.
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Ruby *******
Abey Abey where have you got this information from??? Curious 🧐
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Frank *********
Ruby Jones the Bar Stool experts at the local Bar i would say 🤣🤣🤣🤣
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Ian ********
Ruby Jones Probably many sources. But it's spot on.
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Ruby *******
Ian DelMar it most certainly is NOT spot on at all. It’s utter rubbish. The ‘many sources’ you speak of? I’m guessing that includes Facebook groups? Jimmy down the pub? The ONLY source anyone should pay any attention to, is the official Thai government one. And I’d really love someone to show me where it says that on there
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Alan **********
Ruby Jones So what was your previous I.D. you posted here under ?

Were you banned and you made this new I.D., or is this just a 2nd one in addition to your previous one ?
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Alan **********
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Nivat ***************
Yes, you can return to Thailand within the same year after a long trip elsewhere, as leaving for several months essentially resets your tourist status. While there is no strict legal time limit on how long you must stay out, immigration now heavily scrutinizes frequent entries, often limiting them to twice per year without a long absence, to avoid perceived abuse of the system.
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Greg ***********
Nivat Chantarachoti You are wrong . . . There are no new "visa rules" and there is no new law and there is nothing such as a reset.

There is no “reset” when a new calendar year begins.

There is no limit of two visa-exemptions within a 1-year period, and definitely not within a calendar year. This is simply not true.

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.

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. The count is 60 + 30 + 60 + 7 = 157 days maximum within a 1-year period, regardless of whether you arrive by air or land.

This is not standardized. The decision is made upon the discretion of the individual immigration officer.

Unfortunately, there are some reports of tourist extensions on top of the 60-days being denied for those having arrived across a land border, while there have been some cases under the same circumstances where an extension was granted.

Fact is right now, it is subjective and up to the decision of the officer you are standing in front of when you wish to enter the country. They decide if you are a "real tourist" or if they think you are milking the visa exempt entry program.

There is just no clear directive as far as what's what, there are no official rules, however after a few interviews with Immigration top officers, a few basic patterns have crystallized.

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. Your experience might vary from that.

The 7-day extension is a REAL extension. It is not the same as the stamp "application for extension denied, you have 7 days to leave the Kingdom" even if for some people it looks like the “7-days grace period”.

I have already seen the stamp of a 7-days extension, it takes up half of a passport page.

Visa-exempt entries themselves are not limited, even though some believe that unlimited visa-free entries are possible by air. It is irrelevant if you enter via a land border or by air.

Visa-exempt entries are not limited to two entries per year. This is not correct.

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 year. It simply is not true.

In the past, visa-exempt entries were limited to two across a land border, this old rule was discontinued on July 15th, 2024.

On the paper, visa-exempt entries by air or across land and sea were “unlimited” after this date. LET ME EXPLAIN: this wording “unlimited” is not a fixed rule of Immigration – THEY decide when your “personal limit” is up.

On a few conditions, 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.

The entry history in your passport and your profile on Immigration’s Central Computer must prove that your stays were short-term holidays (like only 2-4 weeks).

Some Immigration officers will tell you the total number of visa-exempt days should not exceed 150 days, some will tell you the limit is 157 days. It remains unclear – because there is no official rule, there is no official limit. There are only guidelines on how to treat repeated entries.

Your best proof that you are not milking the visa-free 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 always are able to 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 new approach was to prohibit "visa runs," where you only entered a neighboring country briefly and then immediately re-entered.

You must be able to prove your short holiday at the Immigration counter—for example, with proof of onward travel or a return journey, such as a flight ticket. A border official would then rather consider you being a "genuine" tourist based on short holiday trips within a year. They expect to see on their Central Computer that you never maximized any of these visa-exempt holidays.

What is crystal-clear: "per year" means "within a one-year period”.

Some people still say it means “calendar year”, yet this does not make much sense. We have received many confirmations after January 1st, 2026, that nothing “had reset in the new calendar year”. The count is based on a rolling year.

Those who want to play safe 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.

ATTENTION: Aquiring a tourist visa after you have accumulated a few visa exempt stays, does NOT “clean the slate”. Touristic entries on a tourist visa will also be frowned upon when you start to misuse them. To use a tourist visa directly after you have maximized visa-exempt stays, does not free you from the obligations. The Immigration officer won’t be fooled.

For people who like to spend half a year in South East Asia and who like to make Thailand the hub for other travels, the 6-months multi-entry Tourist Visa is the choice
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Ian ********
If you mac out two visa exempts with very little time between the third attempt will be open to scrutiny by immigration because there sre proper visas you can apply for if you want to stay for that length of time. Always have an oneard flight thats a def prerequisit.
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Jared **********
2 entries a year is not “frequent”, i left for 2 weeks and came back with zero questions or issues an i normally spend almost 5 months in thailand with a week or two in the middle.

I would say it’s better to get a TR visa for one of the entries and a VE for the second, or METV to further mitigate any possible issues.
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Ralph *******
Jared Jernegan It’s not the number of entries but the amount of time you spend there.

