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subsidiary vs branch Thailand 2026

Subsidiary vs Branch Office in Thailand (2026): Tax, Liability & Which to Choose

By Global Law Experts
– posted 22 hours ago

Quick Decision Summary
Choose a subsidiary Long-term operations, limited liability, BOI incentives, DTA-optimised dividend repatriation, local hiring and contracting.
Choose a branch Short-term or project-based work, full parent control, no need for local shareholders, and willingness to accept unlimited parent liability.
2026 factor Foreign Business Act reforms have increased nominee-company enforcement and beneficial-ownership scrutiny, making entity-choice consequences more severe than in prior years.

Every foreign investor entering Thailand faces the same threshold question: incorporate a Thai limited company (subsidiary) or register a branch of the overseas parent? The subsidiary vs branch Thailand 2026 decision now carries higher stakes than at any point in the last decade. The Foreign Business Act (FBA) reforms that took effect in 2026 tightened anti-nominee enforcement, broadened beneficial-ownership disclosure and increased penalties for non-compliant structures. At the same time, the Thailand Revenue Department has sharpened its scrutiny of profit-repatriation channels, withholding-tax compliance and transfer-pricing documentation.

A subsidiary and a branch are not the same thing, they differ in legal personality, liability exposure, tax treatment and banking access, and choosing the wrong vehicle can lock an investor into years of unnecessary cost, regulatory friction or, worse, personal liability for the parent company’s directors.

Option A, Subsidiary (Thai Limited Company): What It Is, When It Applies, Who It Suits

A subsidiary in Thailand is a separately incorporated Thai private limited company registered under the Civil and Commercial Code. It is a distinct legal person: it owns assets, incurs liabilities and pays tax in its own name. The foreign parent holds shares, subject to the ownership caps imposed by the FBA, and exercises control through the board and shareholder resolutions, not through direct management of day-to-day operations.

Legal Form and Governance

A Thai private limited company requires a minimum of three shareholders (who may be individuals or corporate entities) and at least one director. Under the FBA, foreign nationals may not hold more than 49 % of shares in a company that operates a business reserved for Thai nationals, unless the company obtains a Foreign Business Licence (FBL) or operates under a Board of Investment (BOI) promotion. The company must maintain a registered office in Thailand, appoint a local auditor, and hold an annual general meeting. Corporate governance follows the Civil and Commercial Code; shareholders’ liability is limited to the unpaid portion of their subscribed shares.

Typical Timeline and Costs

Registration with the Department of Business Development (DBD) can be completed in as few as three to five business days once all documents are in order. The registration fee is calculated on the basis of the company’s registered capital. For most small-to-medium enterprises, the combined cost of company-name reservation, memorandum filing, statutory meeting and registration ranges from approximately THB 15,000 to THB 30,000 in government fees. Legal and advisory fees for structuring, drafting articles of association, and handling the registration process typically add THB 50,000 to THB 150,000 depending on complexity.

Banks generally require a minimum paid-up capital of THB 2 million to THB 3 million for a trading company opening a corporate current account, though BOI-promoted companies may face higher thresholds linked to their investment commitment.

Who Should Prefer a Subsidiary

  • Long-term operators. Companies planning indefinite commercial presence, local employment and customer-facing activity.
  • BOI applicants. Only a Thai-incorporated entity can receive BOI promotional privileges (tax holidays, land-ownership rights, work-permit facilitation).
  • Liability-conscious parents. Shareholders’ exposure is capped at unpaid share capital, the parent’s global balance sheet is not on the line for the subsidiary’s debts.
  • DTA-optimised structures. Dividend withholding tax on distributions from a Thai subsidiary can be reduced under Thailand’s extensive double-taxation agreement network.

Option B, Branch Office: What It Is, When It Applies, Who It Suits

A branch office is not a separate legal entity. It is an extension of the foreign parent company, registered in Thailand under the FBA and authorised to conduct the specific business activities stated in its Foreign Business Licence. The branch operates under the parent’s name, and every obligation the branch incurs is, as a matter of law, an obligation of the parent.

Legal and Liability Consequences

Because the branch has no independent legal personality, the parent company bears unlimited liability for all branch debts, contractual commitments and tortious claims arising in Thailand. Thai courts can, and do, enforce judgments against branch assets first, and creditors retain recourse against the parent’s worldwide assets. This exposure is the single most important structural difference between the branch and subsidiary options, and it is the reason that corporate liability Thailand analysis should drive the decision for any investor with meaningful balance-sheet risk.

