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Thailand M&A tax implications 2026

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Thailand M&A Tax Implications 2026, How Merger Control, New Nominee Rules and Due‑Diligence Laws Change Deal Structuring

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Thailand M&A tax implications 2026 have shifted materially as three overlapping regulatory currents converge: the Ministry of Commerce (MOC) nominee verification measures that took effect on 1 January 2026, proposed amendments to the Trade Competition Act B. E. 2560 (2017) that would introduce mandatory pre‑approval for mergers above specified thresholds, and emerging mandatory due‑diligence obligations covering human‑rights and environmental risk. Together, these changes compel deal teams, general counsel, corporate tax directors, CFOs and external M&A advisers, to reassess ownership disclosure requirements, taxable‑presence analysis, transfer pricing documentation and withholding tax planning before signing any letter of intent.

This guide maps each regulatory development to its practical tax consequences and provides the checklists, comparison tables and model contract language that transaction teams need to structure deals confidently in the current environment.

Thailand M&A Tax Implications 2026, Executive Summary and 10‑Point Pre‑Deal Checklist

The 2026 regulatory landscape introduces five immediate impacts that every deal team should internalise before structuring a transaction in Thailand:

  • Nominee exposure is now a closing risk. The Department of Business Development (DBD) under the MOC requires personal appearance and identity verification for shareholders at the point of company registration and material changes, making it harder to mask beneficial ownership.
  • Merger control timelines may lengthen. Proposed amendments to the Trade Competition Act contemplate mandatory pre‑approval, rather than post‑merger notification, for transactions meeting asset, revenue or market‑share thresholds, which industry observers expect will add weeks to deal timetables.
  • Tax residency and taxable presence require fresh analysis. Reclassification of nominee shareholdings can flip a company’s status from Thai‑majority to foreign‑majority, triggering Foreign Business Act restrictions, altered withholding tax (WHT) treatment and potential loss of Board of Investment (BOI) incentives.
  • Transfer pricing documentation must be updated at signing, not post‑close. Post‑deal restructuring of intercompany arrangements is a priority audit target for the Thai Revenue Department (RD).
  • Due‑diligence scope has expanded. Emerging mandatory due‑diligence rules covering environmental and human‑rights risk mean that compliance failures discovered post‑closing may create contingent tax liabilities through fines, remediation costs and loss of tax incentives.

10‑point pre‑deal action checklist

  1. Map the target’s beneficial ownership structure and verify against DBD records.
  2. Assess whether the transaction triggers merger control notification, or, under proposed rules, pre‑approval, based on current Trade Competition Commission (TCC) thresholds.
  3. Determine whether the target or any group entity relies on nominee shareholding arrangements.
  4. Confirm the target’s tax residency status and evaluate whether ownership changes will alter it.
  5. Review the target’s transfer pricing documentation for the prior three fiscal years.
  6. Identify all cross‑border payments subject to WHT and confirm treaty eligibility.
  7. Examine pending or potential RD audits, assessments and disputes.
  8. Evaluate VAT and specific business tax exposures, especially for asset deals.
  9. Draft nominee‑disclosure representations, tax indemnities and adjustment mechanisms into transaction documents.
  10. Build a post‑closing compliance calendar covering RD filing deadlines, TCC notifications and DBD ownership disclosures.

2025–2026 Regulatory Snapshot: MOC Nominee Orders, Trade Competition Act Proposals and Due‑Diligence Laws

Thailand’s regulatory environment for M&A has evolved rapidly since late 2025. Three distinct but interrelated streams of reform are reshaping how transactions must be structured, disclosed and taxed. Understanding the chronology is essential for building realistic deal timetables and allocating regulatory risk between buyers and sellers.

Timeline of legislative and regulatory milestones

Date Regulator Effect / Action Required
1 January 2026 Department of Business Development (DBD) / MOC New nominee verification measures effective, personal appearance and identity verification required for shareholders during company registration and material share transfers. Companies should verify beneficial ownership ahead of any closing.
2026 (proposed) Trade Competition Commission (TCC) Proposed mandatory pre‑approval for mergers above asset/revenue thresholds under amendments to the Trade Competition Act B.E. 2560. Buyers should allow extra lead time for filings and budget for potential fee increases.
2025–2026 (ongoing) Ministry of Commerce / National Legislative Assembly Draft mandatory due‑diligence legislation covering human‑rights and environmental risk in supply chains, compliance failures may affect BOI incentives and create contingent tax liabilities.