You may find you are questioned on your next visit.
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Ralph *******
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Ruby *******
Nope. There are zero restrictions on how many times a year you can visit. Regardless of what you’ll see people saying 🤦🏻‍♀️🤣. You are just at the mercy of immigration on the day. They are looking for patterns of people clearly trying to live here without the correct visa. You don’t sound like you’re doing that 👌🏽
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Greg ***********
yes, you are right . . . Ruby Jones There are no new "visa rules" and there is no new law.

There is no “reset”, and most of all, there is no “reset” when a new calendar year begins.

There is no limit of two visa-exemptions within a 1-year period, and definitely not within a calendar year. This is simply not true.

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.

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 a previous 30-day extension on a visa exempt entry. The count is 60 + 30 + 60 + 7 = 157 days maximum within a 1-year period, regardless of whether you arrive by air or land.

This is not standardized. The decision is made upon the discretion of the individual immigration officer, and your experience might vary from it.

There are some reports of tourist extensions on top of the 60-days being denied for those having arrived across a land border, while there have been some cases under the same circumstances where an extension was granted.

Fact is right now, it is subjective and up to the decision of the officer you are standing in front of when you wish to enter the country. They decide if you are a "real tourist" or if they think you are milking the visa exempt entry program.

There is just no clear directive as far as what's what, there are no official rules, however after a few interviews with Immigration top officers, a few basic patterns have crystallized.

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 only got a 7-days extension issued. Again, your experience might vary from that.

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

Visa-exempt entries themselves are not limited, even though some believe that unlimited visa-free entries are possible by air. It is irrelevant since July 15, 2024, if you enter via a land border or by air.

Visa-exempt entries are not limited to two entries per year. 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 year. It simply is not true.

In the past, visa-exempt entries were limited to two across a land border, this rule was discontinued on July 15th, 2024.

On the paper, visa-exempt entries by air or across land and sea were “unlimited” after this date.

Attention: the wording “unlimited” is not a fixed rule of Immigration – THEY decide on an individual decision when your “personal limit” is up.

On a few conditions, multiple visa-exempt entries are possible - like four, five or even more times, if it is apparent that you do not milk the system.

The entry history in your passport and your profile on Immigration’s Central Computer must prove that your stays were short-term holidays (like only 2-4 weeks).

Some Immigration officers will tell you that the total number of visa-exempt days should not exceed 150 days, some will tell you the limit is 157 days. It remains unclear – because there is no official rule, there is no official limit. There are only guidelines on how to treat repeated entries.

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

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

You must be able to prove your short holiday at the Immigration counter—for example, with proof of onward travel or a return ticket. A border official would then rather consider you being a "genuine" tourist based on short holiday trips within a year. They expect that you never maximized any of these visa-exempt holidays.

What is crystal-clear: "per year" means "within a one-year period”. Some people still say it means “calendar year”, yet this does not make much sense. The count is based on a rolling year.

Those who want to play safe 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.

ATTENTION: obtaining a tourist visa after you have accumulated a few visa exempt stays, does NOT “clean the slate”.

Touristic entries on a tourist visa will also be frowned upon when you start to misuse them. To use a tourist visa directly after you have maximized visa-exempt stays, does not free you from the obligations. The Immigration officer won’t be fooled.

For people who like to spend half a year in South East Asia and who like to make Thailand the hub for other travels, the 6-months multi-entry Tourist Visa is the perfect choice
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Ruby *******
Greg Alexander all absolutely true. You are simply at the mercy of how they feel on the day 🙄👌🏽. BUT this is Thailand 👀🤣 and some things never change. I know people still happily doing back to back visa runs, with an agent. That business still flourishes. Money talks here as I’m sure you know. Can’t see that changing anytime soon
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Ruby *******
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David *******
Ruby Jones yes this is the correct answer. Thailand loves to have tourists.  if people come there multiple times and spend money, they are happy. But as you said, if someone appears to be trying to live in Thailand by making border runs, they expect you to take a necessary steps like get a different type of visa and you could be denied. It’s especially a big deal if you just left and you came back a day or two later.
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Roger ****************
Ruby Jones this. Have your return flights and follow the rules. It's no sweat.
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Fra *****
You should Not give advices as long you talking bullshit like that 😜
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Ruby *******
@Fra ****
case in point… I think you’ll find my advice is entirely accurate. Please do feel free to do your own research though 👌🏽
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Ruby *******
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Dena ********
ORIGINAL POSTER
Ruby Jones Thank you Ruby. We are testing waters and not sure where we will land. We are not trying to evade the rules.
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Ruby *******
Dena Majett of course not. I get it. I’ve done the same. There’s an awful lot of misinformation out there tho, people who think they’re experts and spout all sorts of rubbish 🤦🏻‍♀️🤣. And always remember… this is Thailand… money talks 😉. No matter how much they appear to be cracking down and moving the goal posts about. You can still buy your way in if you know the channels. It’s just how things work here 🤷🏻‍♀️
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Ruby *******
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