Timeline and Operational Costs

Branch registration involves applying for an FBL through the DBD, which typically takes 60 to 120 days depending on the business category (List 2 or List 3 under the FBA). The parent must provide a board resolution authorising the branch, a power of attorney appointing a branch manager resident in Thailand, certified and translated copies of the parent’s certificate of incorporation, articles of association and latest audited financial statements. Government fees for the FBL application and branch registration are comparable to subsidiary incorporation fees, but advisory costs are often higher because of the additional documentation, legalisation and translation requirements.

The branch must bring in and maintain minimum capital in Thailand as stipulated by the FBL, commonly set at THB 3 million or higher.

Who Should Prefer a Branch

  • Project-based operators. Construction contractors, engineering firms or consultancy companies executing a defined-scope contract with a clear end date.
  • Parent-controlled activities. Operations where the parent’s direct management is essential and the overhead of local shareholders, board meetings and Thai corporate governance is unwarranted.
  • Quick market testing. Companies that need a registered presence for a limited period before committing to full incorporation, provided the parent accepts the liability exposure.

Subsidiary vs Branch: Side-by-Side Comparison Table

The following table presents the core decision dimensions for the branch vs subsidiary Thailand choice. Use it as an at-a-glance reference, then read the detailed dimension-by-dimension analysis below for the numbers, rules and practical mitigations.

Dimension Subsidiary (Thai Ltd) Branch Office
Legal personality Separate Thai legal entity; limited liability for shareholders. Extension of foreign parent; no separate legal personality.
Ownership / FBA treatment Treated as Thai company; foreign shareholding capped at 49 % unless FBL or BOI promotion obtained. Classified as foreign; must obtain FBL for each listed business activity.
Capital requirement No statutory minimum (except for FBL/BOI); banks expect THB 2–3 million paid-up. Minimum capital set by FBL conditions; commonly THB 3 million+.
Corporate income tax 20 % on net worldwide income (for Thai-resident company). 20 % on Thai-sourced income only.
Withholding on repatriation 10 % WHT on dividends (reducible under DTAs). 10 % WHT on branch remittance (profit after CIT).
Liability to creditors Limited to company assets; parent shielded. Unlimited, parent liable for all branch obligations.
Banking access Easier; Thai banks treat local companies as standard customers. Possible but subject to stricter documentary requirements; some banks decline branch accounts.
BOI eligibility Yes, only Thai-incorporated entities may apply. No, branches are ineligible for BOI promotion.
FBA 2026 nominee risk Increased enforcement; robust BO disclosure essential. Not applicable (no Thai shareholders), but parent scrutiny increased.
Best suited for Permanent operations, local hiring, BOI incentives, limited liability. Short-term projects, parent-controlled activity, quick market testing.

Three factors typically decide the choice:

  • Liability. If the parent cannot accept unlimited exposure to Thai-law claims, a subsidiary is the only viable option.
  • Duration. A project with a defined end date under two years favours a branch; anything longer favours a subsidiary.
  • BOI incentives. Only a subsidiary can obtain tax holidays and enhanced work-permit quotas through the BOI.

Dimension-by-Dimension Analysis

Thailand Tax Implications: Corporate Tax, Branch Taxation, WHT and DTAs

Both a Thai subsidiary and a branch office pay corporate income tax at the standard rate of 20 % on net taxable profits, as specified by the Thailand Revenue Code. The key differences lie in the tax base and in repatriation mechanics.

