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M&A Lawyers Thailand 2026: Nominee Shareholder Rules, Company Registration & Tax Risk

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Last reviewed: 10 May 2026

Thailand’s mergers-and-acquisitions landscape shifted materially on 1 January 2026, when strengthened nominee shareholder rules, a redesigned beneficial-ownership declaration regime under the Ministry of Commerce (MOC), and parallel amendments to the Trade Competition Act all took effect simultaneously. For M&A lawyers in Thailand, and for the general counsel, CFOs and private-equity teams who instruct them, these reforms create new compliance gates at every stage of a transaction, from preliminary due diligence through post-closing integration.

This guide translates the 2026 changes into concrete deal-level risk controls: the statutory tests that now apply, the tax exposures that follow when those tests are failed, the merger-filing obligations and fee structures that have changed, and the SPA drafting and due diligence playbook that every buyer and seller must now adopt.

Executive Summary, What Changed and What Deals Must Do Now

Three regulatory streams converged on 1 January 2026. First, the MOC’s revised company-registration framework now requires every Thai private limited company, branch office and representative office to file a beneficial-ownership declaration identifying the natural persons who ultimately control the entity, replacing the previously informal self-certification with a structured, digitally filed form subject to verification and penalties. Second, the nominee shareholder provisions under the Foreign Business Act and related MOC enforcement guidelines were tightened: authorities now apply a multi-factor economic-substance test (rather than a simple equity-percentage check) to determine whether a Thai national shareholder is acting as a genuine investor or as a nominee for a foreign party.

Third, the Trade Competition Act amendments raised merger-notification thresholds and restructured filing fees, altering the economics and timing of deal execution.

The practical effect for M&A lawyers in Thailand is that every transaction signed from 2026 onward must address nominee risk, beneficial-ownership compliance and merger-filing obligations as first-order deal issues, not as back-office administrative steps handled after closing. Industry observers expect the Revenue Department to use the new MOC data as a starting point for tax audits, making nominee re-characterisation a live tax risk rather than a theoretical one.

GC checklist, five actions this week:

  • Audit existing shareholder registers. Confirm every Thai-national shareholder can demonstrate economic substance, source of funds, board participation, dividend receipt.
  • File or update the beneficial-ownership declaration. The MOC’s online portal now requires this as a condition of good standing.
  • Model merger-filing obligations early. Recalculate whether your deal crosses the revised Trade Competition Act thresholds and budget for the new fee bands.
  • Add nominee-specific warranties to your SPA. Standard tax indemnities are no longer sufficient; nominee and beneficial-ownership representations must be explicit.
  • Request the target’s full tax and intercompany documentation. Transfer pricing files, withholding-tax records and intercompany loan agreements are now essential day-one due diligence items.

Timeline and Who Is Affected

The 2026 reforms did not arrive without warning, but their simultaneous effective date caught many deal teams mid-transaction. The timeline below consolidates the key dates, the rules that activated, and their practical consequences for M&A participants.

Date Rule / Measure Practical Consequence for M&A
1 January 2026 MOC revised company-registration forms and mandatory beneficial-ownership declaration All Thai entities must file BO declarations via the MOC digital portal; failure blocks certain registrations and triggers penalties.
1 January 2026 Strengthened nominee shareholder enforcement guidelines (MOC + Foreign Business Act) Authorities apply a multi-factor economic-substance test; nominee arrangements may be unwound and foreign-ownership limits re-applied retroactively.
1 January 2026 Trade Competition Act amendments, revised merger-notification thresholds and fee schedule Deals above the new thresholds must notify the OTCC pre-completion; filing fees recalculated under a banded structure.
Ongoing (quarterly) Revenue Department data-sharing with MOC on BO declarations BO filings become a real-time audit trigger; tax due diligence Thailand must now cover BO compliance history.

