Whether you're forming a Thai Limited Company, applying for BOI promotion, or leveraging the US Treaty of Amity, our team handles every filing, every regulator, and every detail — entirely in English.
Choosing the right legal structure is the most important decision you'll make. Here's how each option compares — and which one usually fits.
A standard Thai Limited Company requires 51% Thai shareholding by default. Suitable for most service-based, retail, and trading businesses where Thai partners are part of the plan.
The Board of Investment grants 100% foreign ownership, corporate tax holidays up to 13 years, land ownership rights, and streamlined visas/work permits to qualifying activities.
Under the 1966 US-Thailand Treaty, American citizens and US-incorporated entities can hold up to 100% of a Thai company in most sectors — without BOI promotion.
Required for foreign-owned businesses operating in restricted activities under the Foreign Business Act. We handle the full FBL application with the Ministry of Commerce.
Best for parent companies that want a local presence without forming a separate Thai entity. Representative offices are limited to non-revenue activities (sourcing, market research, quality control). We handle the full registration with the Department of Business Development.
Define structure, ownership, and capital.
Reserve your company name with DBD.
Draft and bilingual Articles of Association.
Shareholder meeting and board appointments.
Company registered as legal entity.
Revenue Department registration.
Corporate banking and Social Security setup.
Visa, work permit, and ongoing compliance handled by us.
Pricing is indicative. Final fees confirmed after the discovery call. All packages include a dedicated English-speaking account manager.
In most cases yes — for the bank account opening and a few signature steps. However, with a properly drafted Power of Attorney, much of the registration can be completed remotely. We coordinate scheduling so you only need to be physically present for 1–2 days.
For a Thai Limited Company employing one foreign worker, the minimum registered capital is THB 2 million per work permit. BOI-promoted companies have separate capital requirements based on activity (typically THB 1 million minimum). Capital does not need to be paid in full at registration — usually 25% paid up is sufficient.
Yes, in three scenarios: (1) BOI-promoted activity, (2) US citizens via Treaty of Amity, or (3) holding a Foreign Business License from the Ministry of Commerce. We assess your business activity during the discovery call and recommend the optimal route.
Thai Limited Company: 7–14 business days. Treaty of Amity: 30–45 days. BOI Promotion: 40–90 days depending on activity complexity. We provide a Gantt-style timeline at proposal stage.
For a standard Thai Limited Company yes — the company needs at least 51% Thai ownership. However, we never recommend nominee shareholders. Nominee arrangements are illegal under the Foreign Business Act and carry serious penalties. If 100% foreign ownership is essential, we'll structure your business through BOI, Treaty of Amity, or FBL instead.
Most clients continue with us on a monthly accounting and compliance retainer (from THB 6,000/month). We handle bookkeeping, VAT/WHT filings, payroll, social security, and annual financial statements — so you stay fully compliant with zero administrative burden.
Book a complimentary 30-minute consultation. We'll map out your optimal structure — with no commitment.