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What are the visa rules for entering Thailand after a 60+30 day stay?

Apr 27, 2026
4 days ago
Turquoise*********
ORIGINAL POSTER
I spent 3 months 60+30 in Thailand for 2026.

I read on internet it’s only 3 months maximum every 6 months without visa, if I make a tourist visa my entry in 2 weeks is safest ?

Thanks.
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TLDR : Answer Summary
A user wants to confirm the visa regulations after spending 3 months (60+30 days) in Thailand during 2026 and is considering applying for a tourist visa for their next entry. The conversation reveals concerns about immigration scrutiny for frequent visitors and the importance of having sufficient funds upon re-entry. Various commenters share their experiences, noting that while there is no strict limit on visa-exempt entries, immigration officers assess individual travel history. Users advised that obtaining a tourist visa ahead of time could be beneficial, especially after recent extensive stays.
Luc ************
You can go back for 60 days but the second extension will only be 7 days. That makes 60 + 30 + 60 + 7 = 157 days.
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Jeen ************
Just get a 90 days visa
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Graham ******
Jeen Ten Hoeve there are requirements for Non-O 90 day visas so they are not available to all
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Jeen ************
Graham Seal Yep your right
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Jeen ************
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Turquoise*********
ORIGINAL POSTER
Jeen Ten Hoeve you mean TR?
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Turquoise*********
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Greg ***********
There are no new visa rules and there is no new law.

There is no reset, and most of all, there is nothing such as a 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 "consecutive border runners"). The new approach taken by border officials is intended to ensure that the option to do a "visa run" is not misused.

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 touristic 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, 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-days extension is a REAL extension. It is not the same as the stamp "application to extension denied, you have seven days to leave the Kingdom". I have already seen the stamp of a 7-days extension, it takes up half of a passport page.

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.

Honest 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 15, 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 conditions, multiple visa-exempt entries are possible - like four, five or even more times, if it is apparent that you do not circumvent 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 - for example, with proof of onward travel or a return ticket. A border official would 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: Some people still say it means “calendar year”, yet this does not make much sense. The count is based on a one-yea period. A new calendar year does not reset anything.

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 stamp history slate.

Touristic entries on a tourist visa will also be frowned upon when you start to maximize them. To use a tourist visa directly after you have used 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 a base for other travels, the 6-months multi-entry Tourist Visa is the perfect choice.
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Ralph *******
Last year I spent 60 days in Thailand twice, visits were 4 months apart. This year I was told I will need a long term visa in future. You just never know.
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Turquoise*********
ORIGINAL POSTER
Ralph Tyson your case is ok because you waited 3 months between these trips that’s what I read..
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Ralph *******
TurquoiseSloth1841 No. Immigration have told me I need a long term visa on my next trip.
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Turquoise*********
ORIGINAL POSTER
Ralph Tyson wtf it’s insane you are a tourist even in your lifestyle…

A visa tourist isn’t good ?
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Turquoise*********
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Wyatt ************
Just make sure you got like 15k in the bank
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Greg ***********
Wyatt Hom-Weaver that money in your bank is no proof of cash. You must have CASH
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Farang *********
Wyatt Hom-Weaver no use. Its 20k cash in hand. No cards, bank books, paper statements or bank
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Turquoise*********
ORIGINAL POSTER
Wyatt Hom-Weaver I have a lot in my bank but I know must have 20k cash
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Turquoise*********
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Rob *************
Since June 2025 I have stayed 195 days via 4 air entries via visa exempt (30 + 30 + (60+30) + 45) I was very worried about not being allowed entry after my second entry so sought a safe entry service to guaranteed entry. Planning to return next week for my 5th entry. I need to use a safe entry service.
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John ********
As long as you understand the future consequences.
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Dave *******
Rob Kristianson So then apply for a proper visa versus taking advantage of the visa exempt program.
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Dave *******
They are not part of the existing rules. I would suggest reading the requirements under the visa exempt program. Requirements are being more closely enforced due to individuals abusing the program
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Siggi *******
Dave Allen you are not taken advantage, why you blame people if the use the existing rules. Better blame Thailand not to make clear rules. But they don't so the corruption scheme still is in place, easy money for immigration
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Siggi *******
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Turquoise*********
ORIGINAL POSTER
Rob Kristianson damm dude you are a player. You never get a lot of questions and pressure ?
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Turquoise*********
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Colin **********
There is no such rule, immigration will be looking at your travel history to assess if your trying to stay in Thailand by maximising your visa exemptions, or a genuine tourist.
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Turquoise*********
ORIGINAL POSTER
Colin Chaffers I have a tourist past, only 2019 was 100 days but after that I come twice for 10 days or less
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Colin **********
TurquoiseSloth1841 probably worth making sure you have your return ticket to your home country, copy of your accommodation, and 20kthb cash, and a good story about your tourists plans.
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Turquoise*********
ORIGINAL POSTER
Colin Chaffers you know if there any atm before immigration?
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Greg ***********
TurquoiseSloth1841 just bring the equivalent of 20,000 Thai Baht in U.S.Dollars, but it must be in cash
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Turquoise*********
ORIGINAL POSTER
Greg Alexander ok I think my last day in Vietnam I will make a western union of 800$ and then fly to Thailand
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Roy ***********
TurquoiseSloth1841 I don't believe there's an ATM before immigration, and if there is a money changing booth before immigration it would not give good rates. However , the 20K Thai baht cash requirement can be an equivalent in a foreign currency, likely U.S. dollars would be the best choice - which you can change for a more standard better rate away from the airport
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Carsten ************
TurquoiseSloth1841 No ATM airside
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Turquoise*********
ORIGINAL POSTER
Colin Chaffers ok thanks mate
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Turquoise*********
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John **********
That's not correct. The critical thing for you is whether you spent time in Thailand in 2025 or not and if so how much?
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Turquoise*********
ORIGINAL POSTER
@John *********
0 days in 2025
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John **********
TurquoiseSloth1841 then you should be fine for the initial 60 days but may not get a 30 day extension, some immigration offices will only give 7 days in your situation. Then you're probably done for a year or so without a proper visa
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Siggi *******
@John *********
of course you get extension, you get 7 days only if you apply for a second extention
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Turquoise*********
ORIGINAL POSTER
Siggi Tirak m’y question is not about extension because I wanna back to home country within 60 days is about if I can come again after 60+30 to get 60 and then leave
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John **********
@Siggi ******
he's already had one extension
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John **********
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Dave *******
No one here can tell yiu for sure . Any decision will be made by the Immigration Officer who will review your travel history and itinerary for Thailand.

If you are concerned,then review the Thai Embassy website and apply for the appropriate visa.
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Turquoise*********
ORIGINAL POSTER
Dave Allen ok then I am cooked in the both choices ? No need to apply for the visa ?
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Turquoise*********
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