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Alcohol Sale Hours in Restaurants Under Review in Thailand

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1920_adobestock-293052266.jpeg

File photo for reference only

 

Thailand's Alcohol Control Policy Committee is set to address confusion regarding alcohol sale hours in restaurants. A meeting scheduled for Thursday, November 13, aims to provide clarity by December 4, as stated by PPTVHD36 on November 11. This follows the enactment of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Act B.E. 2568 (2025) on November 8, which does not specify restricted sale hours.

 

Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul discussed this issue with Public Health Minister Pattana Promphat during a recent cabinet meeting. The current confusion stems from adherence to a 2015 Prime Minister's Office announcement, which restricts alcohol sales to 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. and 5 p.m. to midnight. This regulation does not apply to international airports, legal entertainment venues, and hotels.

 

The announcement mainly impacts general restaurants that cannot serve alcohol between 2 p.m. and 5 p.m., leading to misunderstandings, particularly among tourists. Pattana reassured that the committee would address this issue promptly, with a forthcoming meeting to clarify the regulation.

 

Siripong Angkasakulkiat from the Prime Minister’s Office noted that any new announcement regarding these hours would take effect 15 days post-issuance, aiming for a December 4 deadline. An outcome that aligns with public demand is anticipated, but details remain unresolved.

 

Key Takeaways

  • Thailand’s alcohol sale hours are under review, with clarity expected by December 4.
  • Current laws, based on a 2015 announcement, confuse tourists and restaurant operations.
  • A committee meeting on November 13 seeks to resolve this regulatory misunderstanding.

 

Related Stories:

Tightening of Alcohol Laws With New Fines for Drinkers

Calls Grow to Remove Unregulated Alcohol Vending Machines

 

image.png  Adapted by ASEAN Now from Thai Newsroom 2025-11-11

 

image.jpeg

 

image.png

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  • They really like to complicate things for absolutely no reason. And it always ends up the same: confused people everywhere.

  • For a country obsessed with mass tourisms, they sure are bipolar on alcohol hours, consumption, and limitations.  I don't think any country comes close to changing their minds on alcohol polices

  • 10.....9.....8.....7.....6.....5.....4.....3.....2.....1 HAPPY NEW Yearrrrrr........ . OH! Wait. It's midnight. Consumption of alcohol prohibited with threat of Bt10k fine.  These people are comp

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The restaurants should just shut down until 5pm countrywide.

I know this won't happen but if it did then it would force action should it not be forthcoming.

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They really like to complicate things for absolutely no reason. And it always ends up the same: confused people everywhere.

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56 minutes ago, unblocktheplanet said:

Ummm, Wine Connection,...

Went to one of those for lunch a year ago.  Sat down, ordered food, then tried to order wine.  Cannot, after 14:00.  On the table next to us a couple were enjoying their lunch with a full bottle of wine on the table.  Ah yes, but they ordered before 14:00.  We left and went down the road, with wine of course.  One day all will become like the real world, till then enjoy the challenge.

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10.....9.....8.....7.....6.....5.....4.....3.....2.....1 HAPPY NEW Yearrrrrr........ . OH! Wait. It's midnight. Consumption of alcohol prohibited with threat of Bt10k fine. 

These people are completelty insane. 

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12 minutes ago, daveAustin said:

Kids running an asylum 

 

Idiots running an asylum might be more correct.

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THailand makes everything difficult... because every establishment can or will have different rules in the same law.. Why should restaurants being different than bars, clubs, hotels, airports... One rule for All...

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2 hours ago, Upnotover said:

Went to one of those for lunch a year ago.  Sat down, ordered food, then tried to order wine.  Cannot, after 14:00.  On the table next to us a couple were enjoying their lunch with a full bottle of wine on the table.  Ah yes, but they ordered before 14:00.  We left and went down the road, with wine of course.  One day all will become like the real world, till then enjoy the challenge.

Happens to me every time I am in Thailand 

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For a country obsessed with mass tourisms, they sure are bipolar on alcohol hours, consumption, and limitations. 

I don't think any country comes close to changing their minds on alcohol polices like Thailand. 

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Very simple solution. Get rid of the time restrictions!! 
Ah! TIT

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16 hours ago, snoop1130 said:

Thailand's Alcohol Control Policy Committee is set to address confusion regarding alcohol sale hours in restaurants. A meeting scheduled for Thursday, November 13, aims to provide clarity by December 4,

Take your time why not !!!!

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13 hours ago, shocky2012 said:

They really like to complicate things for absolutely no reason. And it always ends up the same: confused people everywhere.

Where there's a grey area there's a loop-hole, and a negotiation to clear it up

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I wonder what the rates of alcoholism are here compared to any Western country ...

 

 

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And they wonder why people think they have no common sense here, because they don't 

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16 hours ago, snoop1130 said:

Thailand’s alcohol sale hours are under review, with clarity expected by December 4.

What year?

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Thai logic: Restrictions on alcohol will bring in more tourists.

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16 hours ago, snoop1130 said:

address confusion

Thai government: No need to address anything, especially confusion. You've addressed confusion before and you are not good at it.

The BiB is exceedingly good at it, they've been addressing all kinds of confusions the minute you had created them...

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15 hours ago, ukrules said:

The restaurants should just shut down until 5pm countrywide.

I know this won't happen but if it did then it would force action should it not be forthcoming.

Let’s see if I’ve got this right…..

you have a cunning plan (©️Baldrick) that on your own admission won’t happen?

how long does this not have to happen, before the government doesn’t crumble?

