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TM30 Thailand: what landlords must file, why tenants care, and how it affects your visa

TM30 is one of the most misunderstood Thai immigration records. It is technically the host’s address notification, but missing or mismatched TM30 records can create real problems for foreigners at visa extension, 90-day reporting, and immigration-service appointments.

Official basis
Section 38

TM30 comes from the Immigration Act duty for hosts to notify where a foreigner is staying.

Who files
Host or landlord

Hotels, owners, housemasters, landlords, or managers usually carry the filing duty.

Timing
Within 24 hours

The notification is tied to arrival at that address or moving into a new address.

Why tenants care
Extensions

Immigration can ask for TM30 proof during extensions, 90-day reports, and visa changes.

What TM30 is

TM30 is the residence notification for a foreigner staying at an address in Thailand. The official TM30 system describes it under Section 38 of the Immigration Act, where house owners, heads of household, landlords, and hotel managers notify immigration when they accommodate foreign nationals.

For a foreign resident, the practical issue is simple: your address records should match before you need immigration to process something important.

Who normally files TM30

Where you stayWho usually filesPractical note
Hotel or serviced apartmentHotel or managementUsually handled automatically at check-in, but long-stay guests should still ask for confirmation if they need immigration proof.
Rented condo or houseOwner, landlord, juristic office, or authorized agentAsk before signing whether TM30 will be filed and whether they can provide a receipt or screenshot.
Your own condoYou as owner or possessorYou may need to register the property in the TM30 system or file through immigration.
Staying with friends or familyHouse owner or housemasterThey may not know the rule, so explain it early if you need immigration services later.

TM30 compared with other immigration forms

FormWhenWhoPurpose
TDACBefore entering ThailandTravellerArrival registration.
TM30After arriving at an addressHost or accommodation providerResidence notification for where the foreigner is staying.
TM47Every 90 days of continuous stayForeigner or authorized representativeRecurring address notification while staying long-term.
TM7When applying for extensionVisa holderExtension of stay application.

Practical renter checklist

1

Ask before you move in

Confirm who will file TM30, whether they already have an online account, and how you will receive proof.

2

Record the actual move-in date

The 24-hour timing starts from arrival at the address, not from the day you remember to ask.

3

Get proof of submission

Keep a screenshot, receipt number, or printed confirmation with your visa documents.

4

Keep address records aligned

Your TM30, TM47, lease, and extension application should all tell the same address story.

Why TM30 can affect extensions and reports

When you apply for an extension, 90-day report, re-entry service, or visa conversion, immigration may compare your declared address with TM30 records. If the address history does not make sense, the officer may ask for additional proof or require the record to be corrected first.

Common TM30 mistakes

  • Assuming TM30 is not needed because the visa is valid.
  • Using a friend’s address on TM47 while TM30 shows a different condo or hotel.
  • Signing a long lease with a landlord who refuses to file TM30.
  • Moving units in the same building and forgetting the address details changed.
  • Waiting until extension day to discover the address record is missing.
  • Confusing TDAC, TM30, and 90-day reporting as the same process.

Planning checklist before you travel or relocate

Confirm your entry category, passport validity, and return plans before booking non-refundable flights or long hotel stays. Immigration officers compare your stated purpose with your visa stamp, prior entry history, and supporting documents at the counter.

Register your address through TM30 when required, complete TDAC before every arrival, and keep copies of lease agreements, insurance policies, and embassy correspondence in one folder. These records matter for extensions, tax filings, and unexpected compliance checks.

If your situation involves work, marriage, retirement funds, or property purchase, book a case review with our Bangkok team early. Small document gaps that seem minor at arrival become expensive fixes at extension season.

Planning checklist before you travel or relocate

Confirm your entry category, passport validity, and return plans before booking non-refundable flights or long hotel stays. Immigration officers compare your stated purpose with your visa stamp, prior entry history, and supporting documents at the counter.

Register your address through TM30 when required, complete TDAC before every arrival, and keep copies of lease agreements, insurance policies, and embassy correspondence in one folder. These records matter for extensions, tax filings, and unexpected compliance checks.

If your situation involves work, marriage, retirement funds, or property purchase, book a case review with our Bangkok team early. Small document gaps that seem minor at arrival become expensive fixes at extension season.

Step-by-step checklist

Follow this sequence to reduce avoidable delays and compliance gaps. Each step maps to what our Bangkok team verifies before clients submit applications or book long stays.

1

Confirm passport and entry category

Verify passport validity, visa stamp or exemption eligibility, and return plans before non-refundable bookings.

2

Complete TDAC before every arrival

Submit Thailand Digital Arrival Card within 72 hours on tdac.immigration.go.th, mandatory for all foreign nationals.

3

Register address through TM30

Hotels usually file automatically; renters must confirm landlords or juristic offices will register the address.

4

Track 90-day reporting if required

Long-stay visa holders who remain in Thailand 90 consecutive days must file TM47 online or in person.

5

Keep copies of all immigration receipts

Extension stamps, TM47 confirmations, and TM30 screenshots matter for the next renewal cycle.