The reforms apply to all entity types, Thai private limited companies, public limited companies, foreign branches, representative offices and partnerships, though the depth of the BO declaration requirement and the penalty regime differ by entity type. Listed companies face additional obligations under securities-law disclosure rules, making public M&A particularly sensitive to timing.

The New Nominee Shareholder Rules, Scope, Tests, and Deal Impacts

Thailand has long restricted foreign ownership in certain sectors through the Foreign Business Act (FBA). The 2026 reforms do not change the FBA’s sector lists or ownership caps; instead, they fundamentally change how Thai authorities determine whether a Thai-national shareholder is a genuine investor or a nominee acting on behalf of a foreign party. This distinction is critical for M&A lawyers in Thailand because a finding of nominee status can void a company’s business licence, trigger criminal penalties and, as explored below, create immediate tax re-characterisation exposure.

The Multi-Factor Economic-Substance Test

Under the strengthened enforcement guidelines published in the Royal Gazette, authorities now evaluate nominee status using a holistic set of indicators rather than a single ownership-percentage check. The key factors include the source and traceability of the Thai shareholder’s capital contribution, the shareholder’s actual participation in management and decision-making, the pattern of dividend distributions and whether dividends are retained or passed through, and the existence of side agreements, loan-back arrangements or powers of attorney that transfer economic control to a foreign party.

Indicator What It Suggests Documentary Proof to Collect in Due Diligence
Capital contribution funded by loan from the foreign party Thai shareholder may lack genuine economic risk, high nominee risk Bank statements, loan agreements, promissory notes, fund-flow analysis
Thai shareholder has no board seat and does not attend shareholder meetings Absence of management participation, moderate-to-high nominee risk Board minutes, attendance records, signed resolutions
Dividends declared to Thai shareholder are immediately remitted offshore Pass-through pattern consistent with nominee holding Dividend payment records, bank transfer confirmations, withholding-tax filings
Side agreement grants foreign party a call option or irrevocable proxy Economic control resides with the foreign party, strong nominee indicator Shareholders’ agreements, side letters, powers of attorney, option agreements
Thai shareholder holds shares in multiple unrelated FBA-restricted companies Pattern consistent with professional nominee services Corporate search results, shareholder registries across entities

How Nominees Create Tax Re-Characterisation Exposure

When a nominee arrangement is identified, the Revenue Department may re-characterise the underlying economic transactions. If a Thai-national shareholder is determined to have held shares on behalf of a foreign party, dividends paid to that shareholder may be treated as constructive distributions to the foreign beneficial owner, triggering withholding tax at the applicable treaty or domestic rate, plus penalties and surcharges for late payment. In asset-deal structures, the Revenue Department may re-attribute the seller’s gain to the actual beneficial owner, potentially applying different tax rates or denying deductions claimed on the basis of the nominee’s tax status.

The likely practical effect is that buyers who inherit an unremediated nominee structure acquire a latent tax liability that may crystallise at the Revenue Department’s discretion.

Company Registration Thailand 2026, Beneficial Ownership Declaration

The MOC’s revised company-registration framework is the administrative backbone of the 2026 nominee reforms. Every company registered in Thailand must now file a structured beneficial-ownership declaration through the MOC’s digital portal, identifying every natural person who, directly or indirectly, holds ultimate control over the entity. “Ultimate control” is defined broadly: it includes not only majority shareholding but also the ability to appoint or remove directors, control voting rights through agreements, or exercise dominant influence over business decisions.

What the New Filing Requires

The revised registration forms require disclosure of the full name, nationality, identification number and residential address of each beneficial owner, together with a description of the nature and extent of their control. Where control is exercised through a chain of entities, the declaration must trace that chain to the ultimate natural person. Companies must update the declaration within fifteen days of any change in beneficial-ownership structure, a requirement that makes M&A closings a trigger event for immediate re-filing.

Penalties for non-compliance include administrative fines, the potential refusal by the registrar to process subsequent corporate filings (such as director changes or capital increases), and, for wilfully false declarations, criminal liability for the directors who sign the filing. For M&A teams, the practical consequence is that a target company’s BO declaration history becomes an essential due diligence item: a missing or inaccurate declaration signals both regulatory risk and potential tax exposure.

