Member
No results available
The Thailand Foreign Business Act 2026 reforms represent the most significant tightening of foreign ownership rules in Thailand in over two decades. Anchored by DBD Order No. 1/2569, the changes introduce an “actual control” test that supplements the traditional 50-percent shareholding threshold, expanding the circumstances under which a company can be classified as foreign-controlled. For general counsel, CFOs and foreign investors managing or planning Thai operations, the practical effect is immediate: ownership structures, board arrangements, voting agreements and nominee relationships that were tolerated, or at least unexamined, before 2026 now carry materially higher compliance and enforcement risk. This guide explains what changed, what it means for your corporate structure, and the concrete steps you should take now.
The 2026 reforms do not abolish foreign investment in Thailand. They do, however, redefine how “foreign” is determined and dramatically increase the penalties for non-compliance, particularly for nominee arrangements. The Department of Business Development (DBD) has issued Order No. 1/2569, which directs registrars and enforcement officials to look beyond formal share registers and assess whether foreign nationals exercise actual control over a Thai-registered entity.
For existing investors, this means that structures designed to keep foreign shareholding below 50 percent may no longer be sufficient if governance, management or financing arrangements indicate foreign control. For new investors, it means that structuring advice obtained before the reforms should be revisited before closing any transaction.
Industry observers expect that enforcement will intensify throughout 2026 and into 2027, with the DBD using enhanced cross-verification tools, including banking data, director-change filings and beneficial-ownership registers, to identify arrangements that may constitute nominee shareholding.
Immediate actions for foreign investors:
Thailand’s Foreign Business Act B.E. 2542 (1999) has governed foreign participation in Thai business activities for more than 25 years. The statute divides restricted activities into three lists, List One (media, farming), List Two (activities affecting national security or the environment) and List Three (activities in which Thai nationals are not yet ready to compete), and prohibits foreigners from operating in those sectors without a Foreign Business Licence or an applicable exemption.
Under the original framework, the definition of a “foreigner” was anchored almost entirely to a 50-percent shareholding test: if foreign nationals or entities held 50 percent or more of a Thai company’s shares, the company was classified as foreign for FBA purposes. This relatively bright-line test gave rise to a well-known structuring practice. Foreign investors would arrange for Thai individuals, sometimes with little or no genuine economic interest, to hold a bare majority of shares, keeping the foreign stake just below 50 percent and thereby avoiding the need for a licence.
Enforcement against these nominee arrangements in Thailand was inconsistent. While the FBA contained provisions criminalising nominee shareholding, detection depended on manual review and complaints. The DBD lacked systematic tools to cross-reference shareholding records with financial data. The result was a compliance landscape in which the letter of the law was strict but practical enforcement was uneven, a dynamic that the 2026 reforms are explicitly designed to correct.
The 2026 overhaul of foreign ownership rules in Thailand centres on DBD Order No. 1/2569, a directive issued by the Department of Business Development that recalibrates how registrars, inspectors and enforcement officials assess whether a company is foreign-controlled. The Order does not amend the FBA statute itself; rather, it provides the interpretive and procedural framework through which the existing statute is now applied. The Thai government has simultaneously signalled broader legislative reforms to the FBA, though the Order represents the most concrete and immediately operative change.
DBD Order No. 1/2569 applies to all companies registered with the DBD that have any level of foreign shareholding or foreign involvement in management. Its provisions are not limited to companies operating in List One, Two or Three activities, the Order instructs registrars to flag potential foreign-control indicators at the point of registration, annual filing and any corporate change (such as director appointments or share transfers). The Order also applies to partnerships and branches of foreign corporations.
Key provisions of the Order include:
The Order has been published and is operative. Companies with existing structures that may fall within the new actual-control analysis are expected to review and, where necessary, adjust their arrangements within the transitional window signalled in the DBD guidance. Early indications suggest that the DBD will prioritise sectors with historically high nominee activity, particularly real estate, retail and services.
| Date (Gregorian / BE) | Measure / Order | Practical Impact |
|---|---|---|
| April–May 2026 (BE 2569) | DBD Order No. 1/2569 issued; DBD guidance published | New definitional test and instructions to registrars on nominee detection and reporting |
| 2026 (ongoing) | FBA reform proposals and BOI updated guidance | Changes to licensing practice; faster FBL timelines for some categories; BOI clarifies incentive interactions |
| Transitional window (as announced in DBD guidance) | Filing and notification deadlines for re-classification | Companies must review structures and notify authorities per the timeline set out in the official guidance |
The Thailand Foreign Business Act 2026 regime retains the 50-percent shareholding test as a baseline: any company in which foreign nationals or foreign-controlled entities hold half or more of the registered shares is classified as foreign. What has changed is that this is no longer the only, or even the primary, lens through which enforcement operates. The actual control test in Thailand now functions as a parallel assessment, capable of reclassifying a company as foreign-controlled even where formal foreign shareholding sits well below 50 percent.
The practical implications are significant. A company with 49-percent foreign ownership and 51-percent Thai ownership could still be treated as foreign if the foreign shareholder controls the board, holds veto rights over material decisions, provides the majority of the company’s financing, or dictates operational strategy through management or consulting agreements.
