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Last reviewed: 16 May 2026
Thailand’s rules on public wills have undergone their most significant overhaul in more than sixty years. The Ministerial Regulation on the Preparation of Wills and Declarations of Intention Concerning Inheritance, B.E. 2569 (กฎกระทรวงการทำพินัยกรรมหรือการแสดงเจตนาเกี่ยวกับมรดก พ.ศ. 2569), took effect on 24 March 2026, standardising how public wills in Thailand are prepared, witnessed and registered at district offices nationwide. For Thai citizens and the large expatriate community holding Thai-based assets, the regulation creates new procedural requirements, and new protections, that demand immediate attention. This guide explains what changed, walks through the registration process step by step, and identifies the risks that arise when the new procedures are not followed correctly.
The Ministerial Regulation B.E. 2569, published in the Royal Gazette and confirmed by the Thai government on its official news portal, replaced the previous ad hoc procedural framework that had governed district-office will registration since the 1960s. The regulation’s scope extends beyond public wills to cover secret wills deposited at district offices and certain inheritance-related declarations, but its most significant practical impact falls on the public-will process under Section 1658 of the Civil and Commercial Code.
The core changes are as follows:
| Date | Event | Practical Effect |
|---|---|---|
| January 2026 | Cabinet approval and Royal Gazette publication of the draft Ministerial Regulation | Legal community and media alerted to forthcoming changes; preparatory guidance issued by DOPA |
| 24 March 2026 | Ministerial Regulation B.E. 2569 enters into force | New registration procedures, standard forms and nationwide district-office access take effect immediately |
| Ongoing (2026–) | Departmental guidance and district-office rollout by DOPA / Office for Civil Registration | Implementation details, updated forms, fee schedules and staff training circulars, continue to be issued; practitioners should monitor DOPA bulletins |
Before examining the registration process, it helps to understand where public wills sit within the broader framework of Thai succession law. The Civil and Commercial Code, Sections 1655–1672, recognises several forms of valid wills:
| Will Type | Legal Basis | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|
| Written will (holographic or witnessed) | Section 1656 | Written by or in the presence of the testator; signed by the testator and at least two witnesses. Most common form used by foreigners in practice. |
| Public will (will by public document) | Section 1658 | Testator declares wishes orally to a district officer (Nai Amphur) before at least two witnesses; officer records and reads back the declaration; all parties sign. Registered in the official district-office will register. |
| Secret will | Section 1660 | Testator seals the will and presents it to the district officer before at least two witnesses, declaring it to be their will; officer records the deposit on the envelope and signs together with witnesses. |
| Oral will (emergency) | Section 1663 | Permitted only in imminent peril of death; declared before at least two witnesses. Expires one month after the emergency ceases. |
Industry observers note that the public will is widely regarded as the most secure form of testamentary instrument in Thailand because it is created and held by a government authority, reducing the risk of forgery, loss or disputes over authenticity. Expats who hold Thai real estate, particularly condominium units or leasehold interests, may find that a registered public will significantly simplifies the probate and title-transfer process. The district office’s official record can be produced directly to the Land Department and to the courts, whereas a private written will typically requires additional authentication steps. For individuals with assets in multiple jurisdictions, the public will can be coordinated alongside a separate will covering foreign assets to avoid conflicts.
Under Thai law, any person aged 15 years or older who is of sound mind may make a will. There is no citizenship or residency requirement: foreigners do not need permanent residency, a Thai visa or a house registration book (tabien baan) to execute a valid public will. The testator must, however, be able to present acceptable identification at the district office, typically a passport for foreigners or a national ID card for Thai citizens.
The 2026 Ministerial Regulation reinforces the district officer’s obligation to verify that the testator is acting voluntarily and is mentally competent. Where the testator is elderly, infirm or there is any indication of diminished capacity, the officer may request supporting documentation.
Although the law does not mandate a medical certificate for every testator, obtaining one from a licensed physician shortly before the appointment is considered best practice, particularly for testators over 70 or those with a history of cognitive illness. A contemporaneous medical certificate creates a strong evidential record against future claims of incapacity or undue influence. The forensic examination of signatures and handwriting on wills has become an increasingly common aspect of Thai succession disputes, making proactive evidence preservation essential.
The process of registering a public will at the district office under the 2026 Ministerial Regulation follows a defined procedural flow. The steps below reflect the standardised approach outlined in the DOPA practice manual and the regulation itself.