The MOC’s intensified scrutiny of nominee structures, reinforced through a series of DBD orders announced from late 2025, represents the single largest structural change for foreign investors. As reported in detail by Baker McKenzie, the measures require Thai nationals appearing as shareholders in companies with foreign participation to present themselves in person, provide proof of the source of investment funds, and submit sworn declarations that they are not acting as nominees. The DBD has also expanded its inspection powers to cover companies at addresses registered to multiple entities, a common indicator of nominee arrangements.

Simultaneously, the TCC has signalled that it intends to move from a post‑merger notification regime to a pre‑approval model for transactions exceeding defined market‑share or financial thresholds. Early indications suggest that this shift, while still under consultation, will require deal teams to factor in review periods and the possibility of conditions or remedies being imposed before closing. The practical effect will be to push Thailand’s merger control regime closer to the pre‑closing clearance models seen in the EU and several ASEAN neighbours.

Layered on top of these ownership and competition reforms, the government has advanced draft legislation mandating corporate due diligence on human‑rights and environmental impacts. While the bill’s final form remains under deliberation, the likely practical effect will be to expand the scope of pre‑acquisition due diligence and to create new categories of contingent liability that must be addressed in transaction documentation.

Thailand Merger Control 2026, Thresholds, Filing Triggers, Fees and Timelines Under the Trade Competition Act

Merger control in Thailand falls under the Trade Competition Act B.E. 2560 (2017), enforced by the TCC. Under the current framework, mergers that result in a combined market share exceeding prescribed thresholds, or that meet specified asset or revenue levels, require notification to the TCC. The proposed amendments would elevate certain notifications to mandatory pre‑approval, meaning that closing cannot occur until clearance is granted or the review period has elapsed.

When to notify: share deals versus asset deals

The notification obligation is triggered by any transaction, whether structured as a share acquisition, an asset purchase or a business amalgamation, that results in a change of control or a dominant market position. In practical terms:

  • Share acquisitions that bring the acquirer above a controlling stake (typically interpreted as more than 50 per cent of voting rights, though the TCC can exercise discretion at lower levels where de facto control exists) will trigger the filing obligation if the combined entity meets the financial thresholds.
  • Asset deals in which substantially all of a competitor’s business is acquired can also trigger notification if the result is dominance in the relevant market.
  • Cross‑border transactions with a Thai‑nexus, for example, where the target generates revenue in Thailand through a subsidiary or branch, must be assessed against the same thresholds. Industry observers expect the proposed amendments to clarify the extraterritorial reach of Thailand’s merger control regime.

Sanctions for failure to notify include fines and the potential for the TCC to order the unwinding of a completed transaction. Under the proposed pre‑approval model, completing a merger without clearance could expose parties to additional penalties and create significant legal uncertainty around the enforceability of post‑closing arrangements, including tax elections, asset step‑ups and intercompany restructurings that depend on the transaction having been validly completed. Deal teams should build a minimum additional buffer into their timetables to account for TCC review and should engage with the commission early where the transaction is complex or involves concentrated markets.

Nominee Rules Thailand 2026, Ownership Disclosure, Legal Mechanics and Tax Consequences

The MOC and DBD measures targeting nominee structures represent the most consequential ownership‑disclosure reform in Thailand in over a decade. Nominee arrangements, where Thai nationals hold shares on behalf of foreign beneficial owners to circumvent the Foreign Business Act (FBA) restrictions on majority foreign ownership in certain sectors, have long been prevalent. The 2026 enforcement measures are designed to identify and dismantle these structures through enhanced verification at the point of registration, share transfer and annual filing.

