Thailand’s New Investigation Policy on Nominees Matter

drone photography of land and mountain ranges near seacoast

Thailand’s New Investigation Policy on Nominees Matter

The Government of Thailand has launched a nationwide investigation campaign targeting the illegal use of Thai “nominees” — local Thai citizens hired by foreign investors to circumvent restrictions on land ownership and business operations. Enforcement has been concentrated in Thailand’s major economic and tourism hubs, including Phuket, Chiang Mai, and Bangkok.

Action Plan and Policy

The campaign reflects a government priority to ensure fair competition and transparency within the local economy. It is being implemented jointly by 23 Thai government departments, including the Royal Thai Police, the Department of Business Development (DBD), and the Department of Lands. Under the action plan, authorities are re-examining corporate registrations, tracing the source of funds used by Thai shareholders, and reviewing companies in tourist areas with suspicious or unusual ownership structures.

Current Status and Practices

Enforcement efforts to date have produced significant results. Officials report that 172 land plots in the southern economic provinces — covering approximately 51 acres and valued at roughly 1.67 billion baht — are currently under investigation. As a result, courts have issued 107 arrest warrants, leading to 65 arrests of Thai nominees and foreign investors so far.

Government officials have disclosed that Israeli nationals represent the largest group implicated in these illegal nominee arrangements, followed by French, Russian, and other European nationals. The sectors most frequently affected include hotels, resorts, restaurants, and cannabis shops. A common scheme involves registering low-income Thai employees or local citizens as majority shareholders holding more than 50% of company shares — an arrangement that is often easy to identify, since these individuals typically lack the personal savings or income needed to fund such large-scale investments.

The legal consequences of enforcement are becoming increasingly severe. In recent rulings in Surat Thani — the southern province home to the popular tourist destination Koh Phangan — courts have sentenced convicted nominees and foreign investors to prison terms and fines, and ordered them to divest illegally acquired land within a strict timeframe of 180 days to one year.

Future Steps and Business Implications

This intensified enforcement signals a permanent shift toward stricter regulatory oversight of foreign investment in Thailand. The government is now expanding investigations beyond economic and tourism centers to other regions nationwide, aiming for comprehensive enforcement against nominee structures across the country.

The interagency screening process will introduce stricter background and financial checks at both the company registration and land-transfer stages. As a result, foreign investors should expect more rigorous scrutiny regarding the source of their Thai partners’ investment funds. The government also plans to involve the Anti-Money Laundering Office (AMLO) to freeze and seize bank accounts and assets linked to nominee networks.

Key Takeaways

  • AMLO will be engaged to freeze bank accounts and seize assets connected to nominee networks.
  • Thailand is enforcing its new anti-nominee policy nationwide, with particular focus on — but not limited to — major economic provinces.
  • The 23-department investigation framework enables deeper scrutiny of business funding and shareholder backgrounds, meaning investors should anticipate more intensive compliance checks.
  • Investigations are concentrated on, but not limited to, hotels, resorts, restaurants, and cannabis shops with suspicious Thai shareholding structures.
  • Courts are issuing prison sentences, fines, and mandatory orders to divest illegally acquired land within one year.

Author: Panisa Suwanmatajarn, Managing Partner.

Other Articles