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Pink Card

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1 hour ago, Liquorice said:

It's irrelevant as far as the law is concerned.

Translations of names to be entered in the book should be the only requirement.

We know some Amphoes make it so ridiculous as to make it near impossible, but there are actions you can take in these situations.

Yes indeed.

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  • richard_smith237
    richard_smith237

    I understood it otherwise - You cannot get a Pink Card without a Yellow Book.   Yellow Book requires a lot of Hoop Jumping & documentation. Pink Card requires just a yellow book and

  • I can't imagine your landlord will be interested in doing that, if it's even possible.  I thought you had to be married or own the property.

  • Beg to differ. I obtained my first 2 year licences and 2 subsequent 5 year licences, as well as purchasing and registering 2 motor vehicles and 3 motorcycles with nothing more than my Yellow Tabi

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I had to get the pink ID to open a bank account in my "Thai" name and for my medical insurance. I do not remember it being difficult to get. 

 

It also worked in place of a C or R for driver license renewal, and it works most of the time to get the Thai price at the parks and whatnot. My work permit used to work to get the Thai price, but I no longer have one since I retired. 

 

I do not understand all the animosity associated with the pink ID. 

 

 

 

 

On 11/24/2025 at 4:46 PM, brianburi said:

my neighbour had to get one, Bangkok Bank froze his 800K, and wouldn't accept his UK passport as proof of ID.  

 

You mean the bank wouldn't accept his passport as proof of domicile/address. The passport is ALL they need for personal ID. It's the proof of where you're actually residing that can be a can of worms, especially if one's local immigration office are restrictive on why they should issue a certificate of residence.

 

A few months ago, a friend of mine had his BBL account locked until he could provide a yellow book which was challenging as his amphur was of the "cannot" school of gormless, bureaucratic pedantry.

7 minutes ago, NanLaew said:

 

You mean the bank wouldn't accept his passport as proof of domicile/address. The passport is ALL they need for personal ID. It's the proof of where you're actually residing that can be a can of worms, especially if one's local immigration office are restrictive on why they should issue a certificate of residence.

 

A few months ago, a friend of mine had his BBL account locked until he could provide a yellow book which was challenging as his amphur was of the "cannot" school of gormless, bureaucratic pedantry.

He got a phone call from BBL main branch in Phetchabun, bring in ID document and proof of address to prove he was the owner of fixed deposit account (orange savings book) where his 800k for retirement extension is. Despite showing passport/ marriage certificates and other paperwork, the BBL staff insisted that the only means would be Pink ID card and yellow house book. This directive coming from HQ Silom Road, BBL HQ.

It took him about 3 weeks at our local Amphur to do this, jumping through more hoops that you would see at Crufts Dog Show. It's all sorted now, weird one is I too have had funds in a Fixed Deposit account with BBL, but at a different branch in our province,  I don't have Yellow book or Pink ID card and just use my Passport when I have to visit the branch.   

22 hours ago, tandor said:

i understood your name has to first appear in the Property owner's Blue TabienBaan to enable the Yellow Book to be granted, Later to get a Pink Card i needed to co-ordinate with the Property owner and their Blue Book, the PooYaiBaan (Village Headman), me with Yellow book, Passport and on appointmentwho go in a group to the Amphur Office (Sankamphaeng) where they vouched i was indeed a permanent resident in his sub-district. The card was issued shortly after, the fee was 110 baht. Later i supplied a photocopy with other documents to prove my address at Immigration, who accepted the Yellow Book as proof of Residency but did not recognize the Pink Card as acceptable identification. That was 5 years ago. I am single.

 

Foreigners with permanent residency are required have their names put into a blue tabien baan. Foreigners on temporary extension of stay cannot and their option is to get the yellow one. If one has permanent residency and one's name is in a blue tabien baan, there's no need for a yellow one.

Your "Pink Card" and "Yellow Book" save you the hassle of a trip to Immigration to get a "Proof of Residence" certificate that is needed for things like a Thai Driver's License.

Even though the "Pink Card" states that it is not a form of ID, many places WILL accept is as a form of ID and residence.  It's not a "Must Have," but they are useful.  I'd rather have them then not have them. FYI, a whole bunch of years ago that "Pink Card" would get you on the 30 THB medical.  But they closed that loophole for farangs. 