Practical due diligence steps to detect nominee risk

  • Beneficial ownership mapping. Trace every shareholder (individual and corporate) through to the ultimate beneficial owner. Cross‑reference against DBD filings and shareholder lists for the prior five years.
  • Source‑of‑funds verification. Require evidence that Thai shareholders funded their share subscriptions from their own resources. Bank statements, tax returns and loan documentation should be reviewed.
  • Voting and dividend patterns. Analyse whether Thai shareholders have exercised voting rights and received dividends proportionate to their holdings. Patterns of waived dividends or blanket proxies are red flags.
  • Side agreements. Search for any undisclosed shareholder agreements, call options or powers of attorney that transfer economic or governance control to foreign parties.
  • Personal appearance compliance. Confirm that all shareholders have complied, or will comply before closing, with the DBD’s in‑person identity verification requirements.

Tax outcomes when nominee arrangements are reclassified

When the DBD or a court determines that a shareholding arrangement is a nominee structure, the consequences cascade through the target’s tax position:

  • Foreign‑majority reclassification. If Thai nominee shares are disregarded, the company may be reclassified as foreign‑majority, triggering FBA restrictions and potentially voiding BOI promotional privileges that require majority Thai ownership.
  • Withholding tax recalculation. Dividend payments previously treated as domestic distributions may be recharacterised as payments to foreign shareholders, attracting WHT at higher rates (typically 10 per cent under domestic law, subject to treaty reduction).
  • Tax residency and permanent establishment. A finding that control resides offshore may open the question of whether the company’s place of effective management is in Thailand, affecting corporate income tax (CIT) residency for the controlling entity.
  • Penalties under Section 36 of the FBA. Individuals acting as nominees face imprisonment of up to three years and/or fines, while the company itself may face dissolution. These penalties create contingent liabilities that buyers must quantify and address through indemnification.

The nominee rules Thailand 2026 framework therefore demands that every M&A due diligence process includes a thorough nominee‑risk assessment, not as a compliance formality, but as a fundamental input to the deal’s tax modelling and purchase‑price allocation.

Tax Implications by Deal Type: Share Acquisition Versus Asset Acquisition

The choice between a share purchase and an asset purchase has always carried distinct Thai tax consequences. The 2026 regulatory changes amplify certain risks, particularly nominee exposure and transfer pricing scrutiny, making the structuring decision more consequential than in prior years.

Tax Item Share Acquisition Asset Acquisition
Corporate income tax on gain Seller taxed on capital gain at the standard CIT rate (currently 20%). For foreign sellers, treaty relief may reduce or eliminate Thai tax on gains from the sale of shares, depending on the applicable double tax agreement. Target company is taxed on operating profit from the asset sale. Buyer may be able to step up the tax basis of acquired assets, generating future depreciation and amortisation deductions.
Transfer pricing risk Lower immediate TP adjustments at closing, but post‑deal restructuring of intercompany service, licensing or financing arrangements may trigger RD scrutiny and adjustments. Asset transfers between related parties can attract TP re‑characterisation to market value. Valuations must be robust and contemporaneously documented.
Withholding tax WHT on dividends if profits are repatriated (10% domestic rate, often reduced under treaty). Capital gains WHT depends on seller residency and treaty provisions. WHT may apply to certain payments to non‑residents (e.g., interest, royalties) embedded in the asset transfer. VAT at 7% generally applies to asset transfers.
Tax loss carry‑forwards Generally preserved in the target entity, subject to ownership‑change continuity requirements. Typically lost or cannot be transferred to the buyer. Remaining carry‑forwards stay with the selling entity.
Stamp duty Stamp duty applies to the share transfer instrument at prescribed rates. Stamp duty on individual asset transfer documents (leases, receivable assignments, etc.).

Transfer pricing considerations in Thailand M&A

Thai transfer pricing M&A risks arise at two stages. First, during due diligence, the buyer must assess whether the target’s existing intercompany pricing complies with the arm’s length principle and whether adequate contemporaneous documentation exists. The RD has increasingly focused on transfer pricing compliance and has the authority to adjust prices and impose surcharges. Second, post‑deal restructuring, such as centralising procurement, converting distributors to limited‑risk entities, or introducing new management‑fee arrangements, creates fresh TP exposures that must be documented before implementation.