Item Subsidiary (Thai Ltd) Branch Office
Corporate income tax rate 20 % on net worldwide income 20 % on Thai-sourced income
WHT on repatriation 10 % on dividends (domestic rate); reducible to 0–5 % under select DTAs 10 % on branch remittance of after-tax profits
VAT registration Required if annual taxable turnover exceeds THB 1.8 million Same threshold and obligations
Transfer-pricing documentation Required for related-party transactions with parent Head-office cost allocations subject to TP scrutiny
Effective tax on THB 10 m profit repatriated CIT THB 2 m + WHT THB 0.8 m = THB 2.8 m (28 % effective; lower with DTA) CIT THB 2 m + WHT THB 0.8 m = THB 2.8 m (28 % effective; no DTA relief on branch remittance WHT)

A subsidiary distributing dividends can often reduce the 10 % dividend WHT using one of Thailand’s 60-plus DTAs. For example, the Thailand–Japan DTA caps dividend WHT at 10 % for portfolio holdings but allows further reductions for qualifying substantial holdings, while the Thailand–Netherlands DTA has historically offered competitive rates. By contrast, the 10 % branch remittance tax is levied on after-tax profits deemed remitted to the head office and is generally not reducible under DTAs. Industry observers expect the Revenue Department to increase audit activity on branch remittance calculations following the 2026 enforcement clarifications, making accurate record-keeping critical.

Repatriation of Profits and Withholding

The repatriation of profits tax treatment is where the subsidiary option gains a structural advantage for most long-term investors. Dividends paid by a Thai subsidiary to a non-resident parent are subject to withholding, but that withholding is treaty-eligible. A parent resident in a jurisdiction with a favourable DTA can achieve an effective combined tax rate (CIT plus WHT) well below 28 %. A branch, meanwhile, pays the same 20 % CIT and then a flat 10 % on profits deemed remitted, regardless of DTA coverage, producing a fixed 28 % effective rate in most cases. For investors from treaty-network jurisdictions, the subsidiary route typically delivers a lower after-tax repatriation cost.

For investors from non-treaty jurisdictions, the two vehicles produce a near-identical effective rate, and the choice should be driven by liability and operational considerations instead.

Cost and Timing

Setup costs are broadly comparable, but the branch route is slower and administratively heavier.

  • Subsidiary incorporation: Government fees of approximately THB 15,000–30,000; legal and advisory fees of THB 50,000–150,000; timeline of 3–5 business days (DBD registration) plus 2–4 weeks for bank account opening.
  • Branch registration: Government fees for the FBL application and registration of approximately THB 20,000–40,000; legal, translation and legalisation costs of THB 80,000–200,000; timeline of 60–120 days for FBL issuance plus 4–8 weeks for bank account opening.
  • Ongoing annual costs: Both structures require a statutory audit, annual tax filings and bookkeeping. A subsidiary must file half-year and annual CIT returns, an annual financial statement and hold an AGM. A branch must file equivalent tax returns, maintain separate branch accounts and provide translated parent-company financials when requested by the DBD or Revenue Department.

Liability and Enforceability

Liability is the sharpest differentiator. A subsidiary ring-fences the parent: creditors can pursue the Thai company’s assets but cannot pierce the corporate veil to reach the parent’s global balance sheet absent fraud, director misconduct or a court finding of sham incorporation. A branch offers no such protection. Every contract signed, every employee hired and every tort committed by the branch is a direct obligation of the foreign parent. Thai court judgments against a branch are enforceable against the parent under the reciprocal enforcement regime applicable between Thailand and the parent’s home jurisdiction, and even where no formal enforcement treaty exists, creditors can use the Thai judgment as evidence in fresh proceedings abroad.

For any investor deploying significant capital, employing staff or undertaking construction or engineering work, this distinction should override marginal tax or cost considerations.

Regulatory Burden and Foreign Business Act 2026 Implications

The Foreign Business Act 2026 reforms introduced three changes that materially affect the subsidiary-vs-branch calculus. First, the amendments strengthened nominee-company enforcement by giving the DBD broader investigative powers to examine the true source of capital and voting control behind Thai shareholders. Second, the reforms increased penalties for acting as a nominee or for using a nominee to circumvent foreign-ownership limits. Third, the amendments expanded the scope of beneficial-ownership disclosure requirements, requiring companies to file more granular information about ultimate beneficial owners. For a subsidiary, these changes mean that traditional nominee-share arrangements, where Thai nationals held shares on behalf of the foreign investor, now carry serious criminal and administrative risk.

The practical effect is that investors who cannot structure genuine Thai co-ownership must either obtain an FBL, secure BOI promotion or accept minority economic participation. For a branch, the FBA reforms increase scrutiny on the scope of permitted activities and on the parent’s compliance with FBL conditions, but the nominee-ownership risk is simply not relevant because there are no Thai shareholders to begin with. The full analysis of these reforms is covered in our Thailand Foreign Business Act 2026 analysis.

