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Anyone planning to open a private school in Thailand must first understand how to apply for a school license in Thailand under the Private School Act B. E. 2550 (2007). The licensing authority is the Office of the Private Education Commission (OPEC), a body operating under the Ministry of Education that regulates the establishment, operation, and closure of private educational institutions throughout the country. The process applies equally to Thai nationals acting in their own name and to juristic persons, limited companies, foundations, or associations, that wish to operate a formal school, a language centre, or a vocational training institution.
In 2025–early 2026, OPEC and the Ministry of Education moved to standardise application forms, inspection checklists, and review windows, making the procedure more predictable but also more demanding on document formalities.
Under the Private School Act B.E. 2550, no person or entity may operate a private school in Thailand without a licence issued by OPEC. The Act divides private schools into two broad categories: formal schools (offering curricula that lead to recognised qualifications, primary, secondary, or international programmes) and non-formal schools (language centres, tutorial schools, and vocational training establishments). Each category has its own application track, documentary requirements, and inspection criteria, although the overarching procedural framework is shared.
The Ministry of Education school licence regime gives OPEC the power to receive applications, conduct site inspections, impose conditions, and, once satisfied, issue the licence and register the school. For formal schools, OPEC also coordinates with the Teachers’ Council of Thailand (Kurusapa / KSP) to ensure that teaching staff hold valid professional licences. For higher-education programmes, the Office of the Higher Education Commission has a separate mandate; this guide focuses on the OPEC-regulated primary, secondary, international, and non-formal school tracks.
The most common licence is the formal school licence, which authorises an institution to deliver a Ministry-approved curriculum and issue certificates recognised by the Thai education system. International schools operating under a foreign curriculum (British, American, IB) still require this licence but follow additional curriculum-approval steps with OPEC.
Non-formal school licences cover language centres, tutoring schools, and short-course vocational providers. These licences carry lighter premises requirements but impose the same core eligibility and document obligations. A separate category exists for special-purpose training centres operated by corporations for their own staff, which fall outside the OPEC mandate in most cases.
Before assembling any paperwork, applicants must confirm they meet the school licence requirements Thailand imposes on both natural persons and juristic persons. The Private School Act B.E. 2550 sets out minimum qualifications for the licence holder and for the school’s director or principal. Foreign applicants face additional structural requirements that merit careful advance planning.
Foreign educators seeking to teach (rather than own) a school should note the separate foreigner teaching licence requirements administered by the Teachers’ Council of Thailand (KSP). KSP issues provisional (P), basic (B), and advanced (A) teaching licences, each with its own qualification and documentation pathway.
The steps to get a teaching licence in Thailand, and, more broadly, to establish and licence a school, follow a sequential path from site preparation through to post-licence registration. The procedure below reflects the OPEC framework under the Private School Act B.E. 2550 and incorporates practical guidance aligned with the standardised review processes introduced in 2025–2026.
Before any forms are filed, verify that the intended school premises satisfy local zoning regulations and hold a valid building permit, commonly referred to as AOR 6 (or its equivalent under local building-control ordinances). Contact the local municipality or district office to confirm that the site is zoned for educational use. Arrange a preliminary safety and sanitation inspection to identify any remedial works. If the building is leased, ensure the lease term meets OPEC’s minimum requirements and that the landlord consents to the educational use in writing. This step typically takes 2–6 weeks, depending on the condition of the premises and the responsiveness of the local authority.
If the applicant is a juristic person that has not yet been incorporated, register a Thai limited company with the Department of Business Development (DBD) under the Ministry of Commerce. The memorandum of incorporation must include an objective to “provide education” or similar language that OPEC will accept. Ensure the shareholder structure complies with foreign-ownership limits and that the initial registered capital is adequate for OPEC’s operational-funding assessment. Company registration generally takes 1–4 weeks, depending on whether a company-name reservation is needed and on the complexity of the shareholder structure.
Under the Private School Act B.E. 2550, every school must have a named director or principal (ผู้อำนวยการ) who meets OPEC’s eligibility criteria, Thai nationality, minimum bachelor’s degree, no disqualifying criminal record. Prepare a formal letter of appointment and draft employment contracts for all initial teaching and administrative staff. Foreign teaching staff must hold work permits issued by the Ministry of Labour, and their teaching qualifications should be verified against KSP requirements well before the licence application is submitted. Allow 1–2 weeks for appointment formalities and contract preparation.
Gather every document listed in the required-documents table below. Foreign-language documents must be translated into Thai by a certified translator, and the translations notarised. Because Thailand is not a party to the Hague Apostille Convention for domestic-acceptance purposes, foreign public documents (degree certificates, criminal-record checks) must be legalised through the issuing country’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and subsequently authenticated by the Royal Thai Embassy or Consulate in that country. Early indications suggest that incomplete or improperly legalised documents are the single most common reason for OPEC query letters, so applicants should budget 2–6 weeks for this step and begin the process before all other documents are finalised.
File the completed application pack with the OPEC office that has jurisdiction over the school’s location. For schools in Bangkok, this is the central OPEC office; for schools in the provinces, file with the relevant Provincial Education Office. Attach the OPEC-prescribed application form (available on the OPEC website at opec.go.th), all supporting documents, and proof of payment of the administrative processing fee. OPEC has been progressively accepting digital submissions alongside paper filings, confirm the current accepted format with the receiving office. This is “Day 0” of the formal review period.
After filing, OPEC assigns an inspector team to review the application file and conduct a physical site inspection. The inspection covers building safety, classroom capacity, sanitation facilities, and accessibility. OPEC may issue a written query letter requesting additional documents, corrections, or site remediation. Respond promptly, delays in answering queries extend the review clock significantly. Each query-and-response cycle typically adds 1–4 weeks. The administrative review and inspection phase typically takes 60–90 days for a complete, well-prepared file.
