COE Thailand: what Certificate of Entry was, and what travellers need now
During the COVID-19 pandemic, Thailand required a Certificate of Entry (COE) in addition to a valid visa for most inbound travellers. Searches for “COE Thailand” remain common, often from outdated blog posts or embassy bookmarks.
This page clarifies what COE was, whether you still need it, and what replaced it for normal travel in 2025–2026.
Confirm on official sources before you travel or extend.
Confirm on official sources before you travel or extend.
Confirm on official sources before you travel or extend.
Capped at 20,000 THB. Even one day creates an immigration record.
What you need to know
During the COVID-19 pandemic, Thailand required a Certificate of Entry (COE) in addition to a valid visa for most inbound travellers. Searches for “COE Thailand” remain common, often from outdated blog posts or embassy bookmarks.
This page clarifies what COE was, whether you still need it, and what replaced it for normal travel in 2025–2026.
Applied through a dedicated online portal linked to Thai embassies Required before boarding flights to Thailand during controlled reopening phases
See our Thailand lifestyle guide for visa paths, city choices, TM30, 90-day reporting, and compliance habits that keep long-stay holders out of trouble at immigration.
TDAC reminder: Every Thailand entry requires a fresh Digital Arrival Card within 72 hours of landing, including return trips on Elite, LTR, retirement, or marriage visas.
Key requirements at a glance
Use this table as a starting point. Embassy posts and immigration offices apply nationality-specific rules, so confirm live checklists before you lodge.
| Topic | Summary | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Valid passport | Always required | Verify against live embassy or immigration checklists. |
| Visa or visa exemption | Based on nationality; check exemption list | Verify against live embassy or immigration checklists. |
| Thailand Digital Arrival Card (TDAC) | Mandatory for all foreigners at tdac.immigration.go.th | Verify against live embassy or immigration checklists. |
| COE | Not used for normal travel | Verify against live embassy or immigration checklists. |
Long-stay and lifestyle context
Many readers use this page while scouting Thailand for relocation or extended stays. Pair your plans with immigration status that matches how long you actually stay, not visa exemption alone.
What Was The Certificate Of Entry?
Applied through a dedicated online portal linked to Thai embassies. Required before boarding flights to Thailand during controlled reopening phases. Separate from the visa itself: you needed both COE and visa/exemption
Why Do Old Coe Guides Still Rank In Search?
Mentions Thailand Pass or SHA+ quarantine hotels as mandatory. Lists COE as a step after visa approval for tourism. References embassy COE portals without noting discontinuation
If You Find “Coe” In Another Context
Certificate of Entry refers to pandemic travel (this page). Embassy internal codes: some posts label visa confirmation letters differently, so read the document title carefully. Unrelated “Certificate of Employment” is used in work permit applications inside Thailand, not entry COE
Unsure What Entry Documents You Need?
Book an appointment. Live chat. Applied through a dedicated online portal linked to Thai embassies
Step-by-step process
Follow this sequence when preparing your application or in-country compliance tasks. Adjust steps to your embassy post and visa category.
Confirm your visa category
Obtain the correct visa (or qualify for exemption) via e-Visa or embassy
Gather documents and proof
Complete TDAC up to 72 hours before arrival
Lodge at embassy or immigration
Present passport, visa/exemption, and TDAC confirmation at immigration
Complete TDAC on arrival
Passport valid per Thai rules (generally 6+ months recommended)
Register address and reporting
Visa, e-Visa approval, visa exemption eligibility, or VOA where applicable
Plan extensions and re-entry
TDAC completed; we offer help at tvc.co.th/tdac-thailand-digital-arrival-card
Practical planning matrix
Use this matrix alongside the sections above before you confirm dates, payment, or visa paperwork tied to your stay.
| Decision | Guidance |
|---|---|
| Stay length | Under 60 days may suit exemption or tourist visa; longer stays need DTV, Elite, LTR, retirement, marriage, or work permit routes. |
| Work activity | Tourism stamps do not authorise employment in Thailand. DTV, LTR, and work permit routes cover different activity types. |
| Family members | Dependents attach to primary applicant on Elite, LTR, and some marriage cases. This is not automatic on tourist entry. |
| Reporting | Confirm whether your visa uses quarterly 90-day reporting or annual reporting before you travel. |
| City base | Bangkok for immigration access; secondary cities for lower rent; islands for lifestyle with higher seasonal costs. |
Border-run warning: Leaving for a weekend abroad and re-entering on exemption is not a reliable long-term plan. Officers compare entry history. Plan a lawful long-stay category instead.
