Travel to Thailand from Canada
Flying from Canada to Thailand in 2026 is straightforward: no Thailand Pass, no quarantine, and no COVID vaccination proof at the border. You still need the correct visa or exemption, a completed TDAC, and documents immigration may ask for at the counter. Canadian passport holders typically enter on 60-day visa exemption for tourism, but longer stays, remote work, and retirement each require a different path applied before you fly.
At Thai Visa Centre in Bangkok, we help Canadian travellers every week who are unsure whether visa exemption, a tourist visa, or a long-stay option fits their trip. Start with our Thailand entry requirements 2025-2026 guide, complete your TDAC at tdac.immigration.go.th within 72 hours of arrival, and use this guide for flights, airport steps, embassy contacts, and common mistakes canadian visitors make at Suvarnabhumi and regional gateways.
Per entry for tourism in 2026. Confirm Canada on the official exemption list before booking.
Submit before arrival at tdac.immigration.go.th. Required for every foreign entry since 1 May 2025.
COVID registration ended in 2022. TDAC replaced the paper TM6 card, not Thailand Pass.
Exercise normal security precautions for most of Thailand. Separate from immigration rules.
Entry rules for canadian passport holders (June 2026)
Canadian passport holders qualify for visa exemption: 60 days per entry for tourism in 2026. Confirm Canada remains on the official exemption list before you book non-refundable flights. Exemption is free at the border but does not cover remote work, employment, long-term retirement, or stays beyond what immigration grants at the counter.
Every foreign visitor, including visa-exempt canadian tourists, must submit the Thailand Digital Arrival Card (TDAC) before entry. We offer TDAC assistance at our TDAC service page if you want help avoiding field errors that slow you down at immigration.
| Your need | Recommended option | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Vacation up to 60 days | Visa exemption at the border | No pre-approval needed for standard tourism. Carry return ticket, funds proof, and TDAC confirmation. |
| Extended travel (60 to 90+ days) | Tourist visa (TR) via Thailand e-Visa | Typically 60 days, extendable in Thailand. Apply before travel through e-Visa or your regional Thai consulate. |
| Remote work or frequent visits | Destination Thailand Visa (DTV) | For eligible remote workers and approved soft-power activities. Cannot be obtained on visa exemption after arrival. |
| Retirement (age 50+) | Non-Immigrant O-A, Elite, or LTR | Financial and insurance requirements apply. Enter on the correct visa category from the start. |
Longer stay options for canadian travellers
Holiday longer than exemption allows? Tourist visa (TR), DTV for remote workers, and retirement or family visas each have different financial and insurance rules. Entering on exemption and hoping to fix it later is how canadian travellers end up in our urgent queue with overstays or wrong stamps. Choose the correct category before departure and apply through Thailand e-Visa or your regional Thai consulate.
| Visa category | Typical stay | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Tourist visa (TR) | 60 days, extendable in country | Canadian travellers who need clearer documentation, repeat visits, or more time than exemption alone provides. |
| Destination Thailand Visa (DTV) | Up to 180 days per entry | Remote workers, digital nomads, and frequent visitors who outgrow repeated tourist entries. |
| Non-Immigrant O-A retirement | 1 year, renewable | Canadian citizens aged 50+ with qualifying retirement income and approved health insurance. |
| Thailand Privilege (Elite) | 5 to 20 years | Premium packaged long stay with concierge-style immigration support. |
| Long-Term Resident (LTR) | Up to 10 years | Wealthy pensioners, remote workers, and professionals meeting LTR financial thresholds. |
Browse all visa types for a full comparison, or read our DTV application guide if you are comparing DTV against repeated tourist entries.
TDAC: mandatory for every canadian visitor
Since 1 May 2025, all non-Thai nationals must complete TDAC online before entry by air, land, or sea. Submit within 72 hours of arrival using Thailand time at tdac.immigration.go.th. The form is free, required on every entry, and replaces the old paper TM6 arrival card. Thailand Pass is abolished, so ignore outdated blog posts that still mention COVID registration.
Avoid copycat sites charging fees. We offer field-by-field help on our TDAC guide and a pre-flight review at our TDAC service page.
Remember: TDAC is registration only. Immigration still decides admission based on visa category, funds, tickets, and discretion at the counter. A completed TDAC does not guarantee entry or replace visa approval.
Flights and routes from Canada
Toronto, Vancouver, and Calgary offer one-stop and seasonal direct service to Bangkok. West-coast departures often route via Seoul, Tokyo, or Hong Kong. East-coast itineraries frequently connect through Europe or the Middle East on partner carriers.
Allow 2 or more hours if connecting through a third country. Some layovers require transit visas unrelated to Thailand entry, so check requirements for your connection point separately. Suvarnabhumi (BKK) is the primary gateway; Don Mueang (DMK) serves some budget carriers.
