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how to complete post-acquisition tax compliance in Thailand

Step‑by‑step Guide to Post‑acquisition Tax Compliance in Thailand, What Foreign Buyers Must Do

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Understanding how to complete post‑acquisition tax compliance in Thailand is essential for every foreign buyer that has just closed a share or asset deal. The post‑closing window is short: registrations with the Department of Business Development (DBD) should be filed within 14 days, Revenue Department (RD) notifications within 30 days, and transfer pricing documentation ideally prepared within 60–120 days of closing. Failure to follow these steps invites penalties, interest charges and, increasingly in 2026, heightened scrutiny of nominee shareholding structures. This guide sets out the complete post‑acquisition tax process in Thailand, who does what, which documents are needed, the realistic timeline, indicative costs and the regulatory changes foreign acquirers must factor into their compliance calendar.

Overview of the Post‑Acquisition Tax Compliance Process

Post‑acquisition tax compliance in Thailand covers every tax registration, notification, return adjustment and documentation obligation triggered by a change of ownership in a Thai limited company or a transfer of business assets. The taxes in scope include corporate income tax (CIT), value‑added tax (VAT), withholding tax, stamp duty, transfer pricing and, for asset deals, customs duties on imported goods. Both share acquisitions and asset acquisitions are covered, although the sequence and weighting of steps differ.

Who This Guide Is For

This guide is written for CFOs, corporate development teams, general counsel, tax directors and external advisers acting for a foreign acquirer that has completed, or is about to complete, an acquisition of a Thai company or Thai‑situated business assets. It applies equally to direct foreign investors, regional holding companies and entities operating under Board of Investment (BOI) promotion certificates.

Types of Acquisitions Covered

A share acquisition transfers ownership in the target company itself. The company’s tax registrations, VAT number and CIT file continue, but the shareholder register, beneficial‑owner records and, potentially, the appointed tax agent must be updated. An asset acquisition transfers individual assets (equipment, inventory, intellectual property, real estate) out of the seller’s entity. This triggers stamp duty on instruments of transfer, possible VAT on the sale of goods, customs‑valuation adjustments on imported assets and a fresh set of CIT cost‑base calculations in the buyer’s entity. Both deal types require the steps below, though certain steps are flagged where they apply only to one structure.

Eligibility and Prerequisites for Tax Compliance After Acquisition in Thailand

Before the compliance calendar begins, several preconditions must already be in place. If any are missing at closing, they become the first remedial actions on the post‑closing checklist.

Foreign Ownership Limits and BOI / FBA Considerations

Under the Foreign Business Act B.E. 2542, a foreigner may not hold more than 49 per cent of shares in a Thai company operating in restricted business categories unless a Foreign Business Licence (FBL) or a BOI promotion certificate permits majority foreign ownership. If the acquisition takes the foreign shareholding above the statutory threshold, the buyer must confirm that the required FBL or BOI approval was obtained before or at closing. The BOI promotion certificate also dictates ongoing reporting obligations, including annual operating reports and investment compliance filings, that feed into the post‑acquisition tax calendar.

Beneficial Owner and Nominee Declarations

Thai law prohibits nominee shareholding arrangements that circumvent foreign‑ownership restrictions. Before filing any post‑closing registrations, the buyer should confirm the identity and status of every shareholder in the target company. Where nominee structures are detected or suspected, remedial steps, including sworn beneficial‑owner declarations and, where necessary, share restructuring, must be completed before or alongside the DBD and RD filings described below. Industry observers expect that 2026 enforcement activity has made this step non‑negotiable for every foreign acquisition.

How to Complete Post‑Acquisition Tax Compliance, Step‑by‑Step Procedure

The following numbered steps form the core operating checklist for tax compliance after acquisition in Thailand. Each step identifies who is responsible, the key documents and the recommended timeline window.