A practical TP due diligence checklist should cover:

  • Transfer pricing disclosure forms filed with annual CIT returns for the prior three years.
  • Master file and local file documentation, including benchmarking studies.
  • Any advance pricing agreements (APAs) or mutual agreement procedure (MAP) requests.
  • Pending TP audits, assessments or disputes.
  • Intercompany agreements and whether actual conduct matches contractual terms.

Cross‑Border M&A Thailand Tax: WHT, Tax Treaties and Residency

Cross‑border M&A Thailand tax planning centres on three interrelated issues: withholding tax exposure on payments flowing out of Thailand, the availability of treaty relief, and the substance requirements that underpin both.

Withholding tax Thailand M&A, typical rates and planning

Thailand imposes WHT on a range of payments to non‑residents. The domestic rates, which apply absent a treaty, are:

  • Dividends: 10%
  • Interest: 15%
  • Royalties: 15%
  • Service fees (management, technical): 15%
  • Capital gains from sale of shares by non‑residents: 15% (though treaty relief often applies)

Thailand has an extensive network of double tax agreements that can reduce or eliminate these rates. However, the entitlement to treaty benefits depends on the recipient being the beneficial owner of the income and being resident in the treaty jurisdiction, requirements that are scrutinised more closely in the wake of the nominee crackdown. Acquiring entities structured through holding companies in treaty jurisdictions must demonstrate genuine economic substance, including local management, employees and decision‑making, to sustain treaty claims.

Documentation is critical. Payors should obtain a certificate of tax residency from the recipient’s home jurisdiction and ensure that Form WP30 (the Thai WHT certificate) accurately reflects the treaty rate applied. Failure to withhold at the correct rate exposes the payor to joint and several liability for the shortfall, plus surcharges.

The interaction between the nominee rules Thailand 2026 and WHT planning is direct: if a nominee arrangement is unwound and the true beneficial owner of income is determined to be a non‑resident, prior WHT positions may be reassessed. Buyers should therefore model worst‑case WHT exposure as part of their purchase‑price negotiation.

Transfer Pricing and Post‑Deal Restructuring

Post‑merger integration frequently involves reorganising the target’s intercompany arrangements, centralising shared services, restructuring distribution models, introducing or modifying licensing arrangements, and refinancing intercompany loans. Each of these changes can create transfer pricing exposure if not properly documented and priced at arm’s length from the outset.

The RD’s transfer pricing enforcement has intensified significantly. Thailand’s transfer pricing rules, aligned with OECD guidelines, require companies with related‑party transactions above prescribed thresholds to prepare and maintain contemporaneous documentation. The penalties for non‑compliance include TP adjustments, surcharges and, in egregious cases, criminal referral for tax evasion.

Remediation steps and pre‑emptive valuation studies

  • Pre‑closing TP health check. Commission an independent review of the target’s intercompany pricing before signing. Identify gaps in documentation and pricing misalignments.
  • Day‑one TP policy. Draft updated intercompany agreements and a TP policy document that reflects the post‑acquisition operating model. These should be in place at or immediately after closing.
  • Business restructuring study. If the post‑deal plan involves converting the target from a full‑fledged entity to a limited‑risk distributor or contract manufacturer, commission a valuation of any transferred functions, assets or risks. The RD may challenge restructurings that shift profit out of Thailand without adequate compensation.
  • APA consideration. For high‑value, recurring intercompany transactions, consider applying for a bilateral APA to provide certainty and reduce audit risk over the APA period.

Thailand M&A Tax Due Diligence and Transaction Documentation, Tax‑First Checklists and Model Clauses

Effective Thailand M&A tax due diligence in 2026 must go beyond the traditional review of tax returns and assessments. The new nominee rules and merger control proposals require deal teams to integrate regulatory compliance checks into the tax workstream from the outset.

Core due diligence items should include:

  • Complete ownership map with beneficial ownership traced to ultimate individuals.
  • Nominee risk assessment (source‑of‑funds, voting patterns, dividend history, side agreements).
  • CIT returns, assessments, and correspondence with the RD for the prior five years.
  • Transfer pricing documentation (master file, local file, benchmarking studies, TP disclosure forms).
  • WHT compliance history, including treaty positions taken and supporting documentation.
  • VAT and specific business tax returns and any pending refund claims.
  • BOI promotional certificates and compliance with investment conditions.
  • Stamp duty exposure on key contracts and instruments.
  • Pending or threatened tax disputes, including any MAP or competent authority proceedings.
  • Merger control notification history and any outstanding TCC commitments.