6 minutes ago, hotchilli said:

Take your time why not !!!!

 

https://www.nationthailand.com/news/general/40058091

 

According to The Nation this is a 1 year process during which they will write the regulations applicable to all aspects of the changes to the rules.  Until then everything is in a state of flux but, perhaps the good news, is that the police have no right to fine anybody for infringing the not yet written regulations. 

 

He noted that the sub-regulations will clarify how alcohol can be sold or consumed during prohibited hours, covering cases such as customers drinking after midnight in bars or restaurants, and vending machines for alcoholic beverages — which currently lack clear rules.

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At some given point in time a youthful and progressive leader will be elected and he or she will actually be allowed to run the country, and things will change.

 

For now the dinosaurs keep clinging to outdated laws that mean absolutely nothing to anybody, and make absolutely no difference whatsoever. There is no benefit to the public in maintaining this law, it's ridiculous, it's outdated, it's purile, it's puritanical, and it reflects a fake sense of morality, which is rather unappealing and hypocritical to say the least. 

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Why do they have to complicate everything until it just falls flat and fails? We have to suffer the continuous "headline news" everyday about tourist numbers, and if you complain about the quality of the news stories, you get banned!

Then we get the usual proposals to restructure the alcohol laws, and initially it all sounds good and makes sense. Then it begins, every Tom Cobley and all has to have their tuppence worth, and the rollercoaster of stupidity is off!

Within about 4 days, they had trashed the original plan and backtracked as usual, now the proposals regarding alcohol sales have ended up in an even bigger mess than when they began - They do this with every single scheme or idea that flashes into their comatose heads as they sleep.

Why bother? I genuinely believe that they are lacking any confidence, they come up with an idea (usually someone else's and usually from outside Thailand. Then they have a bit of a double take and decide that they need to put their own "personal Thainess" stamp onto the project. This would or could work in a Real Country, where they have developed everything over hundreds of years of evolution. But when you have no history of infrastructure, no manufacturing of your own, no planning skills and no technical prowess, then there is nothing there to base the project on.

So now everyone has there little contribution, everything becomes over complicated and in the end it just crumbles into dust, along with their second hand dreams.

  • Popular Post
16 hours ago, snoop1130 said:

1920_adobestock-293052266.jpeg

File photo for reference only

 

Thailand's Alcohol Control Policy Committee is set to address confusion regarding alcohol sale hours in restaurants. A meeting scheduled for Thursday, November 13, aims to provide clarity by December 4, as stated by PPTVHD36 on November 11. This follows the enactment of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Act B.E. 2568 (2025) on November 8, which does not specify restricted sale hours.

 

Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul discussed this issue with Public Health Minister Pattana Promphat during a recent cabinet meeting. The current confusion stems from adherence to a 2015 Prime Minister's Office announcement, which restricts alcohol sales to 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. and 5 p.m. to midnight. This regulation does not apply to international airports, legal entertainment venues, and hotels.

 

The announcement mainly impacts general restaurants that cannot serve alcohol between 2 p.m. and 5 p.m., leading to misunderstandings, particularly among tourists. Pattana reassured that the committee would address this issue promptly, with a forthcoming meeting to clarify the regulation.

 

Siripong Angkasakulkiat from the Prime Minister’s Office noted that any new announcement regarding these hours would take effect 15 days post-issuance, aiming for a December 4 deadline. An outcome that aligns with public demand is anticipated, but details remain unresolved.

 

Key Takeaways

  • Thailand’s alcohol sale hours are under review, with clarity expected by December 4.
  • Current laws, based on a 2015 announcement, confuse tourists and restaurant operations.
  • A committee meeting on November 13 seeks to resolve this regulatory misunderstanding.

 

Related Stories:

Tightening of Alcohol Laws With New Fines for Drinkers

Calls Grow to Remove Unregulated Alcohol Vending Machines

 

image.png  Adapted by ASEAN Now from Thai Newsroom 2025-11-11

 

image.jpeg

 

image.png

There are countless people running these government departments, surely they can work out these basic details so everyone knows what's happening. 

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16 hours ago, snoop1130 said:

A meeting scheduled for Thursday, November 13, aims to provide clarity by December 4

A U-turn already?

  • Popular Post
8 minutes ago, Tim62 said:

There are countless people running these government departments, surely they can work out these basic details so everyone knows what's happening. 

Only the Thai elites - with education in US, Canada, Oz or UK - are able to think rationally about almost anything. And their preoccupation is with further expanding their finances & properties. 

 

As to the bureaucrats - at all levels - they mostly bought their posts or inherited them from Daddy, or Mummy, or Uncle Jo. High policy skills are not part of the deal.

These restrictions are what brought me back here.  NOT..

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So the restriction was to stop public servants drinking at lunchtime. Focus on that then. It would be more sensible to randomly test them. There are fewer government offices than restaurants. Once you do a few the word will get around. 

13 hours ago, dinsdale said:

10.....9.....8.....7.....6.....5.....4.....3.....2.....1 HAPPY NEW Yearrrrrr........ . OH! Wait. It's midnight. Consumption of alcohol prohibited with threat of Bt10k fine. 

These people are completelty insane. 

What they don't realise is that they could make more money enforcing no helmet laws and traffic control, nowhere to be seen usually that is the way it has been since I first came here 20 yrs ago 

The law is people are permitted to sell and consume alcoholic drinks during certain timings. What is confusing about that?

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