Step Who Does It Typical Duration
Update DBD share register and file change of shareholder Corporate secretary / local counsel Within 14 days of closing
Notify Revenue Department of change in tax representative / tax agent Tax director / appointed tax agent Within 30 days of change
Update VAT registration / file corrective VAT returns (if applicable) Tax agent / accounting team Within 30 days (practical window)
Update payroll withholding and Social Security records HR / payroll provider Within 30 days of employment/ownership change
Prepare transfer pricing documentation and notifications Tax counsel / TP specialist 60–120 days post‑close
Nominee shareholder verification and remedial filings Legal counsel / audit witness 14–90 days depending on complexity
Customs valuation adjustments (asset deals) Customs agent / tax counsel 30–90 days
Year‑end audited financials and PND.50 filing Auditor / tax agent Statutory year‑end deadlines (annual)

Step 1, File Immediate Post‑Closing Updates with the DBD (Within 14 Days)

Register the share transfer with the Department of Business Development. Submit the updated shareholder list (Bor.Oj.5) and, where directors or authorised signatories have changed, file the change‑of‑director form electronically through the DBD e‑filing system. Attach the signed board resolution approving the transfer, the executed stock transfer form and certified copies of each new shareholder’s identification documents. If beneficial‑owner information has changed, update the DBD’s records at the same time. Corporate secretaries or local counsel typically handle this filing. The practical processing window is 14 days from closing; delays risk administrative penalties and create downstream issues with bank‑mandate updates and RD notifications.

Step 2, Update Tax Registrations and Appoint a Tax Agent (Within 30 Days)

Notify the Revenue Department of any change in the company’s tax representative or contact details. If the buyer intends to appoint a new tax agent, common where the acquirer’s group has a preferred adviser, file a power of attorney with the RD district office where the company’s tax identification number is registered. Gather the following documents: a certified DBD company extract showing the new shareholding, the board resolution approving the appointment, and identification documents for the new tax agent. The company’s CIT file (including all PND forms) continues under the same tax identification number after a share deal; no new number is needed unless the entity is dissolved and reconstituted.

For asset deals, the buyer’s entity must confirm that its own tax identification number is active and that the acquired assets are reflected in its CIT cost‑base schedules.

Step 3, Adjust VAT Registration After Acquisition (Within 30 Days)

Determine whether VAT re‑registration is required. In a standard share acquisition, the target company’s existing VAT registration certificate remains valid because the legal entity has not changed. However, if the acquisition involves a change in business type, a relocation of the registered office, or a cessation and resumption of operations, the company must notify the RD and update its VAT registration details. In an asset deal, the buyer must ensure that its own entity is VAT‑registered before taking delivery of taxable goods or services. File corrective VAT returns promptly if invoices issued in the pre‑closing period carry incorrect details. Verify that input VAT on pre‑closing purchases can still be claimed, the reclaimability window narges if corrective returns are filed late.

The practical deadline for all VAT adjustments is within 30 days of identifying the need.

Step 4, Update Withholding Tax Obligations (Within 30 Days)

Review every ongoing payment relationship that triggers a withholding obligation: employee salaries (PND.1), service fees to individuals (PND.3) and payments to companies (PND.53). Update vendor records with the correct withholding‑tax identification number and ensure that withholding‑tax certificates issued to payees reflect the current company details. If directors have changed, the new directors should sign updated withholding certificates. Payroll providers must be instructed to apply the correct withholding rates from the first payroll cycle after closing. Social Security contributions should be updated within the same 30‑day window to avoid penalties from the Social Security Office.

Step 5, Prepare Transfer Pricing Documentation and File Notifications (60–120 Days)

Post‑acquisition, the target company’s related‑party universe changes immediately. Every intercompany agreement, management fees, licences, cost‑sharing arrangements, intra‑group loans, must be reviewed and re‑priced at arm’s length under the Revenue Code’s transfer pricing provisions. Prepare or update a contemporaneous transfer pricing file consisting of a Master File and a Local File, following the framework set out in the OECD Transfer Pricing Guidelines and adopted by Thailand’s RD. Companies meeting the RD’s revenue threshold must also submit an annual transfer pricing disclosure form. Begin assembling comparables data within the first 60 days post‑close; aim to complete the full TP file within 120 days so that pricing positions are documented before the first post‑acquisition fiscal year‑end.

Where the acquisition has changed pricing arrangements retrospectively, for example, termination of a previous parent’s management‑fee agreement, prepare an adjustment memorandum to support any resulting tax‑base changes.

