For stays of up to thirty days,
most foreign passport holders
automatically get a free non-extendable
transit visa when passing
through immigration at Don Muang
Airport, at the Malaysian border
or at the Laos border, but may
have to show proof of onward
travel arrangements.
These transit visas are
absolutely non-extendable, so
you might want to apply for a
sixty-day tourist visa
instead, obtainable in advance
from Thai embassies
. In the UK, sixty-day visas
take two working days to process
if you go in person (Mon-Fri
9.30am-12.30pm), or ten days if
you apply by post, and cost £8.
In the US, it costs $15 and
takes 24 hours in person, or
five days by post. In Canada it
costs CAN$16.50 and is processed
in three working days to a week;
in Australia it costs A$18 and
takes three to five days. New
Zealanders (and nationals of
South Korea, Sweden, Denmark,
Norway and Finland) with a valid
onward ticket get a free ninety-day
visa.
All sixty-day tourist visas
can be extended in
Thailand for a further thirty
days, at the discretion of
officials; visa extensions cost
B500 and are issued over the
counter at immigration offices (
kaan khao muang) in
nearly every provincial capital
- most offices ask for one or
two extra photos as well, plus
two photocopies of the first
four pages and latest Thai visa
page of your passport. If you
use up the three-month quota,
the quickest and cheapest way of
extending your stay for a
further sixty days is to head
down to Malaysia and apply for
another tourist visa at the
embassy in Kuala Lumpur.
Immigration offices also
issue re-entry permits
(B500) if you want to leave the
country and come back again
within sixty days. If you
overstay your visa limits,
expect to be fined B100 per
extra day when you depart Don
Muang Airport, though an
overstay of a month or more
could land you in trouble with
immigration officials.