Once OPEC is satisfied that all statutory and regulatory conditions are met, it issues the school licence and registers the institution. The licence is published in OPEC’s records and the school may commence operations. Post-licence obligations include: filing annual reports with OPEC, ensuring all teaching staff maintain valid KSP professional licences, notifying OPEC of any change in director, premises, or curriculum, and submitting to periodic compliance inspections. Licence issuance normally follows within 1–2 weeks of the approval decision.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Pre‑application checks (zoning, building permit) | Applicant / local municipality / building authority | 2–6 weeks |
| Company registration (if needed) | Applicant / DBD company registrar | 1–4 weeks |
| Appoint director/principal & prepare contracts | Applicant (school) | 1–2 weeks |
| Document collation, translation & legalisation | Applicant / certified translator / consulate | 2–6 weeks |
| Submit application to OPEC / MoE | Applicant / authorised representative | Day 0 (filed) |
| OPEC / MoE administrative review & site inspection | OPEC / MoE inspectors | 60–90 days |
| Query response & remedial actions | Applicant / school | 1–4 weeks per query |
| Licence issuance & registration | OPEC / MoE | 1–2 weeks after approval |
The table below consolidates the principal documents OPEC requires for a school licence application. Applicants should treat this as a checklist and confirm the current form numbers and accepted formats directly with the relevant OPEC office, as minor updates to prescribed forms occur periodically.
| Document | Notes (Issuer, Format, Validity) |
|---|---|
| OPEC application form for school establishment | Available from opec.go.th, original or scanned; use the most current prescribed form. |
| Company registration certificate & objectives | Issued by the Department of Business Development (Ministry of Commerce), certified copy; objectives must include “to provide education”. |
| Land title deed or lease agreement | Land Department / lessor, certified copy; if leased, the lease term must meet OPEC’s minimum duration requirement. |
| Building permit & safety certificate (AOR 6 or equivalent) | Local municipality / building authority, proof that premises meet structural safety and accessibility standards. |
| Director / Principal ID & appointment letter | Thai national ID (or passport for foreign principals where permitted) plus a formal letter of appointment signed and sealed by the school entity. |
| Director / Principal educational certificates | Bachelor’s degree or higher, certified copy; foreign certificates must be translated and legalised; KSP recognition may be required for teaching-role directors. |
| Staff list & employment contracts | Signed contracts with job descriptions for all initial staff; foreign staff must hold valid work permits. |
| Criminal record check (director, principal, key staff) | Issued by the competent authority in the individual’s home country; certified translation and consular legalisation for foreign documents. |
| Health, safety & sanitation certificate | Local health office / relevant authority, inspection report confirming compliance with sanitation and safety standards. |
| Financial statements or proof of operational funding | Bank statements or audited financial statements demonstrating sufficient capital to operate the school. |
For foreign-sourced documents, remember that Thailand does not accept apostille authentication for domestic regulatory purposes. All foreign public documents must be legalised through the originating country’s foreign ministry and then authenticated by the Royal Thai Embassy or Consulate in that jurisdiction. This legalisation chain adds time and cost, begin the process early.
The end-to-end school license timeline Thailand applicants should plan for depends heavily on document readiness and the complexity of the premises. A realistic range is:
Within the OPEC review phase, industry observers expect the regulator to adhere to a 60–90 day processing target for complete applications, consistent with the standardisation efforts introduced in 2025–2026. Applicants should note the following deadline triggers:
The cost to apply for a school license in Thailand comprises government fees, professional-service fees, and ancillary expenses. Exact government fees vary by licence type, region, and the applicable ministerial regulation in force at the time of filing, applicants should verify current amounts directly with OPEC.
| Item | Amount (Typical) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| OPEC / MoE application and processing fee | Varies (small administrative fee) | Confirm current amount with OPEC; amount depends on licence type and region. |
| Teachers’ Council (KSP) licence application fee | Approximately THB 500 per application | KSP P‑licence guidance indicates a 500 baht fee for certain online services, verify for each licence type. |
| Building inspection / AOR documentation | Variable | Municipal inspection fees plus consultant costs for building-permit compliance. |
| Translation, notarisation & legalisation | Variable (per page) | Certified translation and consular legalisation costs for all foreign-language documents. |
| Legal / licensing agent professional fee | Market rate (fixed or hourly) | Covers document preparation, submission, inspection attendance, and appeals support. |
Schools operating as Thai limited companies are subject to corporate income tax and may be liable for VAT on certain non-educational services. Specific tax incentives may be available for BOI-promoted educational projects. Applicants should seek tax advice alongside the licensing process.
In 2025 and early 2026, OPEC and the Ministry of Education introduced several procedural refinements aimed at making the school licence application process more transparent and predictable. The likely practical effect of these changes is threefold. First, OPEC has standardised its application forms and inspection checklists, reducing the ambiguity that previously led to inconsistent requirements across provincial offices. Second, the regulator has signalled a target review window of 60–90 days for complete applications, giving applicants a more reliable planning horizon. Third, document formalities have become stricter, OPEC now scrutinises legalisation chains for foreign documents more closely and expects all translations to be performed by certified translators.
For applicants, the practical advice is clear: use the latest prescribed forms available on opec.go.th, begin foreign-document legalisation well in advance, and ensure every document in the file is complete before submission. A complete initial submission dramatically reduces the likelihood of query letters and keeps the application within the standard review window.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jirawat Leelawanich at JIRAWAT & ASSOCIATES LAW OFFICE, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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