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Thailand Retirement Visa Service

You are age 50 + and want to live in Thailand long-term without the guesswork. This service handles your retirement visa application, checks your bank/income, asks the right questions, prepares your documents, and guides you through the submission before you even come to Thailand.

Guaranteed, "done for you", Thailand Visa & Planning services.

Retirement Visa Service Application

Better quality of life
Lower living costs
Easy yearly renewals

Why retire to Thailand?

Thailand lets you stretch your retirement money further without giving up comfort. Daily living costs are lower than North America and Western Europe, especially for food, transport and basic services. You can afford cleaners, laundry, taxis and eating out without draining your pension. At the same time you have modern condos, good internet, and international supermarkets if you want them. You are not forced into a bare-bones lifestyle just to make your money last.

Thailand also gives you a calmer day to day life. Private hospitals are excellent, with short waiting times and prices that are realistic compared with Western care. Many doctors are foreign trained and speak English. The climate is warm, you can travel easily inside the country, and there is less constant political noise in your daily life. You can step out of the stress, focus on your health, enjoy a simple routine, and still have access to airports, shopping and specialist medical treatment when you need it.


Types of retirement visas

Here are the main retirement-style visa options in Thailand and who they are for.

1. Non-Immigrant O (retirement) – one year at a time

Who it is for: most practical option for many normal retirees who can move funds into Thailand and want to manage things year by year.

2. Non-Immigrant O-A (Long Stay, 1 year)

Who it is for: retirees who want a clean one-year permission from day one and are comfortable arranging insurance and police/medical documents at home.

3. Non-Immigrant O-X (10 year retirement visa)

Who it is for: wealthier retirees from eligible countries who want fewer renewals and are happy to lock in a higher deposit and insurance.

4. Long-Term Resident (LTR) – Wealthy Pensioner

Who it is for: high income retirees who want a premium long-term solution and are comfortable with foreign-currency documentation and investment.


Applying before you come to Thailand

Applying before you fly is often the cleanest route. You arrive with a retirement-type visa already in your passport and do not have to race to meet deadlines immediately after landing.

For Non-Immigrant O-A or O-X or LTR, you normally apply at a Thai embassy or consulate in your home country or country of residence. You must be 50 or older, show the required bank deposit or income, and provide:

The benefits are simple. Airline staff see a clear retirement visa at check-in. Immigration at Bangkok or other airports gives you the full one-year or LTR permission on arrival. You can then open bank accounts, sign leases, and set up your life with a strong status from day one. The trade-off is that you must do more paperwork at home, including police and medical checks and insurance.


Applying inside Thailand

Many retirees arrive on a tourist visa or visa exemption, then decide to stay. In that case, the usual route is a Non-Immigrant O based on retirement, then a one-year extension inside Thailand.

The main challenge is the bank account problem. To extend your stay based on retirement, you need:

Opening a Thai bank account can be hard if you only have a tourist stamp and no local support. Requirements vary by bank and branch. Some want proof of address, some want a long-stay visa, some accept a letter from your embassy or a local company. Timing is important, because the deposit must sit for the full required months before your extension date.

Other requirements for the retirement extension inside Thailand include:

The downsides of doing everything inside Thailand are the time pressure, the need to move money and open a bank account fast, and repeated visits to immigration if you make mistakes. Thai Kru exists to remove those problems.


Our process for each type

When you contact us, we first check your age, nationality, current visa, and financial situation in plain language. If you are still outside Thailand, we look at whether an O-A, O-X or LTR Wealthy Pensioner is realistic for you. We explain the total cost, insurance, and extra documents, then prepare all embassy forms, cover letters, and document lists. You submit a complete file once, not five times.

If you are already in Thailand, we review your passport and current permission to stay, then map out the steps to move you to a Non-Immigrant O retirement and then a one-year extension. We help you choose a bank, open the account, move funds, and time your application so your 800,000 THB deposit meets the two- or three-month rule. We prepare all immigration forms, bank letters and copies, and accompany you to your appointment or go for you where allowed.

For high-income retirees aiming at the LTR Wealthy Pensioner route, we help you gather proof of passive income, investments and insurance in the exact format the BOI and LTR unit expect. We handle the online LTR application, follow up on questions, and guide you through the final stamp in Thailand.

In all cases, you get clear dates, clear numbers, and a written summary of what you must maintain each year so your retirement in Thailand stays stable.


FAQ

1. What is the minimum age for a retirement visa in Thailand?

You must be at least 50 years old on the day you apply for any retirement-based visa or extension.

2. How much money do I need?

For standard retirement options you must show either 800,000 THB in a Thai bank account for the required time, or 65,000 THB per month in income, or a combination totalling 800,000 THB per year. O-X and LTR wealthy pensioner options require much higher deposits or foreign income.

3. Do I need health insurance?

For O-A and O-X visas, yes. You must have Thai-approved insurance with at least 3 million THB overall medical coverage or 400,000/40,000 inpatient/outpatient as specified by current rules. LTR visas also require at least 50,000 USD health insurance or alternatives. Non-O retirement extensions inside Thailand do not always require insurance yet, but it is strongly recommended and some posts ask for it.

4. Can I work in Thailand on a retirement visa?

No. Retirement visas do not allow employment. If you want to work or run a business, you must look at work, business or LTR categories designed for that purpose.

5. What if I am under 50 but want to move now?

You cannot use a retirement visa yet. We can look at other options such as work, business, family or long-term programs until you reach 50, then shift you into a retirement route.

6. Can my spouse stay with me on my retirement visa?

Yes. Your spouse can usually get a Non-Immigrant O visa or extension as your dependent if you are legally married and meet the financial requirement. Some options, like O-X and LTR, allow dependents directly under the same scheme.

7. Do I have to keep 800,000 THB in the bank forever?

You must keep the deposit in the Thai bank the full time before and after your extension according to immigration rules, then you may reduce it to a lower level later in the year. However, if it falls too low or is moved too often, it can cause problems at the next renewal. We will tell you clearly what pattern is safe at your local office.

8. Can I switch from an O-A visa to a Non-O retirement extension inside Thailand?

Often yes. Many retirees move from O-A (with insurance obligations) to a Non-O retirement extension. The exact steps depend on your local immigration office. We review your case and plan the change so there is no gap in your permission to stay.

9. How many times do I have to report to immigration each year?

Even with a one-year retirement extension or O-A/O-X visa, you must still do 90-day address reporting. Some LTR rules are different. We track your dates and can handle the reports for you as part of an ongoing service.

10. Can I travel in and out of Thailand on a retirement visa?

Yes, but you must have a re-entry permit. If you leave without one, your extension is cancelled. We arrange single or multiple re-entry permits for you before you travel and explain how to use them correctly.

11. What happens if I do not meet the financial requirement one year?

If your balances or income fall below the required level, immigration can refuse your renewal and you may have to leave or move to a different visa type. Contact us early if your income or savings change so we can adjust your strategy before renewal time.

12. How does Thai Kru actually help?

You are not buying information, you are buying execution. We calculate which visa fits you, prepare the paperwork, help you open accounts, coordinate with banks and insurers, attend immigration with you or for you, and keep your dates organized. You focus on enjoying your retirement in Thailand while we handle the immigration side year after year.

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