Updating Registers During an M&A Transaction

Sellers must produce a certified extract of the current BO declaration, together with historical filings, as part of pre-signing disclosure. Buyers should verify these against the actual shareholder register, board minutes and fund-flow documentation. At closing, the incoming shareholder structure must be reflected in a new BO declaration filed within the fifteen-day window. Failure to do so, or filing a declaration that does not accurately reflect the post-closing reality, exposes the buyer’s directors to personal liability under the revised rules.

Trade Competition Act Amendments: Filing Thresholds, Fees and Timelines

The 2026 amendments to the Trade Competition Act restructured the merger-notification regime administered by the Office of Trade Competition Commission (OTCC). The changes affect three areas that matter directly to deal teams: the financial thresholds that trigger a mandatory filing, the fee schedule for filing, and the procedural timeline for OTCC review.

Under the revised thresholds, a merger notification is required where the combined post-merger turnover or assets of the merging parties in Thailand exceed the levels prescribed by the OTCC’s updated notification rules. Early indications suggest the revised thresholds are higher in nominal terms than the previous levels, reflecting inflation and market growth, but the OTCC has also broadened the definition of “merger” to capture certain joint-venture formations and asset acquisitions that were previously outside the notification net.

The fee schedule has moved to a banded structure. Filing fees are now calculated as a percentage of the combined Thai turnover of the merging parties, subject to minimum and maximum caps. For mid-market deals, this may represent a meaningful increase over the flat fee that previously applied. Deal teams should model the estimated filing fee early in the transaction timetable, as it affects closing-cost allocations and may influence the choice between pre-merger notification and post-closing notification where both are available.

Procedurally, the OTCC has published guidance stating that it will aim to issue a decision within a defined review period from the date a complete notification is accepted. In practice, industry observers expect the OTCC to exercise its power to request supplementary information, which pauses the review clock, more frequently under the new regime. M&A lawyers in Thailand should therefore build a generous regulatory-approval buffer into deal timetables, particularly for transactions in concentrated sectors such as telecommunications, energy and financial services.

Tax Risks in Practice, Re-Characterisation, Transfer Pricing and M&A Lawyers Thailand Must Address

The 2026 reforms do not create new taxes, but they dramatically increase the likelihood that existing tax rules will be enforced against structures that rely on nominee arrangements, related-party pricing or aggressive intercompany financing. The following analysis maps the principal tax exposures that M&A lawyers in Thailand and their clients must now quantify.

Re-Characterisation of Nominee Arrangements

Where the Revenue Department determines that a Thai shareholder was acting as a nominee, it may re-characterise dividends, management fees or other payments made to that shareholder as constructive income of the foreign beneficial owner. The tax consequences are significant: withholding tax on dividends paid to non-treaty-country residents is assessed at the domestic rate, and even where a tax treaty applies, the beneficial-ownership requirement in most of Thailand’s treaties means that a nominee cannot claim treaty benefits on behalf of the person it represents. Back-assessments may cover up to the statutory limitation period, with penalties and surcharges compounding the exposure.

Transfer Pricing Red Flags and Documentation to Request

Related-party transactions are a second major risk area. Thailand’s transfer-pricing rules, administered by the Revenue Department and aligned with OECD principles, require that transactions between related parties be conducted at arm’s length. In the M&A context, the most common red flags include management fees paid to offshore affiliates without clear service documentation, intercompany loans bearing interest rates significantly above or below market, and the sale or licensing of intellectual property at prices that do not reflect comparable market transactions. Buyers should request the target’s transfer-pricing documentation file, any Revenue Department correspondence on transfer-pricing matters, and copies of all intercompany agreements as standard day-one due diligence items.