Where to live
City choice affects rent, social life, heat, and how often you deal with immigration in person. None of these places removes your visa obligations, but each has a different rhythm.
Bangkok
Most foreigners who work or raise a family in Thailand start here. International schools, hospital networks, and BTS/MRT coverage make daily life workable. Immigration offices and major embassies sit within reach for extensions and embassy runs.
Chiang Mai
Popular with remote workers and retirees who want a slower pace. Rent often runs 20 to 30 percent below central Bangkok. Immigration queues are usually shorter than Bangkok but still busy during peak season.
Phuket and islands
Beach provinces suit lifestyle-first relocators. Rents spike in high season, and many jobs are tourism-linked. Budget for air conditioning, transport, and occasional Bangkok trips for embassy or specialist services.
Hua Hin and Pattaya
Both attract large retiree communities within a few hours of Bangkok by road. Costs sit below Bangkok but above rural provinces. Either works if you want beach access without island logistics year-round.
For neighbourhood-level detail and retirement budgeting, see our cost of living guide.
Your first 30 days after arrival
Long-stay holders who get the admin right in the first month avoid painful fixes later. Work through this list in order where it applies to your visa.
- Complete TDAC within 72 hours of landing, even if you have done it on a previous trip.
- Photograph your passport stamp and note the expiry date. Set a calendar reminder two weeks before it ends if you plan to extend.
- Register your address. Confirm your landlord or condo juristic person files TM30.
- Open a Thai SIM and bank account if your visa path requires local financial proof.
- Buy or verify health insurance if your visa category requires it.
- Locate your nearest immigration office and check whether your visa needs 90-day reporting or annual reporting.
Cost of living snapshot (2026)
Figures below are rough guides for a single person outside luxury districts. Couples, families with school fees, and regular travel home will sit higher. Visa costs, insurance premiums, and membership fees sit on top of daily living.
| Expense | Typical range |
|---|---|
| Bangkok 1-bed rent (mid-range) | 12,000 to 25,000 THB/month |
| Chiang Mai vs central Bangkok | Often 20 to 30% lower |
| Street meals | 60 to 120 THB |
| Modest expat monthly total | 40,000 to 80,000 THB |
| Elite / LTR upfront fees | Separate from daily living; model total cost |
Document and compliance checklist
- Applied through a dedicated online portal linked to Thai embassies
- Required before boarding flights to Thailand during controlled reopening phases
- Separate from the visa itself: you needed both COE and visa/exemption
- Phased out as Thailand returned to standard immigration procedures
- Mentions Thailand Pass or SHA+ quarantine hotels as mandatory
- Lists COE as a step after visa approval for tourism
- References embassy COE portals without noting discontinuation
- Certificate of Entry: pandemic travel (this page)
Beyond tourism: local life and respect
Residents who stay a year or more usually branch out from the tourist trail: Thai language classes, neighbourhood markets, regional train trips, and local festivals. That is part of the appeal. It also means learning basic customs and understanding that visa rules on work still apply even if your employer sits in another country.
Public holidays and festivals change immigration office hours. Plan around the calendar in our Thailand festival guide.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Assuming tourist entry authorises long-term living or remote work without the correct visa category.
- Assuming tourist entry authorises long-term living or remote work without the correct visa category.
- Assuming tourist entry authorises long-term living or remote work without the correct visa category.
- Assuming tourist entry authorises long-term living or remote work without the correct visa category.
- Assuming tourist entry authorises long-term living or remote work without the correct visa category.
- Assuming tourist entry authorises long-term living or remote work without the correct visa category.
Frequently asked questions
Q:Do I need TDAC on every entry?
A:Yes. Each arrival requires a fresh TDAC within 72 hours, including for Elite, LTR, and retirement visa holders returning from trips abroad.
Q:Can I live in Thailand on visa exemption?
A:Not as a long-term strategy. Exemption is for tourism. Repeated entries draw scrutiny, so apply for a proper long-stay category.
Q:Does TVC guarantee visa approval?
A:No agency can guarantee immigration outcomes. We provide honest advice and document preparation to published standards.
Q:Where is TVC based?
A:Bangkok. We serve clients applying from embassies worldwide and residents already in Thailand needing extensions and compliance help.
Q:When was this guide last reviewed?
A:June 2026. Embassy fees, financial thresholds, and procedures change. Verify within two weeks of applying.
Q:How do I start with Thai Visa Centre?
A:Book a consultation online or live chat. Tell us your nationality, location, purpose, and timeline, and we map the lawful path.
Q:How do I start with Thai Visa Centre?
A:Book a consultation online or live chat. Tell us your nationality, location, purpose, and timeline, and we map the lawful path.