Book return or onward tickets that match your permitted stay. Immigration officers compare your stamp expiry to your departure date, and airline check-in staff at Canadian hubs may ask for TDAC proof before you board. Peak Canadian winter travel from December to March overlaps with Thailand's dry season and busier airports.
At the airport: what to expect
Suvarnabhumi is the main gateway for Canadian travellers. The walkthrough below applies to other international airports with minor variations in terminal layout. Keep passport, TDAC confirmation, and return ticket in hand luggage, not only in checked bags.
Disembark and follow transit signs
After landing at Suvarnabhumi (BKK), Don Mueang (DMK), Phuket (HKT), or Chiang Mai (CNX), follow signs to international arrivals and passport control. Canadian passport holders use the foreign passport lanes. Have your passport, TDAC confirmation screenshot, and return ticket accessible before you reach the counter. Do not pack these only in checked luggage.
Immigration counter
Present your canadian passport, visa stamp or exemption eligibility, and TDAC confirmation (screenshot or email). The officer may ask where you are staying, how long you plan to remain, and whether you have sufficient funds. Answer consistently with what you entered on TDAC. Exemption entries typically receive a 60-day tourism stamp in 2026, subject to policy at the time of travel.
Customs declaration
Declare cash over 20,000 USD equivalent when entering or leaving Thailand. Know restricted goods rules for medications, drones, and agricultural products. Most tourists pass through the green nothing-to-declare channel, but carry prescription medicines in original containers with doctor letters if applicable.
Collect baggage and clear arrivals hall
Retrieve checked bags at the carousel, then exit through customs. Keep your arrival stamp page accessible because hotels and visa agents may ask to see it during your stay. If you applied for an e-Visa before travel, the stamp should match your approved category and permitted stay length.
Ground transport
Use the official taxi queue at Suvarnabhumi, pre-booked hotel transfer, Grab, Bolt, or Airport Rail Link depending on your destination and budget. Avoid unlicensed touts offering fixed fares above the meter rate. Save your hotel address in Thai script on your phone for the driver.
First tasks in Thailand
Confirm your stamp expiry date and set a calendar reminder before it expires. Overstay fines run 500 THB per day up to 20,000 THB. If you plan to extend or change visa category, start researching requirements early rather than waiting until the last week of your stamp. See our entry requirements hub for post-arrival compliance.
Documents to keep in your carry-on
Immigration officers may request any of the following at the counter before you collect checked luggage. Requirements vary by entry path, but carrying the full set avoids delays when an officer asks for extra proof beyond what your airline verified at departure in Canada.
- Canadian passport valid 6+ months beyond your planned stay
- TDAC confirmation screenshot and email saved offline on your phone
- Proof of accommodation matching your TDAC entry (hotel booking or host address)
- Return or onward ticket dated within your permitted stay
- Proof of funds if requested (cash, cards, or bank statements)
- Printed or digital tourist e-Visa approval when entering on a pre-approved visa
- Travel insurance certificate when your visa category requires it or you want hospital coverage
For a printable overview of entry documents and post-arrival compliance, see our Thailand entry requirements guide and the extended travel to Thailand checklist.
Royal Thai embassy and consular support in Canada
For visa applications before travel, use Thailand e-Visa or the embassy and consulate website that covers your Canadian province. Processing times vary by post and season.
Royal Thai Embassy, Ottawa
Jurisdiction: All of Canada for visa applications and consular services.
Primary diplomatic post for Canadians. Check embassy hours and e-Visa requirements before visiting in person.
Official websiteRoyal Thai Consulate-General, Vancouver
Jurisdiction: Western Canada for selected consular services.
Covers British Columbia and surrounding provinces for some services. Confirm whether your visa category must go through e-Visa or Ottawa.
Official websiteNot sure which post serves your province? Confirm jurisdiction on the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Thailand before mailing passports. Many Canadians apply tourist visas online through Thailand e-Visa without an in-person visit when the category allows.
Winter escape timing
Peak Canadian winter travel from December to March overlaps with Thailand's dry season. Book flights and hotels early during high season. Busy airports do not change visa rules, but allow extra time at immigration during holiday peaks.
Global Affairs Canada advisory context
Global Affairs Canada publishes Thailand travel advice separately from visa rules. In 2026, much of Thailand is typically covered by standard precaution guidance rather than a blanket do-not-travel warning. Regional variations may apply to southern border provinces where security risk is higher.
Canadian advisories shape insurance coverage, employer approval, and peace of mind. They do not change Thai immigration law. Advisory text does not guarantee entry, and stronger warnings for a specific province do not invalidate a valid Canadian passport or tourist visa. Border decisions are separate administrative acts based on passport, visa status, TDAC, funds, and officer discretion.
