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If you stay in Thailand on repeat tourist entries in 2025, you are now on immigration’s radar. In November 2025, Thai Immigration publicly confirmed a crackdown on people using visa exemptions and tourist visas as a long-term stay strategy. Officers are checking repeat entries more closely, asking more questions, demanding proof of funds, onward tickets, and real travel plans. Multiple back-to-back tourist entries look like you are living here without the correct visa. That can mean refused extensions, refused entry at the airport, or being told to apply for a proper long-term visa before you come back.
Overstaying is an even bigger problem. The fine is still 500 THB per day, but longer overstays are now recorded and tied to bans of up to 10 years depending on how long you stay past your stamp. Even “small” overstays are logged in the system and repeated overstays can mark you as a problem traveler. If you are stopped during a sweep, even a short overstay can mean detention and forced removal, not a friendly fine on departure. Using tourist visas to live in Thailand in 2025 is now a high-risk strategy. This service exists to get you out of the tourist-visa trap and into a proper long-term status.
Below is a direct list of the main long-term options you can move toward from a tourist visa. You do not need to decide on your own — we use this framework to put you into the correct category.
Our job is to look at your age, income, work, family, and risk level, then tell you straight which of these is realistic now, which requires leaving and re-entering, and which you should forget about.
You fill out the short “Tourist Visa Conversion” form with your nationality, remaining days, and a clear description of your situation. We review your immigration history, flags like repeat entries or past overstays, and your long-term goal (work, retire, family, remote work). Then we recommend a single best route, explain if it can be done inside Thailand or requires a consulate trip, tell you exactly what documents to collect, and prepare or review your application. You get direct, human answers, not generic forum guesses, and ongoing support until your new status is secured or you decide not to proceed.
Sometimes yes, sometimes no. It depends on your nationality, your current entry type, how many days you have left, and which visa you are aiming for. We tell you honestly if an in-country conversion is realistic or if you should exit and apply at a consulate.
In late 2025, immigration started checking repeat tourist entries much more aggressively. Too many back-to-back entries can lead to denied boarding, refused entry, or being told to get a proper long-term visa. Visa-run life is no longer a safe long-term strategy.
Even one-day overstays are recorded. A single short overstay with a paid fine is usually tolerated, but repeated or longer overstays can trigger bans and make future visas harder. If you are close to your final date, you must act now, not “see what happens.”
Ideally 30–45 days before your current permission ends. The more time you give us, the more options you have. If you have less than 30 days, we can still look at what is possible, but choices may be limited.
Yes, but not on a tourist visa. There are remote-worker-friendly routes, including DTV and some LTR categories, depending on your income, role, and documents. We match you to the safest option we can defend if immigration asks questions.
You might be a good candidate for a retirement visa or a related long-stay route. We check your age, bank balance, and income, then tell you whether an in-country change is possible or if you must leave and apply.
Yes. Marriage to a Thai or supporting a Thai child is one of the strongest long-stay bases. The key is proper documentation and realistic financials. We handle the structure and tell you exactly what evidence immigration actually expects.
For genuine employment or business cases, yes. If your situation is real work in Thailand, we work with you and the employer or company to prepare the correct Non-B and work-permit documentation as part of the long-stay solution.
Usually yes, via dependent visas, but the rules vary depending on your main visa type. We map out who can be attached to you, what documents are needed, and whether they should apply with you or afterward.
We need to see exactly what happened and what is stamped in your passport. In many cases we can still build a new, cleaner application, but sometimes the only smart move is to step back, fix the pattern, and then re-enter with a proper visa.
No. This service is specifically for people stuck on, or about to be stuck on, tourist status. We work across retirement, family, work, business, remote work, and some special categories. The outcome is a real long-term solution, not another short stamp.
You get a clear, written path and hands-on help to move from tourist status to a proper long-term visa that fits your real life in Thailand. No more visa-run anxiety, no more guessing what immigration will say, and a realistic way to stay in Thailand legally.
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