The Long-Term Resident (LTR) visa is a 10-year, multi-entry residency program run by the Board of Investment (BOI), not the Immigration Bureau. It was launched in 2022 as part of Thailand’s bid to attract high-skill, high-wealth foreigners and was significantly relaxed in February 2025 — most relevantly, the income requirement for the Wealthy Global Citizen category was removed entirely.
For property buyers, the LTR’s most useful feature is that a Thai property purchase counts toward the USD 500,000 qualifying investment for Wealthy Global Citizens. This makes the LTR a structural fit for serious foreign property investors — an investment they would make anyway becomes the basis for a 10-year visa with tax benefits and family inclusion.
The four LTR categories
The 13 January 2025 Cabinet approval and BOI Announcement Por. 3/2568 (effective 17 February 2025) reshaped the eligibility rules. Current criteria:
Wealthy Global Citizens — most relevant for property buyers
- USD 1,000,000+ in global assets, in your own name
- USD 500,000+ qualifying investment in Thailand (property, government bonds with 5+ year maturity, FDI in a Thai company, or a combination)
- Income requirement removed (was USD 80,000/year for two years pre-2025)
- Health insurance USD 50,000+ coverage, OR Thai social security, OR USD 100,000 bank deposit held for 12 months
This is the relevant category for almost all property-buying applicants who can hit the USD 1M asset threshold.
Wealthy Pensioners
- Age 50+
- USD 80,000+ annual passive income (pension, rental, dividends, capital gains), OR
- USD 40,000–80,000 passive income paired with USD 250,000 investment in Thai property, government bonds, or FDI
- Same insurance/deposit rules
Work-from-Thailand Professionals
- USD 80,000+ annual income (or USD 40,000+ with a master’s degree in STEM)
- Foreign employer must be a publicly-listed company OR a private firm with USD 50M+ revenue over the past 3 years (down from USD 150M)
- 5-year experience requirement removed in 2025
- Now includes employees of wholly-owned subsidiaries of multinationals
- No work permit needed (the work is for a foreign employer)
Highly-Skilled Professionals
- USD 80,000+ annual income (or USD 40,000+ with a master’s, or working for the Thai government)
- 5-year experience requirement removed
- Now explicitly includes academic professors across all fields
- Eligible for the 17% flat personal income tax (this category only)
Dependents
The 2025 changes expanded the dependent provision from “spouse + 4 children under 20” to spouse + parents + all legal dependents, with no numerical limit. This makes LTR genuinely useful for multi-generational family relocation.
Property as the qualifying investment
For the Wealthy Global Citizen category, a Thai property purchase counts toward the USD 500,000 investment threshold. The mechanics:
Eligible property types:
- Freehold condominium units (subject to the 49% foreign quota — LTR doesn’t change foreign ownership rules)
- Freehold buildings on leased land (the typical foreign-buyer villa structure: leasehold land + freehold structure registered separately)
- Leasehold property with at least 10 years remaining on the registered lease
Documentation required:
- Land Office: registered Sale and Purchase Agreement, the title deed (Chanote or Condominium Title Deed) in your name, and a Foreign Exchange Transaction (FET) form proving funds entered Thailand from abroad
- BOI portal: same documents uploaded, plus a valuation showing USD 500,000+ at the time of purchase
Timing: BOI accepts a property purchase made within the six months before the LTR application, or a purchase made after pre-approval. The investment must be maintained throughout the 10-year visa term — selling the property and dropping below the threshold can void status.
What LTR does not do for property buyers: it does not override the 49% condo quota, does not allow freehold land ownership beyond Section 96 bis, and does not extend the 30-year leasehold cap. The visa is a residency benefit, not a property-rights modifier.
Benefits
- 10-year visa issued as 5+5 (renewal at year 5 conditional on maintained criteria)
- Multi-entry, no re-entry permit needed
- Annual reporting instead of the 90-day reporting required of standard long-stay visas
- Fast-track immigration at international airports
- Digital work permit included for Highly-Skilled and Wealthy categories (not Work-from-Thailand)
- 17% flat personal income tax for Highly-Skilled Professionals only
- Tax exemption on remitted foreign-source income for Wealthy Global Citizens, Wealthy Pensioners, and Work-from-Thailand Professionals (under Royal Decree No. 743)
- Exemption from the 4:1 Thai-to-foreigner employment ratio that constrains regular Thai employers
- Dependents included — spouse, parents, and legal dependents
The tax benefit — the most important fine-print piece
Before 2024, foreign-source income remitted to Thailand was tax-free if brought in after the calendar year it was earned. This was a major planning tool for foreign tax residents. Revenue Department Order Por. 161/2566 closed this loophole effective 1 January 2024 — from that date, any foreign income remitted by a Thai tax resident (183+ days per year) is taxable regardless of when earned.
LTR holders are explicitly exempt from this remittance tax. Royal Decree No. 743 (B.E. 2565) exempts Wealthy Global Citizens, Wealthy Pensioners, and Work-from-Thailand Professionals from personal income tax on assessable income from foreign sources. Highly-Skilled Professionals get the 17% flat rate on Thai-source assessable income instead.
