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The Foreign Business Act Thailand landscape shifted dramatically in early 2026, and every company with foreign shareholding must respond. DBD Order No. 1/2569, effective 1 April 2026, introduced tighter enforcement instructions for registrars reviewing foreign-held entities, while the Cabinet approved the opening of eight previously restricted sectors to foreign participation. At the same time, the Ministry of Commerce has advanced a proposed “actual control” test that would look beyond nominal shareholding to determine whether a company is genuinely Thai-controlled. Together, these developments require general counsel, CFOs and investors to reassess corporate structures, licensing status and nominee risk within the next 90 days or face escalating penalties.
Senior decision-makers with Thailand foreign investment exposure should treat the period from April through July 2026 as a compliance-critical window. The combination of new DBD enforcement powers, Cabinet sector liberalisation and the looming “actual control” test means that corporate structures that were tolerated for years may now attract scrutiny, fines or criminal prosecution.
The following immediate actions should be prioritised:
The risks of inaction are substantial: criminal penalties of up to three years’ imprisonment and fines of up to THB 1 million for nominee arrangements, plus administrative sanctions, forced dissolution and reputational damage. Conversely, companies that act quickly can take advantage of newly opened sectors and generous BOI incentives Thailand offers to promoted investors.
The Foreign Business Act B.E. 2542 (1999) has governed foreign participation in the Thai economy for more than two decades. It replaced the earlier Alien Business Law of 1972 and established the three-list system that remains the foundation of Thailand’s foreign ownership restrictions today.
The foreign business act divides restricted activities into three categories:
Industry observers note that several converging pressures drove the 2026 reforms. Thailand’s economic competitiveness rankings had slipped relative to Vietnam and Indonesia, prompting the government to liberalise select sectors. Simultaneously, high-profile nominee shareholder cases, where Thai individuals held shares on behalf of foreign beneficial owners, embarrassed regulators and highlighted enforcement gaps in the existing framework. The result was a two-track approach: open more sectors to attract legitimate foreign investment, and tighten enforcement against structures designed to circumvent the foreign business act.
DBD Order No. 1/2569, effective 1 April 2026, is the single most important operational change for foreign-held companies in Thailand this year. It instructs DBD registrars across the country to apply enhanced scrutiny when processing corporate filings from companies with any level of foreign shareholding.
The Order introduces several procedural requirements that foreign-held companies must understand:
| Date | Regulatory Action | Investor Impact |
|---|---|---|
| 1 April 2026 | DBD Order No. 1/2569 takes effect | Enhanced scrutiny of all foreign-held company filings; registrars empowered to request source-of-funds evidence from Thai shareholders |
| April 2026 | Cabinet approves opening of eight sectors to foreign participation | New market-entry opportunities; reduced need for nominees in qualifying sectors |
| April–May 2026 | MOC issues guidance on nominee enforcement and “actual control” indicators | Companies using nominee structures face heightened investigation risk |
| Pending (proposed) | FBA amendments to codify “actual control” test in statute | Would make control-based assessment legally binding, not merely administrative |
Foreign investors entering or restructuring operations in Thailand must choose the correct legal pathway, and the choice between BOI promotion and a Foreign Business Licence has significant implications for cost, timeline, tax exposure and ongoing compliance obligations. This section provides the decision framework.
The Board of Investment offers a comprehensive package of incentives designed to attract foreign capital into promoted activities. Under the BOI’s current investment promotion scheme, eligible companies can receive:
The BOI’s 2026 Quick Guide identifies priority sectors including advanced technology, digital infrastructure, medical and biopharmaceutical manufacturing, electric vehicles, automation and robotics, and food innovation, categories aligned with the Thailand 4.0 economic strategy.
Where BOI promotion is not available, either because the activity is not on the BOI’s promoted list or because the company does not meet minimum investment thresholds, a Foreign Business Licence issued by the DBD is the primary alternative. The FBL permits a foreign-majority company to engage in a specific List 3 activity, subject to conditions set by the Foreign Business Commission.
Key characteristics of the FBL route include a longer processing timeline (typically 60–120 days), the requirement to demonstrate a minimum registered capital of THB 3 million per licensed activity, and annual compliance reporting to the DBD.
Some foreign-held companies discover that their current activities do not qualify for BOI promotion, that the FBL application would be unlikely to succeed due to the nature of the business, or that their corporate structure involves nominee arrangements that cannot be easily unwound. In such cases, corporate restructuring, which may include genuine equity dilution, joint-venture formation or operational carve-outs, becomes the necessary path to compliance.
| Route | Typical Timeline | Key Documentation |
|---|---|---|
| BOI Promotion | 60–90 days (standard); 30 days (fast-track for qualifying investments) | BOI application form, investment plan, feasibility study, factory plans (if manufacturing), corporate registration documents |
| Foreign Business Licence (FBL) | 60–120 days from complete submission | FBL application form, business plan, company registration documents, financial statements, minimum THB 3 million capital evidence, power of attorney |
| Treaty of Amity (US nationals only) | 30–60 days | Proof of US nationality/incorporation, Treaty application, company registration documents, business description |
The use of Thai nominee shareholders to hold shares on behalf of foreign beneficial owners is the single greatest compliance risk under the foreign business act Thailand framework, and the 2026 reforms have made that risk materially worse.
