US expat tax seminars in Thailand
Thai Visa Centre partners with qualified tax professionals to offer free seminars and consultations for US citizens and green card holders living in or relocating to Thailand. US tax law follows you abroad.
For a trip in 2026, start with our current entry requirements guide, submit TDAC on the official immigration site within 72 hours of landing, and confirm your passport on the current exemption list. Our Bangkok team handles live entry questions daily: not Thailand Pass, not quarantine hotels, and not COVID insurance minimums.
The four cards below summarise how this page should be read. Everything that follows is context for researchers, not a packing list for your next flight.
Complimentary admission and limited consultation slots.
Green card holders and dual nationals welcome.
Typically Sukhumvit area near TVC office.
Immigration is our core service. Tax partners handle CPA advice.
Free US expat tax seminars
Thai Visa Centre hosts complimentary tax seminars for US citizens and permanent residents living in Thailand or planning relocation. US tax law follows you abroad including FBAR, FATCA, and foreign earned income exclusion rules.
- Thailand Pass required for most foreign arrivals in H1 2022
- Test & Go (1-day quarantine) or Sandbox (7 days) or full ASQ quarantine
- Mandatory COVID insurance with USD 20,000 minimum cover for Thailand Pass
- RT-PCR testing before departure and on arrival under most schemes
- Pre-paid SHA+ or ASQ hotel packages with embedded testing
- Vaccination proof required or spot-checked depending on month
- Paper TM6 arrival card on flights and at borders after COVID easing
- Major easing from 1 July 2022: no quarantine, no Thailand Pass, no routine vax checks
- TDAC mandatory within 72 hours of every arrival at tdac.immigration.go.th
- 60-day visa exemption for eligible passports on the permanent official list
- No Thailand Pass, vaccination proof, RT-PCR, or COVID insurance requirements
- No quarantine hotels, SHA+ lists, or pre-paid testing packages
- Standard visa, exemption, or e-Visa proof matching your stay purpose
- Tighter scrutiny on repeated exemption entries and border-run patterns
- Long stays require DTV, retirement, Privilege, LTR, or another proper visa category
Full walkthrough: 2026 entry requirements guide.
Archive warning: Thailand Pass and quarantine schemes ended in 2022. TDAC replaced TM6 in May 2025. Do not combine COVID-era steps with a 2026 arrival checklist.
Current rules (June 2026) vs COVID era
Thailand travel in 2022 changed month by month as Test & Go, Sandbox, and Thailand Pass gave way to the 1 July easing. The table below maps the topics travellers still ask about when they compare old advice to immigration counters in 2026. Use it row by row before you pack documents from an outdated source.
| Topic | 2022 rule | Current rule (June 2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-arrival registration | Thailand Pass (Jan to Jun 2022); dropped 1 July 2022 | TDAC mandatory within 72 hours of arrival. See TDAC guide |
| Quarantine | Test & Go (1 day), Sandbox (7 days), or full ASQ until 1 July 2022 | None. No hotel quarantine or embedded testing on arrival. |
| COVID insurance | Mandatory USD 20,000 cover for Thailand Pass until mid-2022 | Not required for standard tourism entry. Travel insurance still recommended. |
| Pre-departure testing | RT-PCR required for Test & Go and most Sandbox routes | Not required. No routine health tests at the border. |
| Vaccination proof | Required or spot-checked depending on month and scheme | Not required for entry. No vaccination certificates at immigration. |
| Visa exemption length | 30 days standard with temporary 45-day extensions during parts of 2022 | Up to 60 days for eligible passports on the permanent list |
| Arrival card | Paper TM6 on flights and at borders | TDAC online submission. TM6 retired from May 2025. |
| SHA+ / ASQ hotels | Pre-paid quarantine or Test & Go packages at approved properties | Not used. Book any legal accommodation. No COVID hotel lists. |
| Certificate of Entry (COE) | Required before Thailand Pass in earlier reopening phases | Retired. No embassy health pre-approval for tourism. |
| Land border entry | Same COVID schemes as air for most of H1 2022; eased July 2022 | Standard visa and exemption rules. No Thailand Pass or quarantine. |
| Travel insurance (general) | COVID policy mandatory early 2022; recommended after July | Optional for most tourists. Mandatory for retirement and some long-stay visas. |
| TM30 address reporting | Required for landlords; checked at extensions | Still required. Missing TM30 blocks many extensions and conversions. |
The practical takeaway for 2026 is simple: complete TDAC, confirm 60-day exemption eligibility on the official list, and ignore every COVID-era document from 2022. Immigration officers still exercise discretion at the counter, especially for repeated entries or vague onward travel plans, but they no longer ask for Thailand Pass QR codes or quarantine hotel vouchers.