Read our Thailand travel advisory guide for a full comparison of U.S., UK, Australian, and Canadian advisory wording alongside what still applies at the Thai immigration counter.
Verify on the official page: travel.gc.ca: Thailand
For outdated COVID-era rules that no longer apply, see our travel restrictions guide.
Common mistakes canadian travellers make
These errors show up repeatedly in our Bangkok office consultations with Canadian clients. Most are avoidable with a fresh checklist and official sources, not forum posts from 2021 or 2022 that still mention Thailand Pass or quarantine hotels.
- Relying on outdated Thailand Pass or COE checklists from 2020 to 2022. Those systems were abolished. TDAC at tdac.immigration.go.th is the mandatory pre-arrival step for every Canadian entry in 2026.
- Assuming visa exemption authorises remote work from a Bangkok cafe or Phuket villa. Tourist exemption and tourist visa stamps do not permit employment in Thailand, including many Canadian-employed remote arrangements performed while physically in the country.
- Flying with only a one-way ticket when immigration expects proof you will leave within your stamp period. Airlines may deny boarding at Toronto or Vancouver before you reach Bangkok.
- Submitting TDAC on copycat sites that charge fees. The official form is free at tdac.immigration.go.th. Third-party sites may collect data without delivering a valid confirmation.
- Missing transit visa requirements on a layover while focusing only on Thailand entry rules. Some connection countries require separate transit permits.
- Entering repeatedly on visa exemption when the real plan is long-term winter escape. Immigration officers compare entry history and may deny, shorten, or question stamps.
- Storing all entry documents in checked luggage with no offline phone access. Immigration questions happen at the counter, often before you collect bags or when airport Wi-Fi is unreliable.
For more application pitfalls, see our top visa mistakes guide.
Frequently asked questions
Quick answers for canadian passport holders flying from Canada. Rules change independently of travel advisory updates, so verify against official sources within two weeks of departure if your trip is weeks away.
Q:Do Canadians need a visa for two weeks in Phuket?
No. Canadian passport holders qualify for visa exemption covering standard tourism stays up to 60 days per entry in 2026. You still need a valid passport, TDAC confirmation, and documents immigration may request such as a return ticket and proof of accommodation.
Q:Is Thailand Pass still required for Canadians?
No. Thailand Pass ended in 2022 and is not used at any checkpoint today. Complete TDAC instead at tdac.immigration.go.th within 72 hours of arrival. TDAC replaced the paper TM6 arrival card, not Thailand Pass.
Q:Is travel insurance mandatory for Canadians?
Not for all tourists at the border, but strongly recommended. Some long-stay visa categories require proof of cover. Canadian travel insurers often expect advisory-aligned coverage even when immigration does not ask at the counter.
Q:Does advisory level block entry?
No. Canadian travel advisories and Thai immigration are separate systems. Advisory text does not guarantee or deny entry. You still need the correct visa or exemption, TDAC, and documents that satisfy the immigration officer.
Q:How long can Canadians stay without a visa?
Typically 60 days per visa exemption entry for tourism in 2026, with a possible in-country extension at Thai Immigration (fees apply, not guaranteed). Multiple back-to-back exemption entries without meaningful time abroad may draw scrutiny.
Q:Can I enter Thailand with a one-way ticket from Canada?
That is risky. Immigration often wants proof you will leave Thailand within your permitted stay, and airlines may deny boarding before you reach Bangkok. Book a return or onward ticket within your stamp period.
Q:Do Canadian children need their own TDAC?
No. Advisory level is separate from Thai immigration law. Government travel guidance describes general safety awareness for canadian travellers abroad, not a border guarantee or visa requirement. You still need the correct visa or exemption, TDAC, and documents that satisfy the immigration officer. See our travel advisory guide for how to read advisory levels alongside entry rules.
Q:Can I work remotely in Thailand on visa exemption?
Visa exemption is for tourism. Performing remote work for a Canadian employer while physically in Thailand may violate immigration rules even if your income is paid abroad. Remote workers should consider the Destination Thailand Visa (DTV) or another category that matches their activity before travel.
Official references
Official sources verified June 2026. Use these primary government links to confirm eligibility for your passport and entry method. Third-party blogs are useful for context, but immigration officers follow published policy on thaievisa.go.th and tdac.immigration.go.th, not forum summaries.
- Thailand e-Visa: visa exemption list
- Thailand Digital Arrival Card (TDAC)
- Thailand e-Visa portal
- Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Thailand
- Royal Thai Embassy, Ottawa
- Global Affairs Canada: Thailand travel advice
Related TVC guides: Thailand entry requirements, Thailand travel restrictions.