Step 6, Pay Stamp Duty and Settle Customs Valuations (Asset Deals)

For share transfers, stamp duty applies at 0. 1 per cent of the higher of the paid‑up capital represented by the transferred shares or the actual transfer value, subject to applicable exemptions. Payment is made by affixing revenue stamps or through the RD’s e‑stamp system. For asset deals, stamp duty may also apply to instruments of transfer for specific asset classes (e. g. , lease agreements, hire‑purchase contracts). If the acquired assets include imported goods, the buyer’s customs broker should review and adjust customs valuations to ensure that the declared values reflect the arm’s‑length transfer price.

Import VAT and customs duties are assessed on the customs value, so any discrepancy between the purchase price and the declared customs value will attract scrutiny from the Thai Customs Department.

Step 7, Verify Nominee Shareholders and Complete Beneficial‑Owner Clean‑Up (14–90 Days)

Request sworn declarations from every Thai shareholder confirming that they hold shares as the beneficial owner and not as a nominee for a foreign party. Where a shareholder cannot provide satisfactory evidence of beneficial ownership, including proof of funds used to acquire the shares, escalate the matter to legal counsel immediately. Remedial steps may include restructuring the shareholding, obtaining a Foreign Business Licence or, if the company qualifies, applying for BOI promotion that permits majority foreign ownership. File updated beneficial‑owner records with the DBD and, where the RD has opened an inquiry, provide the declarations and supporting evidence directly.

The timeline for this step ranges from 14 days (where declarations are straightforward) to 90 days or more if restructuring is needed.

Step 8, Update Banks, Social Security, Payroll Systems and VAT Invoices

Notify the company’s banks to update authorised signatories and account mandates. Provide the bank with the updated DBD extract, the new board resolution specifying signatory authority and identification documents for new signatories. Simultaneously instruct the payroll provider to apply updated withholding rates and ensure that Social Security contribution records reflect any changes in employer details. Finally, re‑issue VAT invoice templates to ensure that the company name, address and VAT registration number printed on all tax invoices match the current RD records. Failure to update invoice details risks disallowance of input VAT credits for the company’s customers.

Documents Needed for Post‑Acquisition Tax Compliance in Thailand

The table below consolidates every document that foreign buyers should collect, prepare or file during the post‑acquisition compliance process. Assembling these documents before closing, or within the first week after closing, materially reduces the risk of missed deadlines.

Document Notes
DBD company extract / updated shareholder register (Bor.Oj.5) Issued by DBD via electronic filing; evidences change of ownership
Board resolution approving share transfer / appointment of directors Signed minutes in Thai or with certified translation
Share purchase agreement / asset purchase agreement Include schedules of assets and VAT clauses
Stock transfer form Standard form required for share registration at DBD
Audited financial statements (latest year) Issued by licensed auditor; used for CIT adjustments and PND.50 filing
PND.50 (annual corporate tax return) and supporting schedules Prepared by tax agent; include post‑acquisition taxable income adjustments
VAT registration certificate / VAT invoices and input VAT schedules Issued by RD / seller; required for VAT adjustments and reclaim
Withholding tax certificates (PND.1, PND.3, PND.53) Issued by payers; needed to credit withholding against CIT
Transfer pricing agreements, intercompany invoices and contemporaneous TP file Prepared by parties; attach TP study and comparables data
Beneficial owner declaration and nominee shareholder affidavits Notarised and certified if executed overseas; used for RD/DBD verification
BOI promotion certificate (if entity is BOI‑promoted) Issued by BOI; dictates tax incentives and reporting obligations
Power of attorney for tax agent Required to transact with RD on behalf of the company
Bank signatory and authorised signatory documents (updated) Issued by bank/company; needed to update account mandates and receive tax refunds
Customs documents (if asset import/export) Issued by Customs / broker; for customs valuation and VAT on import

Timeline and Key Deadlines for the Post‑Acquisition Tax Process in Thailand

The consolidated calendar below organises every compliance action by the number of days after closing. Where Thai law prescribes a specific statutory deadline, this is noted. Where the deadline is a matter of established commercial practice rather than express statutory prescription, it is marked as a practical window.