On 11/27/2025 at 2:51 PM, tandor said:

i understood your name has to first appear in the Property owner's Blue TabienBaan to enable the Yellow Book to be granted, Later to get a Pink Card i needed to co-ordinate with the Property owner and their Blue Book, the PooYaiBaan (Village Headman), me with Yellow book, Passport and on appointmentwho go in a group to the Amphur Office (Sankamphaeng) where they vouched i was indeed a permanent resident in his sub-district. The card was issued shortly after, the fee was 110 baht. Later i supplied a photocopy with other documents to prove my address at Immigration, who accepted the Yellow Book as proof of Residency but did not recognize the Pink Card as acceptable identification. That was 5 years ago. I am single.

hey 'thumbs down' is this meant for me or the confusion about Pink ID Cards and Yellow Tabien Baans ?

3 hours ago, Etaoin Shrdlu said:

 

Foreigners with permanent residency are required have their names put into a blue tabien baan. Foreigners on temporary extension of stay cannot and their option is to get the yellow one. If one has permanent residency and one's name is in a blue tabien baan, there's no need for a yellow one.

Im not going to comment any further..seems to be each Provincial Amphur Office has a different view on this..all i know is it works for me and my Pink Card and Yellow Book are for life. I also have an Usufruct, Proof of Ownership of my house on the land it rests, my name appears in the property owners Blue Book and i have a TRD Tax number which happens to be my Pink ID Card, and i am not married, nor am I a Permanent Resident.

16 hours ago, tandor said:

Im not going to comment any further..seems to be each Provincial Amphur Office has a different view on this..all i know is it works for me and my Pink Card and Yellow Book are for life. I also have an Usufruct, Proof of Ownership of my house on the land it rests, my name appears in the property owners Blue Book and i have a TRD Tax number which happens to be my Pink ID Card, and i am not married, nor am I a Permanent Resident.

 

Some pink cards have expiration dates, like mine for example.

 

YMMV

TiT

On 11/24/2025 at 4:31 PM, DrJack54 said:

Why do you want a "Pink Card" 

Badge? 

Personally I find it useful, for example when passing through security at government, and other, buildings which require proof of identification. 

1 minute ago, DrJack54 said:

Yep. I use my pp. 

Of course. A pink card is useful but certainly not essential.

10 minutes ago, DrJack54 said:

Yep. I use my pp. 

For ID that requires proof of address, a passport alone is not sufficient.

9 minutes ago, Liquorice said:

For ID that requires proof of address, a passport alone is not sufficient.

Your point. I also have a TDL with me at all times. 

The ongoing threads about usefulness of pink card or not is boring. 

If someone wants one get one. 

If not you will find life rolls on just fine. 

On 11/27/2025 at 9:06 PM, khunPer said:

You don't; I'm registered in Yellow House Book and have a Pink ID-card; I've never ever been married in my whole life (so far)...:whistling:

As others have mentioned already I think many amphurs use marriage as a way to get rid of us. I went to the local amphur about a year ago, was with my TGF, were not married but have been together 11 years now and I live in her house, so she's my landlady. Anyway at the amphur (Pak Thongchai, Korat) I was totally ignored, lady behind desk asked my TGF are you married, and when she replied no, we were told to go away and get married then come back. And that was the end of the conversation. However I think I'll give it another shot and go again without TGF. 

4 hours ago, NanLaew said:

 

Some pink cards have expiration dates, like mine for example.

 

YMMV

TiT

yes, prior to a certain year they had an expiry date, but when the compulsory attendance of the Poo Yaibaan it changed to Lifetime...once again this was in Amphur Sankamphaeng.

27 minutes ago, DrJack54 said:

Your point. I also have a TDL with me at all times. 

The ongoing threads about usefulness of pink card or not is boring. 

If someone wants one get one. 

If not you will find life rolls on just fine. 

Do you have a bank account in your Thai-spelled name? 

 

Do you have Thai medical? 

 

 

On 11/24/2025 at 4:10 PM, hereforgood said:

No my friend from the US bought a condo here went down to City Hall had to jump through a few hoops but he now holds a yellow book as well as a pink card all in his name. There's a lot of arguments about having these and not having these all I can say is I haven't had a yellow book or a pink card I've lived here 22 years I bought condos I bought vehicles motorbikes I did a lot of work had a work permit. The yellow book and pink card were never needed for anything that I did in all the years I've been here others swear by them so flip a coin.