The following indicators, individually or in combination, may cause a company to be treated as foreign-controlled under the new framework:
| Test | How It Worked Pre-2026 | How It Works Under the 2026 FBA/DBD Reforms |
|---|---|---|
| Ownership percentage (formal test) | 50%+ foreign shareholding = “foreigner” for FBA purposes | Remains relevant: 50%+ is still a clear indicator of foreign status, but is now supplemented by the actual-control analysis |
| Actual control (new emphasis) | Not clearly defined in the statute; enforcement focused on shareholding patterns and nominee evidence | DBD Order No. 1/2569 adds tests: effective control via management, voting agreements, board composition and veto rights, authorities can treat companies as foreign-controlled even if foreign shareholding is below 50% |
| Nominee arrangements | Historically prosecuted but detection was inconsistent | Tighter enforcement, enhanced disclosure and criminal/administrative penalties; increased cross-verification using banking data, director-change records and beneficial-ownership reporting |
The likely practical effect of this dual-test regime is that investors can no longer rely on share-register engineering alone. Every element of governance, from articles of association to shareholder agreements, board mandates and financing terms, must be reviewed for actual-control indicators.
Nominee arrangements in Thailand have long been the most contentious aspect of FBA compliance. A nominee arrangement exists where a Thai national holds shares on behalf of, or at the direction of, a foreign party, without a genuine independent economic interest in those shares. Under the FBA, both the foreign party procuring the arrangement and the Thai nominee can face criminal liability, including imprisonment and fines.
The 2026 reforms significantly increase enforcement risk. The DBD’s enhanced cross-verification powers mean that patterns previously difficult to detect, such as Thai shareholders who lack the financial capacity to fund their capital contributions, or directors who change simultaneously with changes in the foreign shareholder, are now flagged systematically.
Under the new regime, enforcement officials apply a range of detection methods:
For investors conducting acquisitions, joint ventures or annual compliance reviews, the following checklist addresses the most critical nominee-risk indicators:
For companies that cannot avoid FBA classification through BOI promotion or structural adjustments, the foreign business licence in Thailand remains the primary compliance pathway. The 2026 reforms have brought changes to both the application process and the evidentiary standards required for approval.
The DBD has signalled an intent to streamline FBL processing for certain List Three activities, with the likely practical effect being shorter approval timelines for applications that are complete, well-documented and supported by a clear business rationale. At the same time, scrutiny of the applicant’s ownership structure, management arrangements and capital sourcing has intensified, applications that raise actual-control concerns will face additional questions and possible delays.
Thailand’s Board of Investment (BOI) continues to offer one of the most powerful alternatives to FBA licensing. Under the Investment Promotion Act, BOI-promoted companies may be permitted to operate in otherwise restricted sectors with majority or even 100% foreign-owned company Thailand structures, depending on the activity category and the incentive package granted. BOI incentives in 2026 include corporate income tax exemptions, import duty reductions, land-ownership rights and work-permit facilitation.
The interaction between BOI promotion and the new FBA/DBD regime is critical. A valid BOI promotion certificate can override FBA restrictions for the promoted activity, meaning that a company engaged solely in a BOI-promoted activity may not need a separate FBL. However, if the company also conducts non-promoted activities that fall under the FBA lists, those activities remain subject to the standard FBA analysis, including the new actual-control test.
Consider a foreign technology company seeking to provide software development services in Thailand. Software development is a List Three activity under the FBA. The company could apply for a BOI promotion under the digital economy category, which, if granted, would permit 100-percent foreign ownership and provide corporate tax incentives. If the company also plans to operate a retail showroom (a separate List Three activity not covered by the BOI promotion), it would need either a separate FBL for the retail activity or a restructuring that separates the two activities into distinct entities.
Where the 2026 reforms expose an existing structure to actual-control risk or nominee vulnerability, investors face a practical decision tree:
The decision between an FBL and BOI promotion is not always binary. Some investors will need both, a BOI promotion for the core promoted activity and an FBL for ancillary activities. The key is to map every revenue-generating activity against the FBA lists and BOI promotion categories before committing to a structure. Early engagement with qualified Thai counsel is essential to avoid costly mid-course corrections.
The following checklists are designed for use by in-house legal teams and compliance officers managing Thai operations under the Thailand Foreign Business Act 2026 regime.
Pre-Investment Due Diligence Checklist:
Post-Investment Reporting Checklist:
Nominee Risk Audit Checklist:
The Thailand Foreign Business Act 2026 reforms mark a decisive shift from form-based to substance-based enforcement. The introduction of the actual-control test through DBD Order No. 1/2569 means that corporate structures, governance documents and financing arrangements, not just share registers, now determine whether a company is treated as foreign for FBA purposes. For inbound investors and companies already operating in Thailand, the message is clear: audit now, restructure where necessary, and document every element of your compliance position.
The reforms do not close the door to foreign investment in Thailand. They do, however, raise the compliance standard and eliminate the margin for ambiguous or nominee-dependent structures. Companies that proactively align their governance, ownership and licensing arrangements with the new framework will be well positioned to operate with confidence. Those that delay risk enforcement action, licence revocation and criminal exposure during a period of heightened regulatory scrutiny.
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.
posted 12 minutes ago
posted 35 minutes ago
posted 58 minutes ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message