Banking and Finance Structuring

Thai commercial banks are more comfortable dealing with locally incorporated companies than with branches. A Thai subsidiary can open current and savings accounts, apply for overdraft facilities, issue letters of credit and obtain project-finance or working-capital loans secured against local assets. Documentary requirements are standard: certificate of incorporation, shareholder list, board resolution, director identification and proof of registered address. A branch, by contrast, must provide all of the above plus certified and translated copies of the parent’s incorporation documents, its latest audited financial statements, the FBL and the power of attorney appointing the branch manager. Some banks decline to open accounts for branches altogether; others require a parent-company guarantee or insist on higher minimum balances.

Cross-border cash pooling between a subsidiary and its parent is achievable but must comply with Bank of Thailand foreign-exchange controls and transfer-pricing rules. For branches, head-office funding is treated as capital injection or inter-office transfer rather than a loan, limiting the deductibility of interest and narrowing the range of financing structures available.

What Changes in 2026: FBA Reforms and Tax Enforcement

The 2026 round of Foreign Business Act amendments represents the most significant tightening of Thailand’s foreign-investment framework since the original Act was passed in 1999. Three reform pillars reshape the subsidiary vs branch Thailand 2026 decision.

Anti-nominee enforcement. The DBD now has the power to investigate the flow of funds behind Thai shareholders and to request evidence of genuine investment and independent decision-making. Early indications suggest that the DBD is prioritising industries where nominee arrangements have been most prevalent, including property development, hospitality and retail. For investors structuring a subsidiary, the practical consequence is that all Thai co-shareholders must be able to demonstrate genuine economic interest and independent voting control.

Beneficial-ownership transparency. Subsidiaries must file enhanced beneficial-ownership declarations identifying all natural persons who ultimately own or control 25 % or more of shares or voting rights. Branches must file equivalent disclosure in respect of the parent entity. Failure to file carries administrative fines and, in serious cases, suspension of the FBL.

Nominee-company enforcement. The revised penalties for nominee arrangements include fines of up to THB 1 million and imprisonment of up to three years for individuals who act as nominees, and parallel penalties for the foreign national who uses the nominee. The likely practical effect will be a sharp decline in the use of nominee-share structures and an increase in demand for FBL applications and BOI promotions as the lawful routes to foreign-majority ownership. Investors should treat these reforms as eliminating the nominee option from the decision framework entirely.

Decision Framework: When to Choose Subsidiary vs Branch

Use the rules below to match your operational profile to the right structure. Each trigger condition is drawn from the legal, tax and regulatory analysis above.

If your priority is… Choose
Limited liability and permanent local presence Subsidiary
Hiring local staff and entering local contracts Subsidiary
Obtaining BOI tax holidays or incentives Subsidiary
Optimising dividend repatriation via DTA Subsidiary
Avoiding nominee-ownership risk under FBA 2026 Subsidiary (with genuine Thai co-ownership or FBL/BOI)
Maximum parent control over a short-term project Branch
Minimising immediate setup cost for market testing Branch (accept liability and tax trade-offs)
No need for local shareholders or board governance Branch

Choose a subsidiary when:

  • You intend to operate in Thailand for more than two years.
  • You need to limit the parent company’s liability exposure.
  • You want access to BOI promotional privileges, including corporate tax holidays and enhanced work-permit quotas.
  • Your parent is resident in a jurisdiction with a favourable DTA with Thailand and you want to reduce dividend withholding tax.
  • You plan to hire Thai employees, sign local leases or enter customer-facing contracts.

Choose a branch when:

  • You are executing a single, defined-scope project (construction, engineering, consultancy) with a clear end date.
  • The parent company is willing to accept unlimited liability for all branch obligations.
  • You need the fastest possible route to a registered presence and the FBL application timeline is acceptable.
  • You do not require BOI incentives, local bank lending or DTA-optimised repatriation.