Section 36 of the Foreign Business Act prohibits any Thai national from acting as a nominee for a foreigner to enable that foreigner to operate a restricted business. Section 37 imposes criminal penalties on both the nominee and the foreign beneficiary: imprisonment of up to three years and/or a fine of between THB 100,000 and THB 1 million. Additionally, the company may be ordered to cease operations and dissolve.
Despite these penalties, nominee arrangements have been widespread in practice, particularly in sectors such as property development, retail, hospitality and services, all List 3 activities where foreign majority ownership requires either an FBL or BOI promotion.
The Ministry of Commerce’s proposed FBA amendments Thailand introduce a statutory “actual control” test that would look beyond the shareholder register to determine whether a company is genuinely Thai-controlled. Under the proposed test, regulators would examine multiple indicators of foreign control:
Early indications suggest that the actual control test Thailand would apply retrospectively to existing companies, not merely to new incorporations. This means companies that have operated with nominee structures for years could face investigation if any of the control indicators are present.
Companies that currently use, or are concerned that they may inadvertently have, nominee arrangements should take the following remediation steps:
Compliance with the 2026 foreign business act Thailand reforms requires a structured, time-bound approach. The following checklist is designed for in-house legal teams and external counsel advising foreign-held companies operating in Thailand.
A foreign business licence Thailand application is submitted to the Department of Business Development and reviewed by the Foreign Business Commission. The process is detailed but predictable if the documentation is complete.
Common rejection reasons include insufficient demonstration of benefit to the Thai economy, incomplete documentation, failure to meet the minimum capital requirement, and business activities that overlap with List 1 or List 2 prohibitions.
BOI incentives Thailand represent the most advantageous legal pathway for qualifying foreign investors. The application process has been streamlined under the BOI’s current promotion scheme, and the 2026 Quick Guide provides updated eligibility criteria.
Before applying, confirm that your intended activity appears on the BOI’s list of promoted activities. Priority sectors in 2026 include advanced electronics, digital platforms, biotechnology, electric vehicles, aerospace components, automation and robotics, medical devices, and food innovation. Activities not on the promoted list are ineligible regardless of investment size.
BOI-promoted companies benefit from exemption from Foreign Business Act restrictions for their promoted activities, meaning no separate FBL is required. However, any non-promoted activities conducted by the same entity remain subject to the FBA and may require a separate licence.
Understanding the penalty framework is essential for risk-calibrated decision-making. The following matrix summarises the key penalties, enforcement triggers and recommended responses under the foreign business act Thailand.
| Violation Type | Penalty | Recommended Remediation |
|---|---|---|
| Operating a restricted business without FBL, BOI or treaty exemption (Section 35) | Imprisonment up to 3 years and/or fine THB 100,000–1,000,000; daily fine of THB 5,000–50,000 for continued violation | Cease restricted activity immediately; apply for FBL or BOI; seek legal advice on voluntary disclosure |
| Acting as or using a Thai nominee shareholder (Sections 36–37) | Imprisonment up to 3 years and/or fine THB 100,000–1,000,000 (applies to both nominee and foreign beneficiary) | Restructure shareholding; repay nominee-funded capital; document genuine Thai participation; consider voluntary disclosure |
| Failure to comply with FBL conditions | Licence revocation; potential referral for criminal prosecution | Conduct compliance audit; rectify non-compliance; notify DBD proactively |
| Failure to comply with BOI promotion conditions | Revocation of promotion certificate; repayment of tax incentives received | Review BOI conditions annually; submit required reports; notify BOI of any operational changes |
The likely practical effect of the 2026 enforcement changes will be a shift from complaint-driven investigations to proactive, data-driven screening by DBD registrars. Early indications suggest that companies flagged during routine filings will be prioritised for further review under the proposed actual control test Thailand criteria.
| Entity Type | Reporting / Registration Obligation | Key Action Required |
|---|---|---|
| Thai limited company with >50% foreign shareholders | Possible FBL or BOI eligibility if promoted | Verify classification under Lists 1–3; apply for FBL or BOI; update corporate records |
| Company using nominee Thai shareholders | Increased scrutiny under “actual control” test | Conduct beneficial-owner due diligence; document commercial reality; restructure or disclose |
| BOI-promoted foreign company | BOI reporting and compliance (conditions attached to certificate) | Maintain promoted activities; submit periodic reports; use BOI for visa and work-permit processing |
The 2026 reforms to the foreign business act Thailand represent both a compliance challenge and a strategic opportunity. Companies that act within the current 90-day window can secure legitimate market access through newly opened sectors, capture generous BOI incentives Thailand offers to promoted investors, and eliminate the existential risk of nominee-related criminal prosecution. Companies that delay face escalating enforcement risk as DBD Order No. 1/2569 empowers registrars to conduct proactive reviews and the proposed actual control test moves toward statutory codification.
The recommended next steps are clear: audit your corporate structure now, classify your activities against the three lists, choose the correct licensing or promotion pathway, and remediate any nominee arrangements before they become the subject of regulatory inquiry. For investors evaluating new market entry, the combination of sector liberalisation and BOI incentives makes 2026 one of the most favourable windows for Thailand foreign investment in recent years. Those seeking specialist counsel on foreign business licence Thailand applications, BOI promotion or corporate restructuring can search the Global Law Experts lawyer directory for qualified practitioners in Thailand.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Warot Wanakankowit at Warot Advisory Services, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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