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Foreigners Face 4-Hour Airport Immigration Queue Nightmare

A viral social media post has triggered widespread criticism of operations at Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi Airport after foreign passengers were reportedly left waiting between three and four hours at immigration. The post, published on July 11, showed video of immigration queues stretching for what the author claimed was around one kilometre, prompting fresh debate over the airport’s passenger management and ambitions to become a regional aviation hub.

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The Facebook user sarcastically praised Airports of Thailand (AOT), writing that Suvarnabhumi had achieved the “longest queue in the world” and joking that if Skytrax or Guinness World Records recognised such a category, the airport would win ahead of Changi, Doha and Narita. The author added that they were fortunate to be a Thai citizen because they were able to pass through immigration quickly, while foreign travellers were left waiting for hours.

After the post attracted significant attention online, the author updated it with what they described as a more serious explanation of the issues. They rejected claims that long queues were simply the result of stricter immigration screening, arguing that leading international airports maintain high security standards while processing passengers efficiently through modern technology. According to the post, lengthy queues reflected shortcomings in passenger throughput rather than stronger security.

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Picture courtesy of Manager Online

The author also disputed suggestions that responsibility lay solely with the Immigration Bureau. They acknowledged that immigration officers may have been insufficient in number to keep all counters open but argued that AOT had also failed in managing passenger flow and available space. The post claimed queues overflowed into main walkways, blocking access to priority lanes and Thai passport channels, and stated that even Business and First Class passengers could not easily reach fast-track entrances because of congestion.

The post further rejected arguments that the delays were unavoidable because several flights arrived during peak periods. The author said airports have access to flight schedules well in advance and should plan staffing levels accordingly to prevent bottlenecks. They argued that professional airport management should anticipate busy periods rather than ask passengers to accept extended waiting times.

The Manager Online reported that the criticism concluded by stating that the comments were intended to encourage improvements rather than criticise Thailand itself. The author said experience travelling through other international airports demonstrated that better operational standards were achievable and argued that if Thailand wished to strengthen its position as an aviation hub and attract higher-quality visitors, back-end systems would need to meet international standards.

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13 July 2026

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Recommended Comments

WHansen Silver Member

WHansen

Advanced Member

The 10 times i have arrived in early December, i would guess it averages around 20 minutes to get through passport control. Surely these queues must have been a result of some part of the IT system going down, no airport wants the bad press from reports like this.

scottiejohn Star Member

scottiejohn

Advanced Member
2 hours ago, Liverpool Lou said:

There is no "coming B300 fee", it has been just a proposal for God knows how long and has fallen at every fence so far. If one is ever actually introduced you can be sure that the purpose/benefit of it will be explained.

They might explain it's purpose/benefit but that does not mean that they use it that way!

T.I.T.S.

giants49 Explorer Member

giants49

Member

I'm damn glad I wasn't stuck in that. When I'm not traveling with my wife I have to deal with this. Hopefully they can fix the problem.

Bangkok Barry Star Member

Bangkok Barry

Advanced Member
1 hour ago, jimn said:

You can if married to a Thai

The scanner would know that?

vangrop Silver Member

vangrop

Advanced Member
4 hours ago, Jack Hammer said:

At Suvarnabhumi Airport go To the very far end of the airport down near where the post office is and there is a check-in there for disabled people , elderly people 70 and over , families with small infants. I go there every time you don’t have to take your shoes or your belt off. At the entrance, the staff my question you, show them your passport and tell them you are over 70

this is for departure not arrival

Oliver Holzerfilled Gold Member

Oliver Holzerfilled

Advanced Member
8 hours ago, Dakhar said:

Where are the fast track business class lines. I fly business class to china every month and ive beem told by immigration staff there is no fast track service for business class and I have to stand in the long lines. Departing there is fast track, but I have yet to see fast track for entering thailand.

To the right of the regular queue. I arrived Thursday night. Wheels down at 9:30, I was at my hotel in Sathorn by 10:45. Only 1 person ahead of me at immigration.

Packer Gold Member

Packer

Advanced Member

Many of the teeraks will be happy.

They'll get a few more hours with their boyfriend and a few less with their farang husband. 🙂

robert2 Senior Member

robert2

Member

Come on, the industrial holidays in Europe just started, so this is probably the busiest day/time of the year for immigration.

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