Deal Type Most Likely Tax Issue Key Mitigations
Share acquisition (Thai target) Inherited nominee re-characterisation risk; historic withholding-tax shortfalls; transfer-pricing adjustments on intercompany transactions Full tax due diligence; nominee-specific SPA warranty; tax indemnity with escrow or holdback
Asset acquisition VAT on asset transfer; specific business tax on real-property transfers; stamp duty; potential re-attribution of gain to foreign beneficial owner Structure review to optimise VAT recovery; obtain seller’s tax clearance certificate; price adjustment for transfer taxes
Joint-venture formation Transfer-pricing risk on contributed assets; thin-capitalisation exposure on shareholder loans; nominee risk if Thai JV partner lacks substance Arm’s-length valuation of contributed assets; appropriate debt-to-equity ratio; genuine economic participation by Thai partner

Corporate Tax Compliance, VAT, Withholding and Thin Capitalisation

Beyond nominee and transfer-pricing risk, corporate tax compliance issues permeate Thailand M&A transactions. VAT applies at the standard rate to the transfer of business assets (unless a going-concern exemption is available), and the buyer must confirm that input-tax credits have been properly claimed and documented. Withholding taxes on payments to non-residents, including dividends, interest, royalties and service fees, require careful review, particularly where treaty benefits were claimed but the underlying beneficial-ownership condition may not have been met. Thin-capitalisation rules, while not codified as a formal debt-to-equity ratio cap, are enforced through the Revenue Department’s power to deny interest deductions on loans deemed excessive relative to the borrower’s equity base.

A comprehensive tax due diligence in Thailand must cover each of these areas.

Buyer’s and Seller’s Due Diligence and SPA Drafting Checklist

The 2026 reforms mean that standard M&A due diligence checklists require a significant update. The following document-request list and SPA drafting guidance reflect the current compliance environment.

Buyer’s document-request list, essential items:

  • Beneficial-ownership declarations. Current and historical filings with the MOC, plus supporting identity documents for each declared beneficial owner.
  • Shareholder register and fund-flow records. Complete register, share-transfer ledger, and bank statements showing the source of each shareholder’s capital contribution.
  • Nominee-related agreements. All shareholders’ agreements, side letters, option agreements, powers of attorney and irrevocable proxies, whether or not the target characterises them as nominee arrangements.
  • Tax filings and assessments. Corporate income-tax returns for the statutory limitation period; VAT filings; withholding-tax certificates; any Revenue Department correspondence, audits or assessments.
  • Transfer-pricing documentation. Master file, local file and any country-by-country reports; intercompany agreements; benchmarking studies.
  • Intercompany loan agreements. All shareholder loans and related-party financing, with evidence of interest payments, withholding-tax compliance and arm’s-length pricing.
  • OTCC filings and competition-law correspondence. Prior merger notifications, exemption applications and any OTCC inquiries.

SPA drafting, sample clause language (adapt to transaction specifics):

Clause 1, Beneficial-ownership warranty: “The Seller warrants that the BO declarations filed with the MOC in respect of the Target are true, complete and accurate in all material respects, that the Target’s register of shareholders reflects the true beneficial ownership of its shares, and that no person holds shares in the Target as a nominee or agent for any other person.”

Clause 2, Nominee disclosure: “The Seller represents and warrants that no current or former shareholder of the Target holds or has held shares pursuant to any nominee agreement, side letter, trust arrangement, oral understanding or other arrangement under which the economic benefit or voting control of those shares is or was vested in a person other than the registered holder.”

Clause 3, Tax indemnity: “The Seller shall indemnify the Buyer on an after-tax basis against all Losses arising from or in connection with (a) any re-characterisation by the Revenue Department of any payment made by the Target as a constructive dividend, deemed distribution or transfer-pricing adjustment, and (b) any penalty, surcharge or interest imposed in connection with a finding that any shareholder of the Target held shares as a nominee, in each case to the extent relating to the period prior to Closing.”

