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    Entry brief — France passport

    🇹🇭Thailand

    Visa-freeUp to 60 daysLast verified
    Length of stay
    Up to 60 days
    Processing time
    None — admitted at the border on arrival.
    Estimated fee

    Documents required

    • ·Passport valid 6 months beyond entry
    • ·At least one blank passport page
    • ·Proof of onward or return travel

    Entry requirements

    • ·Return or onward ticket
    • ·Proof of sufficient funds for the stay
    • ·Travel insurance recommended
    • ·Accommodation address may be requested

    No advance application required. The border officer has final discretion on length of stay. Details shown are general guidance for visa-free entry — always confirm current requirements on the destination's official government portal before booking travel.

    Before you fly

    Arrival card required

    Thailand requires travellers to complete the Thailand Digital Arrival Card (TDAC) online before arrival. Mandatory for all foreign nationals entering Thailand by air, land or sea since 1 May 2025. Replaces the paper TM6 form.

    When to submit
    Within 3 days before arrival

    Submit only via the official government portal — many lookalike sites charge a fee for what is a free declaration.

    At the border

    Immigration officers in Thailand

    Strictness
    Relaxed
    Likelihood of questioning
    Light-touch entry — typically a stamp and a brief greeting. Spot-checks on documents do still happen.

    Thailand is known for a friendly, low-friction arrival experience for legitimate visitors.

    Required proof at entry
    • ·Passport valid 6+ months beyond your departure date
    • ·Confirmed return or onward ticket within the permitted stay
    • ·Hotel reservation or host's full address and contact details
    • ·Some cash or a working card — officers may ask how the trip is funded

    Border experience is a planning guide — individual officers have wide discretion. When in doubt, carry more documentation than you think you'll need.

    Source: Thai eVisa

    If things go wrong

    Overstay, refusal & deportation in Thailand

    HarshEnforcement posture
    Overstay fines

    Thailand levies steep daily overstay penalties. Current fine amounts are set by the immigration authority and revised periodically — confirm on the official government portal before assuming.

    Visa rejection consequences

    A refused visa or denied entry is logged in Thailand's immigration database and is automatically disclosed on every future application worldwide that asks the question.

    Re-entry bans

    Re-entry bans are routinely imposed for overstays beyond a few days, and repeat overstays can escalate to multi-year or lifetime bans. The exact tariff is set by the immigration authority.

    Deportation risks

    Removal proceedings are common for any overstay flagged by police, employers or border officials. Detention pending deportation is possible, and the cost of removal can be billed to the traveller.

    Penalties change frequently and vary by circumstance — treat this as a planning guide, not legal advice. Settle any overstay or status issue with the local immigration authority before departure where possible.

    Current penalties and ban tariffs: Thai eVisa

    Staying longer

    Extensions & visa runs in Thailand

    Usually yesCan you extend your stay?

    Thailand has a pragmatic posture toward visitors who play by the rules and apply for extensions properly.

    How many times?

    Thailand routinely grants in-country extensions. Apply at the immigration office before your stay expires; the exact length is set by the immigration authority.

    Visa run rules (leave & re-enter)

    Thailand actively monitors back-to-back entries. Border officers can refuse re-entry, shorten the stay granted, or impose a mandatory cooling-off period after repeated short trips.

    Border discretion is real — even when extensions are technically allowed, individual officers can refuse. For stays beyond a few months, switching to a proper long-stay, student, or remote-work visa is almost always safer than repeated runs.

    Current extension rules: Thai eVisa

    Full French passport mobility report185 visa-free destinations, rankings, and every countryView report
    Frequently asked

    French passport to Thailand — common questions

    Do French citizens need a visa to enter Thailand?
    No. French passport holders can enter Thailand visa-free for short stays. Permitted length of stay: Up to 60 days. Bring a passport valid 6+ months beyond your departure date and proof of onward travel.
    How long can French passport holders stay in Thailand?
    Up to 60 days. Most visa-free entries grant 30–90 days per visit. The exact length is set by the border officer and printed on your entry stamp — always check it before leaving the immigration hall.
    How do French citizens apply for entry to Thailand?
    No advance application — you are admitted at the border on arrival, subject to officer discretion.
    What documents do French travellers need at the Thailand border?
    Bring a passport valid 6+ months beyond your departure date, a confirmed return or onward ticket, proof of accommodation (hotel booking or host address), and proof of funds for the stay. Travel insurance is strongly recommended and sometimes mandatory.
    Can French passport holders extend their stay in Thailand?
    Some destinations allow one extension at the local immigration office; others do not. Apply before your current stay expires — never after.
    What happens if a French citizen overstays in Thailand?
    Overstaying in Thailand can trigger per-day fines, future visa refusals, and re-entry bans. Even short overstays are logged in the immigration database and asked about on future visa applications worldwide. Always leave on or before the date stamped in your passport.
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    Visa data sourced from the Passport Index open dataset (MIT licence), updated monthly. Always verify requirements with the official embassy or consulate before travel.

    Data last updated: .