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Last updated: 8 May 2026
Thailand’s regulatory landscape for foreign investors shifted sharply on 1 April 2026 when the Department of Business Development (DBD) brought Order No. 1/2569 into force, imposing heightened documentary requirements on any company registration that introduces foreign participation. The Order sits alongside broader enforcement activity under the Foreign Business Act B. E. 2542 (1999), commonly referred to as the FBA, targeting nominee structures that disguise true foreign control. For in-house counsel, CFOs and corporate teams evaluating Thai market entry or restructuring existing ownership, understanding these changes is no longer optional.
This guide, written for foreign investment lawyers Thailand practitioners and the clients they advise, walks through the 2026 regulatory shifts, the new “actual control” test, nominee remediation strategies, BOI promotion incentives and the 3-million-baht investment-visa alternative, with compliance checklists designed for immediate implementation.
The Foreign Business Act has always restricted foreign nationals and foreign-majority companies from operating in dozens of regulated business categories without a Foreign Business Licence (FBL) or BOI promotion. What changed in 2026 is the intensity and precision with which registrars and inspectors now verify whether a company is truly Thai-controlled or whether its ownership structure masks foreign dominance.
DBD Order No.1/2569 was issued in March 2026 and became effective on 1 April 2026. It targets registration filings that introduce a foreign individual as a partner, shareholder or authorised director, and company amendments that change the nationality composition of shareholders or management. Under the Order, the DBD registrar must now request a Written Confirmation of Investment and source-of-funds documentation from Thai shareholders before processing the relevant registration.
| Milestone | Date | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| DBD Order No.1/2569 issued | March 2026 | Published by DBD; sets new documentary requirements for company registrations involving foreign participation |
| Order No.1/2569 effective | 1 April 2026 | All registrars must apply the new verification process to qualifying filings from this date |
| Ongoing enforcement window | April 2026 onward | DBD inspectors empowered to investigate existing structures suspected of nominee arrangements |
Before Order No.1/2569, registrars largely processed company amendments at face value. A Thai-majority shareholder register, on paper, was sufficient. The Order fundamentally changes this approach by requiring registrars to look behind the register. Specifically, the changes include:
Industry observers expect these measures to create significant friction for structures that have historically relied on passive Thai shareholders holding shares on behalf of foreign investors. The likely practical effect will be a wave of corporate restructurings throughout 2026 as companies seek to bring their shareholder documentation into compliance.
Central to the 2026 enforcement framework is the concept of “actual control.” While the FBA defines a “foreign” company by reference to shareholding percentages (50% or more held by non-Thai nationals or entities), regulators have long maintained that a company can be treated as foreign-controlled even when Thai nationals hold a majority of shares, if the foreign party exercises actual control over the business.
The actual control test is derived from Section 36 of the Foreign Business Act and from DBD interpretive guidance. It asks whether a foreign national or foreign entity, despite holding a minority equity stake, in substance directs the company’s affairs, finances and operations. Order No.1/2569 reinforces this by giving registrars explicit tools to probe beyond the share register.
Regulators and foreign investment lawyers Thailand practitioners recognise five primary indicators that the DBD and courts consider when assessing actual control:
Safe structure: A Thai company with 51% Thai-held shares where the Thai shareholders can demonstrate independent source-of-funds, serve as active directors, participate in genuine board meetings and share in dividends proportionate to their holdings. The foreign 49% shareholder has standard minority-protection rights but does not control management appointments or operations.
Risky structure: A Thai company where a Thai individual holds 51% of shares but the shares were paid for by a loan from the foreign shareholder. The Thai shareholder does not attend board meetings, has signed a power of attorney granting all voting rights to the foreign party, and receives no meaningful dividends. Management decisions are made entirely by the foreign director.
Borderline structure: Thai institutional shareholders (e.g., a legitimate Thai fund) hold 51% but the joint-venture agreement contains veto rights for the 49% foreign investor over all material decisions, including hiring, capex above a low threshold, and any distribution of profits. Early indications suggest the DBD will scrutinise veto provisions more closely under the 2026 framework, particularly where they effectively replicate majority control.
A nominee arrangement exists when a Thai national or entity holds shares in a company for the benefit of a foreign party, allowing that foreign party to circumvent FBA restrictions on foreign ownership. The arrangement need not be formalised in a written agreement, the DBD and Thai courts will look at the substance of the relationship, including financial flows, decision-making authority and the economic reality of the Thai shareholder’s involvement.