These clauses should be supported by a disclosure letter in which the seller discloses known exceptions to the warranties. Where nominee risk is identified, buyers should consider an escrow or holdback mechanism, typically holding a portion of the purchase price for the statutory limitation period applicable to tax assessments, as a practical enforcement tool for the indemnity. Guidance on protecting minority shareholders in such structures is also essential where the target has multiple stakeholders.

Enforcement, Investigations and Dispute Defence

The 2026 reforms are backed by a multi-agency enforcement architecture. The MOC conducts initial verification of BO declarations and may refer suspected nominee arrangements to the Department of Special Investigation (DSI) for criminal prosecution under the FBA. Simultaneously, the Revenue Department receives BO data through its information-sharing arrangement with the MOC and may open a tax audit focused on re-characterisation of payments, denial of treaty benefits and transfer-pricing adjustments. The OTCC enforces compliance with the merger-notification regime, including penalties for failure to notify or for completing a transaction before obtaining clearance.

Common documentary requests in a Revenue Department audit of nominee arrangements include fund-flow evidence tracing each shareholder’s capital contribution, board and shareholder meeting minutes demonstrating (or failing to demonstrate) the Thai shareholder’s active participation, dividend payment and remittance records, and all intercompany agreements and side letters. Administrative penalties for late or incorrect BO filings can include daily fines; criminal penalties under the FBA for operating through nominee shareholders include imprisonment and fines for both the foreign party and the Thai nominee.

Typical Administrative Appeal Track and Timeline

If the Revenue Department issues an assessment based on nominee re-characterisation, the taxpayer has the right to file an administrative objection within the prescribed period. If the objection is rejected, the taxpayer may appeal to the Tax Court. The appeal process can take several years, during which penalties and surcharges continue to accrue unless a stay is obtained. Defence strategies typically focus on demonstrating the Thai shareholder’s genuine economic substance: contemporaneous documentation of the source of funds, evidence of active management participation, retention (rather than pass-through) of dividends, and the absence of side agreements transferring control. Thailand-based tax counsel experienced in Revenue Department disputes should be engaged at the earliest stage of any inquiry.

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.

Practical Annexes, Comparison Table, Red Flags and Resources

The table below summarises reporting obligations by entity type under the 2026 regime, providing a quick reference for M&A deal teams.

Entity Type BO / Nominee Reporting Obligations (2026) Practical Note for M&A Teams
Private limited company (Thai) Must file updated BO declaration on MOC digital portal; disclose all natural persons with ultimate control; update within 15 days of any change. Sellers to provide certified BO extract and supporting statements on nominees before signing.
Foreign branch / representative office BO information required at registration and upon renewal; additional documentation may be requested for branches in FBA-restricted sectors. Confirm branch filings and cross-check Thai tax registrations; verify head-office BO chain.
Listed company (public limited company) Stricter disclosure regime under securities law, plus BO information to the SEC and MOC; enhanced penalties for non-disclosure. Public M&A must consider disclosure timing, market-sensitive information rules and SEC coordination.

If you see these six red flags, stop the deal and escalate:

  • No BO declaration on file. The target has not filed the mandatory beneficial-ownership declaration, immediate regulatory risk.
  • Thai shareholder cannot explain source of funds. Capital contribution was funded by the foreign party or an unidentified third party.
  • Side agreements grant foreign party unilateral control. Call options, irrevocable proxies or blank share-transfer forms exist.
  • Dividends are systematically remitted offshore. Payments to the Thai shareholder are passed through to a foreign account within days.
  • Transfer-pricing documentation is missing or outdated. No master file, local file or benchmarking study exists for material intercompany transactions.
  • Revenue Department correspondence is undisclosed. The seller has failed to disclose pending audits, assessments or information requests.

For a complete operational checklist, see the buyer’s tax due diligence checklist for Thailand M&A 2026 (forthcoming as a downloadable resource). For background on the Thai administrative-contracts framework, consult the companion guide published previously.