Contract drafting examples, model protective clauses

Transaction documents should contain bespoke protections addressing the 2026 regulatory environment. The following model clause concepts illustrate the approach:

  • Nominee disclosure representation. “The Seller represents and warrants that no shares in the Target are held by any person acting as a nominee, agent or trustee for any other person, and that each Thai shareholder has funded their subscription from their own resources and has not entered into any undisclosed agreement affecting voting rights, dividend entitlements or the transfer of shares.”
  • Tax indemnity with cap and survival. “The Seller shall indemnify and hold the Buyer harmless against any Tax Liability (as defined) arising from or in connection with any period ending on or before the Closing Date, subject to: (a) a cap equal to [percentage] of the Purchase Price; and (b) a survival period of [five/seven] years from Closing, or, if longer, the expiry of the applicable statute of limitations plus 90 days.”
  • Adjustment mechanism for RD assessments. “If, within the Indemnity Period, the Revenue Department issues an assessment against the Target for any Pre‑Closing Tax Period, and the Seller disputes the assessment, the Seller shall have the right to control the defence at its own cost, provided that (i) the Seller keeps the Buyer reasonably informed, (ii) the Seller does not settle or compromise any claim without the Buyer’s prior written consent (not to be unreasonably withheld), and (iii) any amount ultimately payable is funded from the Escrow Account within 30 days of final determination.”

These clauses should be tailored to the specific transaction, taking into account the results of the nominee‑risk assessment, the target’s tax compliance history and the parties’ respective risk appetites.

Post‑Deal Risks and Thai Tax Authority Interaction, Audits, Rulings and Dispute Readiness

M&A transactions are a well‑known audit trigger for the RD. Common post‑closing audit focus areas include transfer pricing adjustments, the validity of treaty‑based WHT positions, and the tax treatment of the transaction itself (including any gain or loss recognised by the seller). The RD has published guidance confirming its approach to the tax treatment of mergers, and recent public rulings illustrate the department’s willingness to scrutinise the substance of transactions.

How to prepare an immediate post‑closing filing and response strategy

  • File all outstanding returns. Ensure that the target’s CIT, WHT and VAT returns for all open periods are filed accurately and on time. Any pre‑closing period returns should be reviewed and, where necessary, amended before the RD initiates contact.
  • Assemble a response team. Designate internal and external advisers who will manage RD communications. Centralise all tax records, including board minutes, intercompany agreements and TP documentation, in a secure, accessible repository.
  • Map the dispute timeline. If an assessment is issued, the taxpayer generally has 30 days to appeal to the RD’s internal review process, followed by the right to appeal to the Tax Court. Understanding these deadlines is critical to preserving rights.
  • Consider advance rulings. For novel or high‑value questions arising from the transaction, such as the availability of a tax‑neutral restructuring or the treatment of earnout payments, consider applying to the RD for an advance ruling to obtain certainty before the issue crystallises in an audit.

The RD’s approach to post‑M&A audits is increasingly data‑driven, with cross‑referencing between DBD ownership filings, WHT certificates and CIT returns. Industry observers expect this trend to accelerate as the DBD’s enhanced nominee verification data becomes available to the RD, creating a more integrated enforcement environment.

Conclusion, Action Plan for Thailand M&A Tax Implications 2026

The convergence of Thailand merger control 2026 proposals, nominee rules Thailand 2026 enforcement and expanding due‑diligence obligations creates a regulatory environment that is materially different from even two years ago. Deal teams that treat these reforms as siloed compliance tasks, rather than interconnected inputs to tax structuring, risk significant post‑closing exposure.