When (and Why) to Engage a Lawyer for This Decision

Most investors should consult a Thailand commercial lawyer before committing to either structure. The following situations make professional advice essential rather than optional:

  • Capital commitments above THB 10 million, the liability, tax and structuring stakes are too high for a templated approach.
  • Nominee or agency arrangements are contemplated or already in place, the FBA 2026 enforcement changes create criminal exposure that requires specialist restructuring advice.
  • BOI promotion is part of the plan, application strategy, eligible-activity classification and incentive-period structuring all require experienced counsel.
  • Cross-border financing, parent guarantees or security packages are involved, Bank of Thailand regulations and transfer-pricing rules interact in ways that affect both entities.
  • Regulated sectors, telecommunications, financial services, energy, healthcare and other licensed industries impose additional foreign-ownership and capitalisation requirements that must be mapped against the FBA and sectoral law simultaneously.

Before your first meeting, prepare: a summary of your business model and expected Thai revenue streams; your capital-deployment plan; the parent company’s latest audited financial statements; a list of proposed shareholders or directors; the contracts and licences you expect to need; and your anticipated exit or wind-down timeline. A well-prepared initial consultation with a firm experienced in international commercial law will typically produce a clear structure recommendation within one to two weeks.

Conclusion

The subsidiary vs branch Thailand 2026 decision is not abstract, it determines your liability ceiling, your effective tax rate on repatriated profits, your eligibility for BOI incentives and your exposure to the FBA’s tightened nominee-enforcement regime. For the majority of foreign investors planning a commercial presence of more than two years, a Thai subsidiary is the stronger choice: it delivers limited liability, treaty-eligible dividend repatriation and access to the full range of Thai banking and BOI services. A branch remains the right vehicle for a narrow category of short-term, project-based operators whose parent companies are willing to accept unlimited liability and who do not need DTA-optimised repatriation or BOI promotion.

Whichever structure you are leaning toward, engage qualified Thailand counsel before committing capital, the 2026 reforms have raised the cost of getting this decision wrong.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Dr. Herbert Kuess at Sukhothai Inter Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Department of Business Development (DBD), Thailand company and branch registration guidance
  2. Thailand Revenue Department, corporate income tax, withholding tax and VAT guidance
  3. Board of Investment (BOI) Thailand, promotional incentives and eligibility
  4. Global Law Experts, Thailand Foreign Business Act 2026 analysis
  5. Tilleke & Gibbins, Thailand corporate formation and FBA practitioner guidance
  6. PwC Thailand, tax and corporate structuring guidance
  7. OECD, Model Tax Convention and Thailand DTA network
  8. Global Law Experts, International commercial law practice area

FAQs

Is a subsidiary the same as a branch in Thailand?
No. A subsidiary is a separate Thai legal entity with its own shareholders and limited liability. A branch is an extension of the foreign parent, has no independent legal personality, and exposes the parent to unlimited liability for all branch obligations.
Both pay corporate income tax at 20 %. However, a subsidiary can reduce dividend withholding tax using Thailand’s DTA network, while the 10 % branch remittance tax is generally not treaty-reducible. For investors from DTA jurisdictions, the subsidiary typically delivers a lower effective rate.
A branch suits project-based operators with a defined scope and timeline, where the parent accepts unlimited liability and does not need BOI incentives or DTA-optimised repatriation. Construction and engineering contractors executing a single contract are the most common branch users.
Yes, in most cases. The interaction of FBA 2026 ownership rules, nominee-enforcement penalties, tax structuring and banking requirements creates legal and financial risks that generic formation guides cannot address. Professional advice is essential for any investment above THB 10 million or in a regulated sector.
There is no direct statutory conversion mechanism. Converting from a branch to a subsidiary requires incorporating a new Thai company, transferring assets and contracts, winding down the branch registration and cancelling the FBL. The process involves tax, employment-law and contractual-novation consequences that should be planned with legal counsel from the outset.
The FBA 2026 amendments strengthened anti-nominee enforcement, increased penalties for nominee arrangements and expanded beneficial-ownership disclosure. These changes make it riskier to use nominee Thai shareholders in a subsidiary and increase regulatory scrutiny on branch-permitted activities. A detailed analysis is available in our Thailand Foreign Business Act 2026 guide.
For a subsidiary: certificate of incorporation, shareholder list, board resolution, director ID and proof of registered address. For a branch: all of the above plus certified and translated parent-company incorporation documents, the parent’s latest audited financial statements, the FBL and the branch manager’s power of attorney. Some Thai banks decline branch-account applications entirely.
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Subsidiary vs Branch Office in Thailand (2026): Tax, Liability & Which to Choose

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