Preparing the correct documents in advance avoids delays and return visits. The public will registration checklist below covers the essential items:
| Item | Why It Is Needed | Example Documents |
|---|---|---|
| Testator’s identity document | District officer must verify the testator’s identity before recording the declaration | Thai national ID card; valid passport (foreigners); long-term visa documentation (optional, for context) |
| House registration book (if available) | Confirms domicile for administrative records; not legally required for foreigners | Tabien baan (blue or yellow book) |
| Asset schedule / list of property | Allows the testator to declare specific bequests clearly; reduces ambiguity | Title deeds (Chanote / Nor Sor 3 Gor), condominium ownership certificates, bank account details, vehicle registration |
| Beneficiary details | Officer records full names and identification of all beneficiaries | Beneficiaries’ ID card numbers, passport numbers, addresses |
| Witnesses’ identity documents | At least two witnesses must be identified and recorded | Thai ID card or passport for each witness |
| Medical certificate (recommended) | Evidence of mental capacity; protects against future challenges | Letter from licensed physician dated within 30 days of registration |
| Interpreter or bilingual assistant (if applicable) | Testator must understand the declaration read back by the officer | Certified interpreter; bilingual lawyer |
On arrival, the testator and witnesses report to the civil registration section. The 2026 procedure follows these standardised steps:
A public will under Section 1658 of the Civil and Commercial Code requires at least two witnesses to be present throughout the entire process, from the oral declaration through the read-back and signing. Witnesses must be adults of sound mind. The Code disqualifies certain persons from acting as witnesses to a will, including minors, persons of unsound mind, and those who are deaf, mute or blind. Crucially, a beneficiary named in the will, and their spouse, should not serve as a witness, as this may render the bequest to that beneficiary void under Section 1653.
District offices charge a modest administrative fee for public will registration. Practitioners should verify the current fee schedule with the specific district office, as DOPA circulars may update amounts. The testator receives a certified copy of the will; additional certified copies can typically be requested for a small per-page fee. It is advisable to retain the official receipt as proof of registration and to store the certified copy separately from other personal documents.
The nature of a public will, an oral declaration before a district officer, generally requires the testator’s personal attendance. Industry observers note that remote or proxy execution is not contemplated by the Ministerial Regulation or by Section 1658. Where a testator is bedridden or physically unable to travel, some district offices may arrange for an officer to attend the testator’s location (hospital or home), although this is discretionary and should be confirmed in advance with the relevant Amphur. For individuals who cannot attend any district office, a privately drafted written will under Section 1656 may be a more practical alternative.
Foreigners can make a public will in Thailand regardless of visa status, residency or nationality. The process is the same as for Thai nationals, with a few additional practical considerations that affect wills for expats in Thailand.
Expats who hold assets in South-East Asian jurisdictions outside Thailand may also benefit from reviewing how neighbouring countries handle cross-border succession, for instance, the rules governing wills for foreigners in Vietnam or the treatment of inheritance estates of foreigners deceased in Vietnam.
A registered public will streamlines the post-death inheritance procedures in Thailand. When the testator dies, the certified copy of the public will, or the original held at the district office, serves as primary evidence of testamentary intent. The key stages in Thailand estate administration are as follows:
Thai law requires a court-appointed administrator for virtually all estates, whether or not a will exists. The likely practical effect is that a registered public will accelerates, rather than eliminates, the probate process, because the court can rely on the district office’s authenticated record rather than requiring extensive proof of the will’s validity. For smaller estates where beneficiaries agree, the process may be completed in a matter of months. Contested estates or estates involving foreign assets may take significantly longer.
A critical question for anyone who already holds a Thai will is whether the 2026 Ministerial Regulation invalidates existing documents. The answer is no. The regulation governs procedure at the district-office level; it does not alter the substantive rules of the Civil and Commercial Code that determine the validity of wills in Thailand.
Public wills registered before 24 March 2026 under the previous procedural framework remain legally valid. Similarly, private written wills under Section 1656 and secret wills under Section 1660 are unaffected, they continue to be governed by the same Code provisions as before. There is no legal requirement to re-register an existing will.
That said, individuals who registered a public will many years ago may wish to consider voluntarily re-registering under the new standardised forms. The likely practical benefit is an updated registration record that conforms to the format now expected by courts and the Land Department, potentially reducing administrative friction during probate. Anyone whose circumstances have changed, new assets, new beneficiaries, marriage, divorce, should treat the 2026 reform as a prompt to review and update their estate plans.
The standardised procedures introduced by the 2026 Ministerial Regulation are designed to reduce disputes, but they do not eliminate them entirely. Common risk scenarios involving public wills include:
Legal representation is not legally required to make a public will, but engaging an administrative-law practitioner is strongly advisable in the following situations: high-value or complex estates; cross-border asset structures; any indication of family disputes or potential challenges; cases involving elderly or vulnerable testators; and any instance where a district office raises procedural objections. In urgent cases, for example, where an interested party seeks to prevent the registration of a will alleged to be fraudulent, emergency injunctions may be available through the courts.
The following condensed checklist summarises the essential steps and documents for registering a public will at a Thai district office under the 2026 Ministerial Regulation:
The 2026 Ministerial Regulation represents a meaningful modernisation of public wills in Thailand, introducing standardised procedures that benefit testators, heirs and the administrative system alike. For Thai citizens and expatriates with Thai-sited assets, the practical next step is straightforward: review your current estate plan, gather the documents listed in the checklist above, and contact an experienced administrative-law practitioner to ensure that your public will is registered correctly and coordinated with any wills in other jurisdictions. Acting promptly reduces the risk of procedural complications and ensures that your testamentary wishes are recorded in the most secure form available under Thai law.
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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