Action Deadline Type Timeframe
File change in shareholder details at DBD Practical Within 14 days of closing
Notify RD of tax representative change / update tax ID information Practical (statutory obligations vary by filing type) Within 30 days of change
File corrective VAT returns / re‑issue invoices (if required) Practical, timing affects reclaimability Within 30 days of identifying the need
Update payroll withholding and Social Security records Practical Within one payroll cycle (approximately 30 days)
Prepare contemporaneous transfer pricing documentation Recommended best practice 60–120 days post‑close
Complete nominee shareholder verification and remedial filings Practical, urgency depends on risk level 14–90 days
Customs valuation adjustments (asset deals) Practical 30–90 days
Submit BOI annual reporting (if BOI‑promoted) As per BOI promotion certificate schedule Check certificate for exact dates
File annual CIT return (PND.50) and audited financial statements Statutory Within 150 days of fiscal year‑end (standard RD deadline)

The first 30 days after closing are the most intensive. Foreign buyers should plan for dedicated in‑country resources, either a seconded team member or an engaged local tax agent, to handle the overlapping DBD, RD and VAT filings within this window.

Costs, Fees and Tax Considerations

Costs vary significantly by deal size, entity complexity and whether nominee‑remediation or a full transfer pricing study is required. The table below provides indicative ranges; buyers should confirm current statutory fee schedules with the DBD and RD before filing.

Item Indicative Amount Notes
DBD filing fees (change of shareholder / director) THB 100–500 Statutory range; depends on filing method (electronic vs. paper)
Stamp duty on share transfer 0.1% of the higher of paid‑up capital or transfer value Subject to applicable exemptions; verify with latest Royal Gazette guidance
VAT adjustment penalties (if failure to update invoices on time) Variable Penalty and surcharge rates calculated under the VAT provisions of the Revenue Code
Tax agent / legal fees (post‑closing compliance pack) THB 50,000 – 300,000+ Scope‑dependent: nominee clean‑up, TP study, audit readiness
Transfer pricing study THB 150,000 – 1,000,000+ Scales with number of related‑party transactions and comparability analysis
Customs duties on imported assets (asset deals) Percentage of customs value (varies by goods classification) Refer to Thai Customs Department tariff schedule; broker fees additional

What Changes in 2026, Regulatory and Enforcement Updates

The 2025–2026 period has seen a notable tightening of enforcement by both the Revenue Department and the Department of Business Development. Foreign acquirers completing deals in 2026 should integrate the following developments into their post‑acquisition compliance plans.

Practical Implications for Foreign Buyers

The likely practical effect of heightened enforcement is threefold. First, the RD has intensified nominee‑verification inquiries, requesting beneficial‑owner evidence, including proof of funds and bank records, as part of routine post‑acquisition reviews. Buyers should therefore treat the nominee‑verification step not as optional due diligence but as a mandatory compliance action within the first 30–90 days. Second, early indications suggest that the RD is applying closer scrutiny to transfer pricing arrangements established immediately after acquisitions, particularly intercompany management fees and licence payments introduced by the new parent. Contemporaneous TP documentation prepared within 120 days of closing is now the minimum expected standard.

Third, the DBD’s continuing migration to electronic filing has shortened processing times for shareholder‑register updates but also increased the transparency of filings, meaning that delayed or inconsistent filings are flagged more quickly.

Recommended Remedial Actions for 2026 Compliance

In light of these developments, foreign buyers should include a nominee‑warranty clause in the share purchase agreement, require the seller to deliver certified beneficial‑owner declarations at closing, and build a closing data room that contains notarised identification documents and proof‑of‑funds records for every shareholder. Where BOI promotion is in place, verify that any change of shareholding does not trigger a need for BOI re‑approval and file the required notification with the BOI promptly.

