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posted 2 hours ago
Last updated: 6 July 2026
Private M&A transactions involving Thai companies routinely raise a critical tax question: how to avoid withholding tax on share transfer in Thailand without exposing either party to enforcement risk. Under the Thai Revenue Code, buyers who acquire shares from non-resident sellers are generally obligated to withhold income tax at source and remit it to the Thai Revenue Department (RD) before the transfer completes. The stakes are significant, failure to withhold can leave the purchaser jointly liable for the tax, penalties and surcharges, while over-withholding erodes the seller’s net proceeds and can derail deal economics.
This guide walks transaction lawyers, in-house counsel and acquirers through the statutory triggers, the lawful levers available (double tax treaty relief, seller residency planning and compliant structuring), and the procedural steps, including the e‑Stamp duty process, required to close a Thai share sale cleanly in 2026.
Quick-reference decision points:
Understanding when withholding tax on share purchase in Thailand is triggered is the essential first step for any deal team. The obligation does not arise on every transfer, it depends on the seller’s residency, the type of shares involved and the character of the income under the Revenue Code.
Thailand’s withholding tax framework for share disposals sits primarily within the Revenue Code. Where a buyer makes a payment to a non-resident person or entity for the acquisition of shares in a Thai company, the payer is required to withhold income tax at source before remitting the purchase price. The domestic withholding rate on capital gains paid to non-resident sellers is generally set at 15 per cent of the gross amount, although the effective rate can vary depending on whether the seller is an individual or a juristic person, and whether a double tax treaty overrides the domestic rate.
For resident sellers, the position differs. Thai-resident individuals who sell shares are subject to personal income tax on the capital gain, but the buyer is not typically required to withhold at source in the same manner as cross-border payments. Instead, the resident seller self-assesses by including the gain in their annual tax return. Thai corporate sellers similarly account for the gain within their corporate income tax filings. The buyer’s withholding obligation in a purely domestic transaction is therefore either absent or limited, though careful verification of the seller’s residency status remains essential.
A key distinction applies to shares traded on the Stock Exchange of Thailand (SET). Capital gains realised by individual investors from the sale of shares listed on the SET are exempt from personal income tax under a long-standing Royal Decree. This exemption does not extend to juristic persons, nor does it cover unlisted (private) company shares. For private M&A transactions, which form the majority of share acquisitions that this guide addresses, no equivalent blanket exemption exists. The Thailand capital gains tax on shares therefore applies in full to disposals of unlisted equity, making withholding analysis a central concern for every private deal.
Industry observers note that the SET exemption is periodically reviewed and could be modified, so deal teams acquiring listed equity should confirm the exemption’s current status at the time of signing.
The buyer in a private share acquisition is the party that carries the withholding risk. If the purchaser fails to withhold when required, the RD can pursue the buyer for the unpaid tax together with penalties of up to 100 per cent and monthly surcharges. This section sets out a practical, step-by-step checklist for buyers navigating withholding tax thailand for foreigners and domestic sellers alike.
Suppose a Singapore-incorporated seller disposes of shares in a Thai private company for THB 100 million. The seller’s original acquisition cost is THB 60 million. The gross capital gain is THB 40 million. Without treaty relief, the buyer would need to withhold 15 per cent on the gain, amounting to THB 6 million. If the Thailand–Singapore double tax treaty allocates the taxing right to Singapore (the seller’s residence state), the buyer may reduce withholding to zero, provided it holds a valid TRC and can demonstrate that the treaty article applies. The buyer must still document this position and retain the supporting evidence.
| Seller Type | Buyer Withholding Obligation | Key Documentation to Obtain |
|---|---|---|
| Thai-resident individual or company | Generally no cross-border WHT, seller self-assesses; buyer should still verify residency | Seller’s Thai tax ID, evidence of 180-day residency or domicile, tax clearance where relevant |
| Non-resident seller (foreign individual or company) | Buyer required to withhold on gain portion, typically 15% under domestic rules unless reduced by treaty | Seller’s TRC from home jurisdiction, SPA schedule allocating purchase price to gain, treaty claim documentation |
| Listed-company shares (SET) / related-party transfers | Individual capital gains on SET-listed shares are exempt; confirm current Royal Decree status and holding period | SET trade confirmations, share register extracts, holding-period statements |
The seller’s residency status is the single most important variable in determining whether withholding tax on share purchase in Thailand applies. Getting this analysis wrong, in either direction, creates material risk for both parties.
Under the Thai Revenue Code, a person who resides in Thailand for an aggregate period of 180 days or more during any tax (calendar) year is considered a tax resident. For juristic persons, the test focuses on where the company is incorporated or where its place of effective management is situated. Dual-residency situations, where a seller qualifies as resident under both Thai law and a foreign jurisdiction’s rules, are resolved by the tie-breaker provisions of the applicable double tax treaty.
Sellers who are Thai tax residents are subject to personal income tax or corporate income tax on their worldwide income, including capital gains on Thai shares. However, the buyer’s obligation to withhold at source on a resident seller’s gain is substantially reduced or eliminated, because the resident seller files and pays tax directly. In contrast, withholding tax thailand for foreigners, that is, non-resident sellers, is triggered precisely because the RD cannot otherwise collect tax from a person outside the Thai jurisdiction.