6

Book case review for complex situations

Work, marriage, retirement funds, and property purchases benefit from early document review with our Bangkok team.

How TDAC, TM30, and 90-day reporting fit together

Foreigners often confuse three separate obligations. TDAC is completed by the traveller before each arrival. TM30 is filed by the host when you move into an address. The 90-day report is filed by the visa holder who stays in Thailand without leaving for 90 consecutive days. Missing any one can block your next extension.

RequirementWhenChannel
TDAC (Digital Arrival Card)Every entry within 72 hourstdac.immigration.go.th
TM30 address notificationWithin 24 hours of moving inLandlord, hotel, or immigration
90-day report (TM47)Every 90 days in-countrytm47.immigration.go.th or office
Visa extensionBefore stamp expiresLocal immigration office

Full form reference: Thailand immigration forms guide. Lifestyle planning: Thailand lifestyle guide.

Common mistakes foreigners make

Most difficult immigration cases start with avoidable errors. Use this list as a pre-travel and pre-extension control checklist.

  • Assuming a tourist stamp or exemption authorises employment or long-term residence in Thailand.
  • Skipping TDAC because you completed it on a previous trip, each arrival requires a fresh submission.
  • Signing a 12-month lease before confirming the landlord will file TM30 for visa extensions.
  • Waiting until day 89 to file a 90-day report when the online portal is busy near deadlines.
  • Relying on outdated blog posts instead of thaievisa.go.th and immigration.go.th for current rules.

How Thai Visa Centre can help

Our Bangkok team works with retirees, remote workers, spouses, and business owners who need the right visa before they sign leases or transfer pension funds.

1

Document review

We check passport scans, bank statements, relationship evidence, and embassy-specific requirements before you pay application fees.

2

Extension preparation

Retirement, marriage, and business extensions need maintained balances, TM30 history, and clean 90-day records, we map the file months ahead.

3

Entry troubleshooting

If you were denied at the border or need to switch visa category, early case review reduces overstay risk and re-entry bans.

4

Bangkok office visits

Chaeng Watthana queues reward prepared applicants. We help clients arrive with complete folders and correct form order.

Visa and entry paths at a glance

Thailand offers multiple legal routes depending on age, income, family ties, and activity type. The table below maps common goals to visa categories, use it as orientation, then confirm eligibility for your passport on thaievisa.go.th.

GoalVisa pathNotes
Tourism / short visitVisa exemption or TR tourist visaUp to 60 days exemption for listed passports; tourist visa for longer planned trips.
Remote work / freelancerDestination Thailand Visa (DTV)180 days per entry, 5-year validity: activity and financial proof required.
Retirement (50+)Non-Immigrant O-AFinancial and approved health insurance requirements.
Marriage to Thai nationalNon-Immigrant O marriageFinancial proof, relationship evidence, TM30 and reporting obligations.
Employment in ThailandNon-Immigrant B + work permitEmployer sponsorship and Labour Department approval required.
Premium long stayThailand Privilege (Elite)Paid membership with 5 to 20 year options and reduced immigration friction.
Skilled professional / investorLong-Term Resident (LTR)10-year visa with sub-categories for pensioners, workers, and investors.
EducationNon-Immigrant EDRequires acceptance from a recognised Thai school or university.

Long-stay lifestyle planning: Thailand lifestyle guide. Entry requirements: Thailand entry requirements.

Before you commit money or sign a lease

Immigration status should be decided before you ship household goods, enrol children in school, or sign a 12-month lease. Many long-term categories must be applied for at a Thai embassy abroad, or meet strict in-country rules that did not exist when you entered on exemption.

Keep a single folder with passport copies, TDAC confirmations, TM30 receipts, lease agreements, bank statements, and insurance policies. Extension officers at Chaeng Watthana and provincial offices ask for this history in chronological order.

If your situation involves remote work, marriage, retirement funds, or a Thai company, book a case review with our Bangkok team before your next border crossing. Small document gaps at arrival become expensive fixes at extension season.

Frequently asked questions

Does the foreign tenant file TM30?

The legal duty usually sits with the house owner, housemaster, landlord, hotel, or manager. In practice, the foreign tenant often has to chase proof because immigration may ask for it later.

Does TM30 extend my visa?

No. TM30 only records where you are staying. It does not add stay time and does not replace a visa extension.

Do hotels file TM30?

Reputable hotels and serviced apartments usually handle it at check-in. Ask for proof if you will need it for immigration.

What if my landlord refuses to file TM30?

Explain that it is a routine immigration duty. If they still refuse, ask a juristic office, property agent, or immigration adviser about practical options before your extension or 90-day report becomes urgent.

When was this guide last reviewed?

June 2026. Immigration rules, embassy practices, and entry requirements change. Verify on official government portals before you travel or apply.

Can Thai Visa Centre review my documents before I submit?

Yes. Our Bangkok team checks passport eligibility, supporting documents, and filing order for visa applications, extensions, and entry compliance.

Official references and further reading