Category guide

DTV Workcation: proving your remote work

Facts on this page checked against official sources on July 17, 2026 and reviewed by the DTV Thailand visa team. Rules change and vary by embassy, so always confirm with the embassy you apply through.
Sources

Workcation is the DTV category for people who earn outside Thailand: remote employees, freelancers, digital nomads, and consultants. The test the embassy applies is simple to state and strict to document: your employer or your clients are outside Thailand, and your papers prove it. Job title matters less than the paper trail.

Three profiles, three evidence sets

Remote employee

You are on the payroll of a company outside Thailand.

  • Employment contract
  • Employment certificate or employer letter, ideally naming remote work
  • Salary slips
  • Salary arriving on your bank statement

Freelancer

You work project to project for foreign clients.

  • Client contracts
  • Invoices and payment records
  • Portfolio or personal site
  • Platform profiles: Upwork, Fiverr, LinkedIn

Consultant

You advise foreign companies under service agreements.

  • Service contracts
  • Invoices
  • Letters from clients
  • Portfolio of engagements

What every Workcation case must prove

  1. The professional activity exists. Contracts, a portfolio, a working history. A job title on a form proves nothing by itself.
  2. It points outside Thailand. The employer is registered abroad, or the clients are. This is the line embassies read most carefully.
  3. Your role is documented. Who you are in the arrangement: employee, contractor, consultant, with papers signed by the right people.
  4. The finances hold. The 500,000 THB ending balance on a 3-month statement, plus income proof. Details in the requirements guide.

What does not qualify

Company ownership by itself

"I own a business" is not a DTV category. If the business gives you documented remote work or foreign clients, the case is judged on that evidence, like any other Workcation application.

Working for a Thai company

The DTV is not a work permit. Thai employment, or serving Thai clients where a permit is required, needs the Non-Immigrant B route instead. No document package changes that.

Freelancing without a contract: how to make it provable

The most common weak spot we see is a real freelancer with an unprovable business: money arrives, but nothing on paper says why. Embassies refuse what they cannot verify. The fix is usually assembling evidence you already have:

  • Export invoice history from your billing tool or payment platform.
  • Ask two or three regular clients for a short signed letter about your work.
  • Screenshot platform dashboards with earnings history, as supporting files.
  • Put the portfolio at one URL the officer can open in ten seconds.

If the work is real, the evidence almost always exists. It just was never collected in one place, and that is a solvable problem, not a refusal sentence.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Often yes, if you can show the work exists: invoices, payment records, platform profiles like Upwork, and a portfolio. Two or three short-term clients with paper trails beat one big client you cannot document.
A letter helps most when it states your role and the remote format directly. In recent cases, as of July 2026, embassies have asked for exactly that wording, so requesting "confirms remote work from abroad" up front saves a second request later.
It can, but the embassy will look past the ownership at the actual work: contracts, clients, invoices, payments. Ownership alone is not a category. Treat your own company like any other employer you must document.
Work for Thai clients or a Thai employer is outside what the DTV covers where a work permit is required. Mixing it in puts the whole status at risk. Keep the paid work pointed at clients outside Thailand.
Yes, that is who Workcation is for. What matters is documented foreign income, not where you slept last month. You still need to apply from a country whose Thai embassy accepts you as an applicant.
There is no published income minimum. The hard number is the 500,000 THB ending balance. Income proof for the last 6 months is in the official checklist and supports the story that the money is yours and recurring.
Yes. Once your DTV is approved, a legal spouse and unmarried children under 20 apply as dependents, each with a separate application and fee. Their cases lean on your visa plus proof of the family relationship.

Not sure your remote work reads as Workcation?

Send us what you have: contracts, invoices, platform profiles. We tell you honestly whether the evidence holds, what is missing, and whether a different category fits your case better.

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