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Thailand to Regulate Ride-Hailing Apps Within 90 Days for Fairer Competition


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Posted

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Picture courtesy of Thailandee

 

In a significant shift for ride-hailing services, Thailand’s Department of Land Transport (DLT) is acting swiftly to bring digital platforms like Grab under new regulations. Within the next 90 days, app-based taxi and motorbike operators are to register under a government system, addressing long-standing fairness concerns compared to traditional taxis.

 

This is part of a pathway towards a level playing field, ensuring app-based taxis comply with the standards set forth by the Transport Ministry.

 

DLT Director-General, Jirut Wisanjit, confirmed this development following a draft from the Electronic Transactions Commission. It sets a mandate for all ride-hailing vehicles to legally register and meet DLT service application standards. The Ministry is engaging ride-hailing companies in discussions to align on legal compliance and service enhancement, focusing on creating a fairer market space alongside traditional taxis.

 

Service operators must register vehicles under categories Ror Yor 17 and Ror Yor 18, and drivers are required to secure public driving licences. To facilitate this transition, the DLT is expediting criminal background checks at transport offices, promising a faster licensing timeline.

 

Alongside these procedural updates, the DLT is reviewing commission fees on ride-hailing apps to ensure each stakeholder, including the drivers and passengers, benefits fairly.

 

In anticipation of the new rules, the upcoming “Draft Announcement of the Electronic Transactions Commission on Digital Platform Services: Ride-Sharing Vehicles and Motorbikes” is set to roll out within 90 days.

 

It mandates all ride-shares to register officially, drivers to hold public licences, and platforms to adhere to fare standards. Additionally, platforms will need to establish systems to manage driver misconduct and report essential vehicle and fare data to the DLT.

 

As these changes unfold, the transport sector braces for a more regulated and equitable framework. This initiative marks a crucial juncture in the way digital and traditional taxi services operate side by side in Thailand, amplifying public interest and aligning operational standards across the board.

 

image.png  Adapted by ASEAN Now from The Nation 2025-06-16

 

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Posted

Reading between the lines, the end game is to make apps like Bolt charge the same higher fares as "regular" taxis ending actual free market competition. Happy happy joy joy.God forbid that consumers get a break. Am I wrong?

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Posted
4 hours ago, webfact said:

This is part of a pathway towards a level playing field, ensuring app-based taxis comply with the standards set forth by the Transport Ministry.

 

I would argue the apps set a higher standard than I not go somchai.

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Posted
8 minutes ago, blaze master said:

 

I would argue the apps set a higher standard than I not go somchai.

Yes, but the big leasing companies who provide "I not go Somchai" with their cars on a daily lease basis are "people of influence"!

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Posted
4 hours ago, webfact said:

It mandates all ride-shares to register officially, drivers to hold public licences, and platforms to adhere to fare standards. Additionally, platforms will need to establish systems to manage driver misconduct and report essential vehicle and fare data to the DLT.

 

 

"adhere to fare standards" could mean they need to charge more to so they don't undercut the taxi mafia scumbags. If Thailand is really really stupid they could do some serious damage.

Posted

Unless Thailand works with the App itself. There will not be any regulation. Thailand can not even regulate the regular taxis that drive around. Unlicensed drivers, reckless, scammers to overcharge. 

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Posted

Grab is considerably more expensive than regular taxi. From what I paid and what I see driver to receive, it seems about 30% are deducted from the driver, where the fare for the distance is often still about double of what it would have been in a regular taxi. But, that's OK for me, because at least most of the time (yes, I hate those who keep me waiting for 10 minutes while I'm in a hurry and then cancel on me or try to make me cancel it) the driver comes, knows where he or she is going, there's no fare blackmail or rejection, the map shows the route and estimated arrival clearly. That's what I am paying extra for - the predictability.

I know Bolt is cheaper but taking it a few times, the drivers were scary. Maybe just bad luck, but it did seem a step down from Grab. And LineMan... that was a regular taxi with 20 baht surcharge - no issues except that it often took much longer for any driver to arrive than from Grab. But all these were way better than arguing with regular taxi driver (although only small percentage of them are bad, unfortunately they ruin reputation for all).

I think the work needed on apps is far less than the work required to get the regular taxis to follow rules and regulations. Perhaps the DLT and government should start there first? Maybe go out with cameras, recording conversations, and start hailing cabs all over the country, and fine/confiscate cars/revoke licenses of offenders. All the laws and regulations are there. Just nobody enforcing them. And when some TikTok influencer does, it's a few days of harsh words before it all goes back to the way it was before.

Public transport is a public service. It is the job of government to oversee it and make it effective and affordable, and it is their job to pluck the weed. Many drivers are great, they are just always in the shadows of greedy lowlifes ruining reputation for everyone.

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Posted
1 hour ago, wasabi said:

Uber tends to be more reliable than Grab where it's available, but I'd choose Grab over traditional taxis in Thailand even if it costs triple traditional taxi's rate. The traditional taxi drivers only have themselves to blame for losing customers by overcharging, taking long routes and getting lost because they don't know how to use GPS or have three phones open and a movie playing.

 

Uber does not operate in Thailand.

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Posted

It doesn't matter about the regulations. Grab and other ride hailing apps will always have a higher standard than regular taxis.

