Thailand Ends the 60-Day Visa-Free Stay: What Nightlife & Party Travelers Need to Know in 2026
TRAVEL NEWS · Bangkok · Updated July 2026
Thailand is scrapping the 60-day visa-free entry that visitors from 93 countries have enjoyed, and most nationalities revert to a 30-day exemption. Note that five countries with bilateral agreements — Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Peru and South Korea — keep 90 days and are not affected. If you are planning a Bangkok, Pattaya or Phuket nightlife trip, here is exactly what changes, based on official announcements and Thai reporting. Note: as of July 2026 the changes are not yet in force.
What is changing
On 19 May 2026 the Thai Cabinet decided to scrap the 60-day visa-exemption scheme introduced in 2024. As that scheme ends, each country reverts to its earlier tier, and there are three. Most drop to 30 days (the United States, United Kingdom, Japan, Australia, Germany, France and roughly 54 countries in all); Seychelles, the Maldives and Mauritius get 15 days; and Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Peru and South Korea keep 90 days under bilateral (reciprocal) agreements.
Countries in the 30-day tier can still extend once, by another 30 days, at any Thai immigration office for a 1,900 baht fee — so the exemption ceiling stays at 60 days if you file the extension. Some early reports also mentioned a two-entries-per-year cap on visa-exempt arrivals, but this is not confirmed in the official Cabinet revision and was raised mainly around land-border "border runs"; in practice it comes down to immigration-officer discretion where abuse is suspected. Separately, the overhaul also cut Visa on Arrival eligibility from 31 countries to 4 (reported as Azerbaijan, Belarus, India and Serbia).
| Item | Before (now) | After (once in force) |
|---|---|---|
| Visa-free stay | 60 days | 30 days |
| Extension at immigration | +30 days (1,900 baht) | +30 days (1,900 baht) |
| Max under exemption | 90 days | 60 days |
| Repeat visa-free entries | Unlimited | Tighter limits floated (unofficial; mainly land border) |
Note: the table above applies to the 30-day tier (most countries). Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Peru and South Korea keep 90 days under bilateral agreements and are not affected.
When it takes effect
This is not automatic. The change becomes law only after three Ministry of Interior notifications are published in the Royal Gazette, and the new rules then start 15 days after that publication. As of July 2026 the notifications are still pending, which means anyone entering Thailand before they appear is still stamped in for the full 60 days.
In short: the reduction is decided, but not yet live. Until the Gazette publishes, the old 60-day stamp continues at the border — so timing matters if you are booking a longer trip.
Why Thailand is doing it
Officials point to misuse of the long window: foreigners working illegally, running nominee businesses, operating unlicensed accommodation, and — in the government's words — criminals posing as tourists, including online-scam operators. Immigration data also shows the average visitor stays only about nine days, far below the 60-day allowance. The reduction is framed as a move toward attracting "quality tourists" while tightening security.
What it means for nightlife & party travelers
For the vast majority of nightlife trips this changes very little. A long weekend or a two-week run through Bangkok's Sukhumvit and Nana, Pattaya's Walking Street or Phuket's Bangla Road sits comfortably inside 30 days — remember, the average stay is nine days.
Where it bites is the long-stay crowd: snowbirds, extended Pattaya stays, and anyone who relies on repeated visa-free "border runs." The 30-day window plus the two-entry annual cap make that pattern tighter, and long-stayers should look at a proper tourist visa (60-day) or the relevant long-stay options instead of leaning on the exemption.
The new visa-free tiers (2026)
As the 2024 60-day scheme ends, each country reverts to its earlier tier. The final per-country assignment may still be adjusted by Thailand's Visa Policy Committee.
90 days — kept via bilateral (reciprocal) agreements, not affected: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Peru, South Korea
15 days: Seychelles, Maldives, Mauritius
30 days — most countries (down from 60): United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, Japan, China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Macao, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Philippines, Vietnam, Ukraine, Israel, and all Schengen nations (Germany, France, Italy, Spain, the Netherlands, etc.) — about 54 in total (the exempt list drops from 57 to 54)
Frequently asked questions
The 60-day exemption is being scrapped and most nationalities revert to 30 days. However, you can still extend once by 30 days at immigration for 1,900 baht, keeping a legal maximum of 60 days under the exemption.
It takes effect 15 days after three Ministry of Interior notifications are published in the Royal Gazette. Until then, arrivals still receive the 60-day stamp.
Yes. For visa-free stays of 30 days or less you must complete the Thailand Digital Arrival Card online within 72 hours before arrival.
A two-entries-per-year cap on visa-exempt arrivals was introduced. Officials are still clarifying whether it applies to all entries or mainly land borders.
Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Peru and South Korea keep 90 days under bilateral (reciprocal) agreements and are not affected. Most other countries (US, UK, Japan, Australia, Schengen — about 54) move to 30 days, while Seychelles, the Maldives and Mauritius get 15 days.
Reported from official Thai Cabinet announcements and Thai news coverage (May–July 2026). ThailandNightlife rewrites and verifies all facts independently; figures and dates were confirmed at time of publication and may change — always check current immigration rules before travel.
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