Under the strengthened enforcement posture introduced by Order No.1/2569, DBD inspectors and registrars are trained to identify the following red flags:
The consequences of operating through a nominee structure without authorisation are severe. Under the Foreign Business Act, penalties include fines and imprisonment for both the foreign party and the Thai nominee. The company itself may face dissolution. Press reports from early 2026 confirm that Thai authorities have signalled a willingness to pursue criminal prosecution in egregious cases, and the DBD has publicly stated its intention to refer suspected nominee structures to the Department of Special Investigation (DSI) where fraud is indicated.
For companies currently operating structures that may be characterised as nominee arrangements, the window for remediation is narrowing. Recommended steps include:
For foreign investors seeking a legitimate path to majority or full ownership in Thailand, BOI promotion remains the most established and widely used mechanism. The Board of Investment offers a range of incentives to companies engaged in activities that Thailand has designated as economically beneficial.
A company that receives BOI promotion for an eligible activity may operate with 100% foreign shareholding in that activity, effectively bypassing the FBA’s restrictions. This makes BOI promotion the most powerful tool for foreign investment lawyers Thailand practitioners to deploy on behalf of clients who need certainty around ownership structures. However, it is essential to note that the promotion applies to the specific promoted activity, ancillary or non-promoted activities conducted by the same entity may still be subject to FBA restrictions.
A typical BOI application proceeds through the following stages:
Foreign investors exploring Thailand frequently compare the 3-million-baht investment visa with BOI promotion as alternative pathways to residence and business participation. While both options serve different primary purposes, the comparison is relevant because each carries distinct implications for ownership rights, tax treatment and land access.
| Criteria | 3-Million-Baht Investment Visa | BOI Promotion |
|---|---|---|
| Primary purpose | Residence permit for the individual investor | Investment incentives for the promoted company and its shareholders |
| Minimum investment | THB 3 million deposited in a Thai bank or invested in Thai government bonds or approved instruments | Varies by activity; minimum registered capital requirements apply (generally THB 1 million per foreign worker, subject to specific activity thresholds) |
| Foreign ownership of operating company | Does not by itself grant the right to hold majority foreign shares in a Thai company operating in FBA-restricted activities | Permits up to 100% foreign ownership in the promoted activity |
| Land ownership | No automatic right to own land; condominium ownership (foreign quota) possible | May be permitted to own land for the promoted activity, subject to BOI conditions |
| Corporate income tax benefits | None directly, standard CIT applies to any company the investor operates | CIT exemptions up to eight years, with possible extensions |
| Import duty benefits | None | Exemptions on machinery and raw materials for the promoted activity |
| Typical time to approval | Approximately one to three months for the visa application (immigration process) | Approximately three to six months for BOI approval; expedited via FastPass for qualifying projects |
| Spouse and dependants | Dependant visas available | Facilitated visa and work-permit processing for executives, technicians and families |
| Best suited for | Individual investors seeking long-term residence; passive investment or small-scale business | Companies seeking to operate in promoted sectors with full foreign ownership, tax incentives and land rights |
The decision between these routes depends on the investor’s objectives. An individual seeking residence and a modest Thai business presence may find the 3-million-baht investment visa sufficient. A corporate investor planning significant operations in a BOI-promoted sector should prioritise the BOI promotion pathway for its superior ownership, tax and operational benefits. Many sophisticated investors pursue both: BOI promotion for the operating company and a long-term residence visa for the individual executive.
Given the enforcement measures now in effect under Order No.1/2569, every company with foreign participation in its shareholder register should undertake the following compliance steps without delay:
This checklist is not exhaustive, complex structures involving multiple entities, cross-border holding companies or sector-specific regulations (banking, insurance, telecommunications) will require tailored legal analysis. Consult a qualified Thailand lawyer with FDI expertise for structure-specific advice.
The 2026 regulatory changes make professional legal guidance essential rather than optional. Foreign investment lawyers Thailand specialists typically provide the following services relevant to the current enforcement environment:
When engaging counsel, industry observers recommend retainer arrangements that include fixed-fee compliance audits, clearly defined scope-of-work provisions and response-time commitments for urgent regulatory inquiries, given that DBD inspector requests frequently carry short deadlines.
The enforcement regime introduced by DBD Order No.1/2569 represents the most significant tightening of nominee-structure oversight in Thailand in over a decade. Companies that have historically relied on passive Thai shareholders to maintain a compliant appearance now face genuine scrutiny of their funding, governance and operational control arrangements. The five immediate actions every affected company should take are:
The window for voluntary remediation is open now but will narrow as enforcement activity accelerates. Foreign investment lawyers Thailand practitioners are advising clients to act proactively rather than wait for a registrar query or inspector investigation to force disclosure. For expert guidance tailored to your company’s structure, consult a qualified foreign investment lawyer through our directory.
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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