Thailand Visa for Japanese Citizens
Japan passport holders · Updated 2026-07-05
No — Japanese citizens do not need a visa for short trips to Thailand. You currently get 60 days visa-free on arrival, extendable once by 30 days at a local immigration office (1,900 THB). A change approved by the Thai cabinet on 19 May 2026 will cut this to 30 days once it is published in the Royal Gazette — it has not taken effect yet. For stays beyond that, you need an actual visa — the options below.
Multiple daily nonstops link Tokyo and Osaka with Bangkok, supporting both heavy tourism and one of Asia’s largest corporate expat populations, from Sukhumvit’s Japanese enclaves to the manufacturing belt around Sriracha. Japanese passports currently receive 60 days visa-free. The cabinet approved a 30-day limit on 19 May 2026, taking effect 15 days after Royal Gazette publication, which remains outstanding, so 60 days applies for now.
Entry rules for Japanese citizens at a glance
| Entry rule | Visa-free entry |
|---|---|
| Visa-free stay | 60 days |
| Extension | +30 days at immigration (1,900 THB) |
| Max without a visa | 90 days |
| Approved change | 30 days visa-free (pending Royal Gazette publication) |
| Passport validity | 6+ months on arrival |
| Arrival card | TDAC (Thailand Digital Arrival Card) — required for all arrivals since Feb 2026 |
| Last verified | 2026-07-05 |
Thailand visa options for Japanese citizens
| Visa | Best for | Stay | Key requirement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tourist Visa (SETV / METV) | Trips of 2-9 months | 60 days per entry (+30 ext.) | Funds: 20,000 THB (SETV) / 200,000 THB bank (METV) |
| Destination Thailand Visa (DTV) | Remote workers & digital nomads | 180 days per entry, 5-year visa | 500,000 THB funds + remote income proof |
| Retirement Visa | Age 50+ settling in Thailand | Up to 1 year, renewable | 800,000 THB bank or 65,000 THB/month income |
| Marriage Visa (Non-O) | Spouses of Thai nationals | 90 days → 1-year extensions | 400,000 THB bank or 40,000 THB/month income |
| Education Visa (ED) | Students & language learners | 90 days + extensions while enrolled | Enrollment at an approved Thai school |
| Non-Immigrant B (Work) | Employees of Thai companies | 90 days → 1-year extensions | Thai job offer + work permit |
| Long-Term Resident (LTR) | High earners, wealthy pensioners | 10 years, annual reporting only | USD 80,000/yr income (category-dependent) |
| Thailand Privilege (Elite) | Convenience seekers with budget | 1 year per entry, 5-20 year membership | 650,000-5,000,000 THB membership fee |
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Frequently asked questions
Do Japanese citizens need a visa to visit Thailand?
Not for short visits. Japanese citizens get 60 days visa-free on arrival (dropping to 30 days once the approved May 2026 change takes effect). A visa is only needed for longer stays or purposes like work, retirement or study.
How long can Japanese citizens stay in Thailand without leaving?
60 days visa-free plus one 30-day extension (1,900 THB) — 90 days total without a visa. Beyond that you need a visa such as the DTV (180 days per entry) or a long-stay visa.
Is Thailand really cutting the 60-day visa-free stay to 30 days?
Yes, the Thai cabinet approved the cut on 19 May 2026 as part of a wider immigration overhaul. The change takes effect 15 days after publication in the Royal Gazette, which has not happened yet. Until then, the current rules below still apply. We update this page as soon as the status changes.
What is the TDAC and do I need it?
The Thailand Digital Arrival Card replaced the paper TM6 form in February 2026. Every traveller must complete it online (tdac.immigration.go.th) within 3 days before arrival — it is free and takes a few minutes. Airlines increasingly check it at the gate.
How do Japanese retirees arrange long-term stays in Thailand?
Chiang Mai and Bangkok both host substantial Japanese retiree communities using the Non-Immigrant O retirement visa: age 50 plus, with 800,000 THB deposited in Thailand or 65,000 THB in monthly income, thresholds most Japanese pensions and savings clear comfortably. The visa renews annually, and agents in Japanese-speaking offices smooth the paperwork.
Can Japanese visitors drive in Thailand on a Japanese license?
Japan and Thailand both belong to the Geneva Convention system, so a Japanese-issued International Driving Permit plus your domestic license is valid for short visits. The Japanese license alone is not accepted. Long-term residents convert to a Thai license, and note that Thailand drives on the left, familiar territory for Japanese drivers.
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Rules for other nationalities
Last verified 2026-07-05. Immigration rules change — we update these pages as official announcements land, and our Thailand visa news tracks changes daily. This page is general information, not legal advice.