For a foreign property buyer planning to spend more than 180 days per year in Thailand and remit foreign income to fund their lifestyle, this exemption is the most concrete financial benefit of the LTR — typically worth more in absolute baht than every other LTR perk combined.
A note on the moving target: a draft amendment in 2025 proposed returning to a “remit within 2 years” exemption for general tax residents (not LTR holders). Status as of mid-2026 is uncertain. If enacted, it narrows the LTR’s tax advantage relative to standard residents but does not eliminate it. Verify current rules before structuring around the exemption.
The Thai-source income side is unchanged — Thai employment income, Thai rental income, and Thai capital gains are taxed normally for all LTR categories. The exemption is only on the foreign-source side.
Application and cost
- Apply online via ltr.boi.go.th
- Stage 1: BOI qualifications endorsement — about 20 working days
- Stage 2: Pre-approval letter — 1–3 days
- Visa collected within 60 days at a Thai embassy abroad or at the One Stop Service Center in Chamchuri Square, Bangkok
- Government fee: THB 50,000 for the full 10-year, multi-entry visa
- Optional digital work permit: THB 3,000 per year
As of end-2024, BOI had issued over 6,000 LTR visas. Top countries of origin: Europe (2,500), USA (1,080), Japan (610), China (340), India (280). Thailand opened a dedicated Thailand Investment and Expat Services Center on 17 March 2025 to streamline LTR processing.
How LTR compares for a property buyer
| Visa | Duration | Cost | Best fit |
|---|---|---|---|
| LTR Wealthy Global Citizen | 10 yr (5+5) | THB 50k | Property buyer with USD 1M+ assets, USD 500k+ in Thai property. Foreign-income exemption is the headline benefit. |
| LTR Wealthy Pensioner | 10 yr | THB 50k | 50+ buyer with USD 250k Thai property + USD 40k passive income |
| Privilege (Elite) Visa | 5–20 yr | THB 650k–5M | Buyer who can’t meet LTR thresholds, wants concierge service, doesn’t need tax exemption or work rights |
| DTV (Destination Thailand Visa) | 5 yr multi-entry | ~THB 10k visa fee + proof of THB 500k liquid funds | Remote worker / digital nomad. 180-day stays per entry. Property ownership is a soft tie, doesn’t qualify alone. |
| Retirement (O-A / O-X) | 1 yr renewable / 5+5 | Low fee + THB 800k bank balance OR THB 65k/month income | 50+ retiree without USD-level wealth |
| Marriage (O) | 1 yr renewable | Low fee + THB 400k bank or THB 40k/month | Married to a Thai national |
When LTR makes sense versus each alternative for a property buyer:
- vs Privilege Visa: LTR wins on cost (THB 50k vs THB 650k+), provides tax exemption that Privilege doesn’t, includes work rights, and has lower reporting burden. The downside is the qualifying threshold (USD 1M assets) — Privilege has no qualifying activity beyond payment.
- vs DTV: LTR is for tax residency strategy and family inclusion. DTV is for lifestyle flexibility without commitment. A foreign property buyer planning to spend 5+ years primarily in Thailand benefits more from LTR; a buyer planning to use the property occasionally while staying mobile benefits more from DTV. Detail in Thailand DTV (Destination Thailand Visa) for digital nomads and remote workers.
- vs Retirement (O-A / O-X): LTR for those under 50 who want tax exemption and a 10-year horizon without annual renewal. The retirement visa has a much lower financial threshold but no tax benefits and annual renewal hassle. Detail in Thailand retirement visa for property owners — O-A and O-X compared.
A common misconception about the 17% flat tax
The 17% flat personal income tax rate frequently cited in LTR marketing applies only to Highly-Skilled Professionals on their Thai-source assessable income. It does not apply to Wealthy Global Citizens, Wealthy Pensioners, or Work-from-Thailand Professionals — those categories get the foreign-income exemption instead, which is typically more valuable in absolute terms.
A property-buying investor will almost always qualify under Wealthy Global Citizen and should plan around the foreign-income exemption, not the 17% rate.
Practical sequence — buying property and applying for LTR
A clean structure for a foreign buyer using property to qualify:
- Confirm asset position — USD 1M+ in your name, documented (bank statements, brokerage, property abroad with title in your name).
- Identify a target Thai property that will be at or above USD 500,000 — for Phuket, this is most freehold condos in Bang Tao, Laguna, Surin, or Kamala, and most pool villas. See Buying property in Phuket — complete guide for foreign buyers and Rental yields in Phuket — what investors actually earn for area selection.
- Confirm property type qualifies — freehold condo, freehold building on leased land, or leasehold with 10+ years. Avoid pure leasehold with shorter terms unless restructuring is planned.
- Buy the property following the standard sequence in How to buy property in Thailand — step-by-step guide for foreigners. Critical: bring funds in with FET — both the property registration and the LTR investment proof depend on it.
- Apply for LTR via the BOI portal once the title deed is in your name. BOI accepts purchases made within the past 6 months. Health insurance documentation, proof of USD 1M+ assets, passport scans.
- Maintain the investment for the full 10-year term. Selling the property and dropping below the threshold can void status — plan for this in your hold horizon.