Because they refuse the bad ones or kick them out after complaints 

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Posted

This regulation certainly won't benefit any tourist.  Taxis are some of the biggest scam artists in Thailand--especially those at the airport who always play the game of hide the meter and try to rip you off.  Grab and bolt drivers are usually honest. 

Posted
4 hours ago, tomazbodner said:

Grab is considerably more expensive than regular taxi.

Grab Car or Just Grab might be, but Grab Taxi is the metered price with a surcharge. The drivers make more when hired under the taxi booking than they do Grab Car. In fact the amount taken from private drivers of Grab Car is pretty offensive.

 

The price shown when you book a taxi via Grab is an estimate and in my estimation, always significantly higher than the final price.

 

Thai taxi costs are cheap - they meter fare has only recently changed after years stagnant at the initial fee. Drive times have not improved, fuel has increased dramatically. When meters were first introduced, fuel was around 8-11 Baht if I remember correctly... There are plenty of dishonest and unscrupulous taxi drivers, but there are also large numbers of honest and hardworking ones. The fares are too low and that is part of, not all, the incentive to lie and cheat for those who are inclined to do so.

 

Were the fares more in line with the cost of living, the incentive to cheat would be reduced. There will always be those that prey on the newbies in tourist zones, but that needs a different mode of control.

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Posted
10 hours ago, webfact said:

Within the next 90 days, app-based taxi and motorbike operators are to register under a government system, addressing long-standing fairness concerns compared to traditional taxis.

Since when have traditional taxis been fair?

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Posted
17 minutes ago, DualSportBiker said:

Grab Car or Just Grab might be, but Grab Taxi is the metered price with a surcharge. The drivers make more when hired under the taxi booking than they do Grab Car. In fact the amount taken from private drivers of Grab Car is pretty offensive.

 

The price shown when you book a taxi via Grab is an estimate and in my estimation, always significantly higher than the final price.

 

Thai taxi costs are cheap - they meter fare has only recently changed after years stagnant at the initial fee. Drive times have not improved, fuel has increased dramatically. When meters were first introduced, fuel was around 8-11 Baht if I remember correctly... There are plenty of dishonest and unscrupulous taxi drivers, but there are also large numbers of honest and hardworking ones. The fares are too low and that is part of, not all, the incentive to lie and cheat for those who are inclined to do so.

 

Were the fares more in line with the cost of living, the incentive to cheat would be reduced. There will always be those that prey on the newbies in tourist zones, but that needs a different mode of control.

Agree. I use JustGrab.

Posted
10 hours ago, webfact said:

To facilitate this transition, the DLT is expediting criminal background checks at transport offices, promising a faster licensing timeline.

So one must have a criminal record to drive a taxi?

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Posted
7 hours ago, Jingthing said:

Reading between the lines, the end game is to make apps like Bolt charge the same higher fares as "regular" taxis ending actual free market competition. Happy happy joy joy.God forbid that consumers get a break. Am I wrong?

Yep.

Posted

"A free market is a continuous process of voluntary transactions, with each participant trading value for value. Government intervention, whether through subsidies, tariffs, or regulations, distorts this process by introducing force, which negates the principle of mutual consent and benefit."
-Ayn Rand, Philosophy: Who Needs It

Posted

The taxis I get through the the apps are generally in better condition and than the smelly  death traps you hail from the side of the road 

Posted
11 hours ago, webfact said:

This is part of a pathway towards a level playing field, ensuring app-based taxis comply with the standards set forth by the Transport Ministry.

 

What are these standards for registered taxi drivers?

 

1. Must be a grumpy old sod.

2. Must refuse to use the meter

3. Must argue with the customer over the route even if the customer has lived there for 20 years

4. Must threaten the customer if they don't leave a good tip. 

5. Must be a cranky old git

6. Must add random amounts to the fare at their whim.

7. Must carry a loaded gun in the glove compartment. 

8. Must be a miserable old toerag. 

 

Posted

Government has no bigger fish to fry?

Ah, me stupid, most cabbies are sheer analphabets from Isan and pristine voter material. 

Why do people chose Bolt, Uber and whatever-else-there-is? The details of the driver are known to the passenger (phone, car registration and name of driver) which ensures, that unlike the two-coloured cabbie with some licenses on his dashboard showing anybody but the driver, the passenger has a safer feeling. The Bolt driver on the other hand gets a pre-announced fare and the details of the passenger can be retrieved as well. 

Given the present ranigazoo I would assume, that the distinguished government might have other stuff on their plate and keep their noses and fingers out of this jar as well ......... 

Posted
7 hours ago, ronnie50 said:

You'd think this was already the case but TIT. From a customer's perspective, the ride hailing apps are not as reliable in Thailand as other countries. For example, I've had several rides accepted by a driver, only to then realize he's not 10 minutes away as indicated, he's 30 minutes away. Oh, and of course once the driver (far away) has accepted, the customer can't cancel the ride. Same goes for food deliveries where 20 minutes can turn into an hour.

The Bolt App has cancel button. Scroll down past where you see the price at at the bottom there is a "Cancel" button. When you  hit it a menu pops up giving you choices as to why, works great, I've used it before when the driver was taking to arrive like he was lost or something.

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