Evidence that sellers should prepare includes passport entry/exit stamps, Thai work permits, corporate registration documents showing place of incorporation, and, critically, a TRC issued by the tax authority of the seller’s claimed home jurisdiction. Early preparation of this evidence prevents closing delays.
Double tax treaty thailand capital gains provisions are the most powerful lawful tool for reducing or eliminating withholding on share transfers. Thailand has signed double tax agreements with more than 60 jurisdictions. Many of these treaties follow the OECD Model Tax Convention framework, under which capital gains from the alienation of shares are taxable only in the state where the seller is resident, unless the shares derive more than a specified proportion of their value from immovable property situated in Thailand.
Treaty relief operates by overriding the domestic withholding rate. Where a treaty allocates the exclusive right to tax a share-sale gain to the seller’s state of residence, the buyer is entitled to apply a zero withholding rate, but only if the buyer can demonstrate that the treaty conditions are satisfied. This requires the following procedural steps:
Thailand’s treaty network varies in its treatment of capital gains. Several of Thailand’s key investment-partner treaties allocate share-sale capital gains exclusively to the residence state, meaning a properly documented sale to a resident seller of that treaty partner should attract zero Thai WHT. However, many treaties contain an immovable-property carve-out, if the Thai target company derives the majority of its value from Thai real property, Thailand retains the right to tax the gain regardless of the seller’s residency.
Early indications from recent RD enforcement patterns suggest that the Revenue Department is scrutinising treaty claims more closely, particularly where holding structures appear to have been interposed primarily to access treaty benefits. Deal teams should ensure that the seller entity has genuine substance in the treaty jurisdiction and is not merely a conduit.
In addition to withholding tax, every share transfer in Thailand attracts stamp duty. Understanding the share transfer stamp duty thailand rules, and the procedural shift to electronic stamping, is essential for a compliant closing.
Stamp duty on the transfer of shares in a Thai limited company is imposed under the Revenue Code’s Stamp Duty Schedule. The duty is levied on the instrument of transfer (the share transfer form recorded in the company’s share register). The statutory rate is 0.1 per cent of the paid-up value of the shares transferred or of the transfer price, whichever is higher. By convention and under most SPAs, the buyer and seller agree on which party bears the stamp duty, absent a specific agreement, the transferor (seller) is the party primarily liable.
Stamp duty must be paid at the time the transfer instrument is executed. Instruments that are not properly stamped are not admissible as evidence in Thai courts, which creates a strong incentive for timely compliance.
Thailand’s Revenue Department has progressively adopted electronic stamping (e‑Stamp) as the primary method for paying stamp duty. The e‑stamp duty thailand system allows parties to calculate, pay and obtain confirmation of stamp duty online, reducing the need for physical stamps or visits to RD offices. The practical steps are:
Late payment of stamp duty attracts surcharges. Industry observers expect the RD to continue tightening enforcement of e‑Stamp compliance throughout 2026, making timely filing a non-negotiable step in every share-transfer closing.
Beyond treaty relief and residency planning, deal teams sometimes consider structural alternatives to manage withholding tax exposure. While legitimate structuring is lawful, the line between tax planning and avoidance is closely watched by the RD.
The RD has broad powers to disregard transactions that lack commercial substance or are designed primarily to obtain tax benefits. Deal teams should be alert to the following risk indicators:
A compliance-first approach, where the structure is driven by genuine commercial rationale and supported by contemporaneous documentation, remains the most reliable way to manage WHT exposure without triggering enforcement action.
A disciplined closing process is the final safeguard against post-completion WHT disputes. The following document checklist should be incorporated into the SPA’s conditions precedent or closing deliverables schedule:
Retaining a complete set of these documents for a minimum of five years (aligned with the RD’s standard audit window) is strongly recommended.
Navigating withholding tax on share transfers in Thailand requires a disciplined, compliance-first approach. The core decision points are clear: identify the seller’s residency, check the applicable double tax treaty, calculate and document the withholding position, pay stamp duty via e‑Stamp, and retain a complete closing file. Buyers who invest in this due diligence process protect themselves against joint liability and enforcement action. Sellers who cooperate by providing TRCs and cost-basis evidence early in the process ensure smoother closings and better net-proceeds outcomes.
For acquirers evaluating a private share purchase in Thailand, the lawful levers to reduce or eliminate WHT, treaty relief, residency planning and compliant structuring, are well established but require precise execution. Every transaction is different, and the interaction between domestic law, treaty provisions and the RD’s evolving enforcement posture demands specialist advice tailored to the specific deal. Those seeking guidance on how to avoid withholding tax on share transfer in Thailand in their particular transaction should consult a qualified Thai tax adviser before signing.
This article provides general information only and does not constitute legal or tax advice. Readers should consult qualified counsel for advice specific to their transaction and circumstances.
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This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Kittirut (Kevin) Luecha at Legalese, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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