Conclusion

The reforms that took effect on 1 January 2026 represent the most significant tightening of Thailand’s nominee, beneficial-ownership and merger-filing regime in over a decade. For M&A lawyers in Thailand and the international deal teams they advise, the message is clear: nominee risk, BO compliance and merger-filing obligations are no longer secondary workstreams, they sit at the centre of every transaction. Buyers who fail to conduct thorough tax due diligence in Thailand, or who rely on standard-form warranties that do not address the 2026 rules, risk acquiring liabilities that may exceed the value of the target itself. Sellers who enter the market without remediated structures and complete BO filings will face price discounts, prolonged negotiations and potential deal failure.

The Global Law Experts lawyer directory connects buyers, sellers and advisors with experienced M&A and tax practitioners across Thailand and more than 190 other jurisdictions.

Sources

  1. Ministry of Commerce (Thailand), Company Registration Guidance
  2. Royal Gazette (Ratchakitcha), Legislative Texts
  3. Office of Trade Competition Commission (OTCC)
  4. Revenue Department (Thailand)
  5. Legal500, Thailand Corporate & M&A
  6. Chambers & Partners, Corporate/M&A Thailand

FAQs

Q1: What are Thailand's 2026 nominee shareholder rules and who must file?
The 2026 rules apply a multi-factor economic-substance test to determine whether a Thai-national shareholder is acting as a genuine investor or as a nominee for a foreign party. Every Thai-registered entity, private limited companies, branches and representative offices, must file a beneficial-ownership declaration with the MOC, disclosing the natural persons who hold ultimate control. Failure to file, or filing a false declaration, triggers administrative fines and potential criminal liability.
Buyers who acquire a target with an incomplete or inaccurate BO declaration inherit the regulatory risk: the MOC may block post-closing corporate filings, and the Revenue Department may use the discrepancy as the basis for a tax audit and re-characterisation of historical payments. Buyers should verify BO declarations during due diligence and require seller warranties and indemnities covering BO compliance.
Yes. The 2026 amendments introduced a banded fee structure under which filing fees are calculated as a percentage of the combined Thai turnover of the merging parties, subject to minimum and maximum caps. This replaces the flat-fee structure that previously applied and may significantly increase costs for mid-market and large transactions. Deal teams should model the estimated fee early in the transaction timetable using the OTCC’s published guidance.
The highest-priority exposures are: (a) nominee re-characterisation leading to deemed dividends and withholding-tax assessments, (b) transfer-pricing adjustments on intercompany management fees, loans and IP licensing, (c) VAT and specific business tax on asset transfers, and (d) denial of interest deductions on related-party loans under thin-capitalisation principles. Each of these should be covered by specific document requests and addressed in SPA warranties.
Sellers should: update the BO declaration to ensure it is current and accurate, confirm that every Thai shareholder can demonstrate economic substance (source of funds, active participation, dividend retention), prepare a comprehensive disclosure letter addressing any known nominee arrangements, assemble transfer-pricing documentation and intercompany agreements, and resolve any outstanding Revenue Department correspondence before entering the data room.
The company should immediately engage Thailand-based tax counsel experienced in Revenue Department disputes, compile all contemporaneous documentation of shareholder substance (fund-flow records, board minutes, dividend records), and respond within the deadline specified in the request. Delay or incomplete responses increase the risk of an adverse assessment. Counsel should evaluate whether voluntary disclosure of a historical nominee arrangement, accompanied by remediation, may reduce penalties.
In many cases, a genuine restructuring of the shareholding can mitigate ongoing nominee risk, for example, by replacing a nominee shareholder with a party that has demonstrable economic substance, or by applying for an appropriate foreign business licence where the sector permits it. However, historical exposure (back-taxes, penalties, surcharges) cannot be eliminated by post-closing remediation alone. Buyers should use holdback or escrow mechanisms to protect against historical liabilities and require the seller to co-operate in any remediation programme.

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M&A Lawyers Thailand 2026: Nominee Shareholder Rules, Company Registration & Tax Risk

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