Guides / Visas
Thailand DTV Visa: Complete 2026 Application Guide
9 min read · Last checked July 2026
The Destination Thailand Visa (DTV) is the closest thing to a genuinely low-friction digital nomad visa in Southeast Asia — no employer sponsorship, no minimum income from a specific source, just proof of savings and a straightforward online application. It's the main reason Thailand's nomad scene has kept growing instead of relying purely on visa runs.
Who Qualifies
The DTV covers a genuinely wide net: employees working remotely for a foreign company, freelancers with foreign clients, and people attending approved cultural, educational, or professional activities (like a multi-month Muay Thai or cooking course). Spouses and unmarried children under 20 can apply as dependents.
- At least 500,000 THB in a savings account, held for a minimum of 3 months before applying
- Proof of remote employment or self-employment with non-Thai clients/employer
- For the 'soft power' activity route: proof of enrollment in an approved cultural/educational program of at least 6 months
- Applicants must be 20 or older (dependents exempt from the age minimum)
Required Documents
- Passport valid for the duration of your intended stay
- 3–6 month official bank statement showing the 500,000 THB balance
- Employment contract, or freelance client contracts/invoices proving remote work
- Passport-style photo per embassy specifications
- Proof of accommodation for at least the initial period (booking confirmation is generally accepted)
How to Apply — Step by Step
- Confirm you meet the savings threshold and have 3+ months of statements ready.
- Apply through a Royal Thai Embassy/Consulate abroad, or via Thailand's official e-Visa portal — applications must be submitted from outside Thailand.
- Upload your documents and pay the 10,000 THB fee online or at the consulate.
- Wait for approval — typically faster than most other nomad visas on this list, often days to a few weeks depending on the embassy.
- Enter Thailand within the visa's validity window; each entry grants 180 days of stay.
- If you want to stay past 180 days on a single entry, extend once at a local immigration office (1,900 THB extension fee) rather than leaving the country.
Costs & Fees
- DTV visa fee: 10,000 THB (~$400–500), paid once for up to 5 years of validity
- 180-day extension fee: 1,900 THB, paid locally per extension
- No employer/sponsor fee — the DTV doesn't require a Thai company sponsor
The DTV is technically a special tourist visa category, not a full residency visa. It's genuinely nomad-friendly, but it does not grant permanent residency or a path to citizenship the way Portugal's D8 or Spain's nomad visa do.
What the DTV Doesn't Let You Do
- You cannot apply for a Thai work permit on a DTV
- You cannot work for a Thailand-registered company or take on Thai clients as a freelancer
- It's not a tax residency status by itself — Thailand's 183-day tax residency rule still applies independently
Visa requirements change — this guide reflects our research as of July 2026. Confirm current figures directly with a Royal Thai Embassy or the official e-Visa portal before applying.