If your research started with a 2022 blog post or YouTube walkthrough, compare it row by row above, then open our Thailand entry requirements hub for step-by-step preparation. Our Bangkok team reviews nationality-specific cases daily and can confirm whether your saved checklist is still valid.
What to use in 2026 instead
If you saved a 2022 checklist, received outdated advice from a travel agent, or found a Thailand Pass tutorial on social media, replace it with the actions below. Each item reflects a rule change or scam pattern we see frequently at our Bangkok office when travellers mix COVID-era steps into modern trips.
Submit TDAC on the official immigration site
Complete TDAC within 72 hours of every arrival at tdac.immigration.go.th only. The form is free, replaces the old TM6 paper card, and applies to all foreign nationals including infants. Save your confirmation email and screenshot offline before you board. Thailand Pass is not TDAC and must not be used.
Confirm 60-day exemption eligibility for your passport
Do not rely on 2022 temporary 45-day schemes or outdated forum posts. Check the official exemption list on thaievisa.go.th before booking non-refundable flights. Immigration may still ask for proof of funds and onward travel even when no embassy visa is required.
Discard COVID-era checklists entirely
Thailand Pass, Certificate of Entry, SHA+ hotel bookings, RT-PCR before departure, and mandatory COVID insurance no longer apply. If an airline email or travel agent still references them, treat the advice as archived. Our 2026 entry guide replaces every item on a 2022 packing list.
Avoid fake TDAC and Thailand Pass copycat sites
Third-party websites charged fees for Thailand Pass in 2022 and continue to sell unnecessary TDAC services today. Use immigration.go.th and thaievisa.go.th only. Paid copycat forms may not produce a valid confirmation and can delay you at the counter.
Book normal accommodation without quarantine packages
ASQ, AHQ, and SHA+ quarantine hotels were mandatory under Test & Go and Sandbox in early 2022. In 2026 you may stay at any legal hotel, guesthouse, or rental. No pre-paid testing packages or government-approved COVID hotel lists are required for standard tourism entry.
Carry appropriate visa proof for how you plan to stay
Entering on repeated tourism stamps to live or work remotely was risky even after July 2022 and is harder in 2026. Apply for DTV, retirement, Thailand Privilege, LTR, or another matching category before you sign a long lease or relocate family members.
For a printable arrival checklist, see our full 2026 entry guide. We also offer TDAC assistance if you want a second review before departure.
Why this page still exists
Search engines and social posts still surface Thailand Pass and 2022 travel guide results. YouTube walkthroughs with hundreds of thousands of views continue to rank even though the steps they describe ended years ago. We keep this archive so travellers understand three common misconceptions: Thailand Pass is not TDAC; quarantine hotels (ASQ/AHQ) are not part of modern entry; and temporary 30-day exemption schemes evolved into the 60-day policy for eligible passports.
The page also links forward to our 2024 travel snapshot for readers tracing how entry changed year by year. If you need live help separating history from current rules, use live chat or book a consultation with our Bangkok team.
Frequently asked questions
These questions come up when travellers compare old forum advice, airline notices, and immigration counters in 2026. Each answer is two to three sentences and points to live policy where it matters.
Q:Is the seminar really free?
A:Yes. Seminar admission and promotional consultation slots with participating CPAs are complimentary.
Q:Does Thai Visa Centre prepare US tax returns?
A:We partner with qualified CPAs. Immigration is our core service, not tax preparation.
Q:Do seminars cover Thai tax rules?
A:Overview of Thai residency concepts is included. Detailed Thai tax advice requires a Thai accountant.
Q:Who should attend?
A:US citizens and green card holders living in or relocating to Thailand including retirees and remote workers.
Q:What topics are covered?
A:US federal filing abroad, FEIE, FBAR, FATCA, and how Thai residency interacts with US obligations.
Q:Is seminar content individual tax advice?
A:No. Events are educational. Personal advice requires a licensed tax professional.
Q:Are seminars only in Bangkok?
A:Sessions are typically held near our Sukhumvit office. Contact us for the current schedule.
Q:Do I need a visa before attending?
A:Secure proper visa or exemption separately. Seminars discuss tax obligations, not immigration filing.
Official references (current)
Verify exemption eligibility and TDAC submission on these official sites before departure. Third-party copies may charge fees or collect data without delivering valid confirmations. Thailand Pass portals and COVID insurance validators from 2022 are not listed because they no longer govern entry.