Common Pitfalls in Post‑Acquisition Tax Compliance in Thailand

  • Failing to update the DBD register within 14 days. Delayed filings create mismatches between the company’s legal records and its tax filings, triggering RD queries and potential administrative fines.
  • Not appointing a local tax agent promptly. Without a tax agent holding a valid power of attorney, the company cannot transact with the RD, including filing returns, responding to assessments or claiming refunds.
  • Ignoring VAT invoice updates. If post‑acquisition invoices carry the old company details or VAT registration number, customers may be unable to claim input VAT credits, damaging commercial relationships.
  • Underestimating nominee‑shareholder risk. Discovery of a nominee arrangement can lead to reclassification of ownership, revocation of the Foreign Business Licence and retrospective tax reassessments.
  • Delaying transfer pricing documentation. Preparing TP files only at year‑end, rather than within 120 days of closing, leaves the company exposed if the RD opens an early audit.
  • Overlooking stamp duty on share transfers. Stamp duty at 0.1 per cent is modest, but non‑payment renders the transfer instrument inadmissible as evidence and attracts penalties.
  • Failing to notify the BOI of a shareholding change. BOI‑promoted companies risk losing their promotional privileges if the change triggers a condition requiring BOI consent that was not obtained.
  • Missing the payroll withholding update. Incorrect withholding on employee salaries results in under‑collection penalties assessed against the employer, not the employee.
  • Not coordinating bank‑mandate and signatory updates. Tax refunds and VAT credits can be delayed if the bank account mandate does not match the current authorised signatories.
  • Treating compliance as a one‑off event. Post‑acquisition tax compliance is a continuous process through the first fiscal year‑end. The annual PND.50 return must reflect post‑acquisition adjustments, and TP files must be maintained and updated annually.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Kittirut (Kevin) Luecha at Legalese, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Revenue Department of Thailand (RD)
  2. Department of Business Development (DBD)
  3. Royal Gazette (Ratchakitcha)
  4. Thai Customs Department
  5. Board of Investment (BOI) Thailand
  6. Ministry of Finance, Thailand
  7. OECD, Transfer Pricing Guidelines

FAQs

Can a foreigner own a Thai company?
A foreigner may hold up to 49 per cent of shares in a Thai limited company engaged in restricted business activities under the Foreign Business Act B.E. 2542. Majority foreign ownership is permitted where the company holds a Foreign Business Licence or operates under a BOI promotion certificate that allows foreign majority shareholding. The ownership structure directly affects which post‑closing registrations and notifications are required.
At a minimum: update the DBD shareholder register, notify the RD of any change in tax representative, review and adjust the VAT registration, update withholding‑tax records for payroll and vendors, and prepare transfer pricing documentation. The full checklist is set out in the step‑by‑step procedure and documents table above.
DBD filings should be completed within 14 days. RD notifications, VAT adjustments and payroll withholding updates should be completed within 30 days. Transfer pricing documentation should be prepared within 60–120 days. The annual CIT return (PND.50) must be filed within 150 days of the fiscal year‑end.
The RD will typically request the updated DBD company extract, the share purchase agreement, audited financial statements, PND.50 and supporting schedules, VAT returns and invoices, withholding‑tax certificates, transfer pricing files (Master File and Local File), beneficial‑owner declarations and, increasingly, proof of funds for Thai shareholders. The full documents table above covers all items.
In a share acquisition, the target company’s VAT registration ordinarily continues unchanged because the legal entity persists. Re‑registration or amendment is required if the acquisition involves a change of business type, relocation of the registered office, or cessation and resumption of taxable activities. In an asset deal, the buyer’s entity must confirm its own VAT registration before receiving taxable supplies.
Engage specialist counsel before closing if the deal involves nominee shareholders, BOI‑promoted entities, complex intercompany arrangements or customs‑intensive asset transfers. If these issues were not addressed pre‑closing, engage counsel on day one post‑close. A Thai tax lawyer can manage the full compliance calendar and coordinate with the RD and DBD on your behalf.
The consequences are severe. The company’s Foreign Business Licence may be revoked, the foreign buyer may face criminal penalties under the Foreign Business Act, and the RD may reassess the company’s tax liabilities on the basis that the true ownership structure was different from what was declared. Mitigation requires immediate disclosure, restructuring of the shareholding and, where applicable, applying for a Foreign Business Licence or BOI promotion to regularise the ownership position.
By Awatif Al Khouri

posted 1 hour ago

By ILIA ETL GLOBAL

posted 2 hours ago

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Step‑by‑step Guide to Post‑acquisition Tax Compliance in Thailand, What Foreign Buyers Must Do

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