A six‑step action plan for deal teams:

  1. Start nominee‑risk assessment at LOI stage. Do not wait for formal due diligence.
  2. Model merger control timelines into the deal calendar. Build in buffer for potential pre‑approval requirements.
  3. Commission TP and WHT health checks before signing. Remediation is far cheaper pre‑close.
  4. Draft bespoke tax representations and indemnities. Use the model clauses in this guide as starting points.
  5. Prepare a post‑closing compliance calendar. Cover RD filings, TCC notifications and DBD disclosures.
  6. Brief the board on contingent tax liabilities. Ensure that nominee risk, TP exposure and WHT recalculation scenarios are quantified and disclosed.

For a detailed, downloadable version of these action items, see the Practical Tax Due‑Diligence Checklist for Thailand M&A (2026), a companion resource to this guide.

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.

Sources

  1. PwC Thailand, 2026 Tax Alert
  2. IFLR, M&A Guide 2026: Thailand
  3. KPMG, M&A Trends in Thailand Q4 2025
  4. Baker McKenzie, Thailand: New Measures Target Nominee Arrangements
  5. Thai Revenue Department (RD), Official Site
  6. Department of Business Development (DBD), Official Site
  7. Ministry of Commerce (MOC), Official Site
  8. Forvis Mazars, Recent Tax Ruling on Merger
  9. Taxand, Tax Planning for M&A in Thailand
  10. Lexology, Thailand Intensifies Scrutiny of Nominee Structures
  11. RWT Law, Nominee Arrangements in Thailand
  12. Global Law Experts, Navigating Thailand’s Transforming M&A Landscape

FAQs

Do I now need merger control pre‑approval for all Thailand M&A transactions in 2026?
Not all transactions. Under the current Trade Competition Act B.E. 2560, mergers that meet prescribed market‑share or financial thresholds require notification to the TCC. Proposed amendments would elevate certain notifications to mandatory pre‑approval, but these changes remain under consultation. Transactions below the thresholds, and those in sectors with specific regulatory regimes (such as banking and insurance), follow separate rules. Deal teams should assess each transaction against the current thresholds and monitor the progress of the proposed amendments.
The DBD’s nominee verification measures, effective from 1 January 2026, require personal appearance and source‑of‑funds declarations from shareholders. If a nominee arrangement is identified and unwound, the company may be reclassified as foreign‑majority, triggering Foreign Business Act restrictions, potential loss of BOI incentives, and reassessment of WHT positions on dividends and other payments previously treated as domestic.
In a share deal, the seller bears CIT on the capital gain (subject to treaty relief for foreign sellers), and WHT applies to repatriated dividends. In an asset deal, the target company is taxed on the gain from the asset sale, VAT generally applies at 7%, and the buyer may benefit from a stepped‑up tax basis for acquired assets. Transfer pricing risk profiles differ significantly between the two structures.
Common WHT triggers include dividends (10% domestic rate), interest (15%), royalties (15%), management and technical service fees (15%), and capital gains on share sales by non‑residents (15%). Double tax agreements can reduce or eliminate these rates, but treaty benefits require the recipient to be the beneficial owner of the income and to hold a valid certificate of tax residency.
Tax indemnities should specifically cover liabilities arising from the reclassification of nominee shareholdings, including WHT reassessments, loss of BOI incentives and FBA penalties. The indemnity should be backed by an escrow or bank guarantee, survive for the longer of the contractual indemnity period or the applicable statute of limitations, and include a mechanism for the seller to control the defence of any related RD assessment, subject to the buyer’s consent to any settlement.
The RD may request transfer pricing documentation (master file, local file and benchmarking studies), intercompany agreements, board minutes approving the transaction, WHT certificates (Form WP30), CIT and VAT returns for pre‑ and post‑closing periods, and evidence of the arm’s length nature of the purchase price. Maintaining a centralised, organised record set from the point of closing is essential.
RD audits of post‑M&A periods can commence at any time within the statutory limitation period. The audit process itself typically takes between six and eighteen months, depending on complexity. If the RD issues an assessment, the taxpayer has 30 days to file an objection, followed by the right to appeal to the Tax Court. The entire dispute cycle, from initial audit to final court resolution, can extend over several years, underscoring the importance of robust documentation and a pre‑planned response strategy.

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Thailand M&A Tax Implications 2026, How Merger Control, New Nominee Rules and Due‑Diligence Laws Change Deal Structuring

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