Same here, 21 years living here. Never once was I asked for either the Yellow book nor the pink card. I,ve bought and sold cars,bikes and a house and not required at any time.My lawyer said not to bother when I asked him.  

Just now, jaideedave said:
On 11/24/2025 at 12:10 PM, hereforgood said:

No my friend from the US bought a condo here went down to City Hall had to jump through a few hoops but he now holds a yellow book as well as a pink card all in his name. There's a lot of arguments about having these and not having these all I can say is I haven't had a yellow book or a pink card I've lived here 22 years I bought condos I bought vehicles motorbikes I did a lot of work had a work permit. The yellow book and pink card were never needed for anything that I did in all the years I've been here others swear by them so flip a coin.

Same here, 21 years living here. Never once was I asked for either the Yellow book nor the pink card. I,ve bought and sold cars,bikes and a house and not required at any time.My lawyer said not to bother when I asked him.  

 

The cards are a 'handy to have' rather than a 'need to have'....

 

There are numerous examples where posters have submitted comments highlighting where the Yellow-House-Book / Pink ID cards have added a layer of convenience and cost saving that made going through the leggy process of obtaining the Yellow-House-Book worth while to them.

 

There are also numerous examples where posters have submitted comments that they never 'needed' such. 

 

Individual mileage clearly varies.... 

 

Anecdotal real world example:

- DL expired - Booked appointment to renew 

- No need for a CoR from Immigration.

- Travelled overseas - missed appointment.

- Booked new appointment to renew DL.

- No need for another CoR from Immigration. 

 

- Thats 2x trips to Immigration avoided.

 

 

Personally - I wouldn't swear by the Yellow House Book / Pink ID - those doing so are perhaps over egging the usefulness - but, the documents certainly add a layer of convenience that I personally have found useful.

 

IF I had to go back and go through the effort of obtaining them - I would.

 

Would I recommend others to obtain Yellow House Book / Pink ID ?? - thats a very individual decision as some simply will not want to go through the leg work of getting the necessary documentation and paperwork necessary etc to secure the book & ID - meanwhile others see the potential benefit and don't mind making the effort once to obtain the longer term convenience. 

 

 

 

36 minutes ago, grain said:

As others have mentioned already I think many amphurs use marriage as a way to get rid of us. I went to the local amphur about a year ago, was with my TGF, were not married but have been together 11 years now and I live in her house, so she's my landlady. Anyway at the amphur (Pak Thongchai, Korat) I was totally ignored, lady behind desk asked my TGF are you married, and when she replied no, we were told to go away and get married then come back. And that was the end of the conversation. However I think I'll give it another shot and go again without TGF. 

 

Going through the Paperwork is a very bureaucratic process for the Amphur Officers - many really do not want to go through the paper work of processing a Yellow House Book for a foreigner - it's 'effort' and takes up to a couple of hours (depending on their familiarity with the process).

 

Thus: 'The 'cannot' approach' is taken - which is not an uncommon response here when someone doesn't know how to or doesn't want to do something - in this case the Amphur officer may try and throw in an excuse such as 'you need to be married' etc... or they may actually believe that having heard of such a regulation from their peers. 

 

When my Wife enquired about the Yellow book for me (she was renewing her ID at the time) - the Amphur Officer told her that my Visa was 'not a real visa' so they can't process an application !!! - which of course is an incredible dumb and transparent response. When pushed, there wasn't an appointment for processing for another couple of months !!! which suited us as we were due to travel. 

On the appointment day - things ran more smoothly as the Amphur Officer had clearly accepted that this was work she was simply going to have to do... 

 

Thus - Experiences clearly vary - but I tend not to believe the excuses of many people here when it comes to a reason for them not to do something that involves a little effort - call me cynical, but I've been here too long to fall for such rubbish.

On 11/24/2025 at 4:08 PM, vincent13 said:

My understanding is that you need to be married to a Thai to obtain the yellow book.

 

No, but you need your landlord's cooperation. If you don't have a Thai wife who doubles as your landlady, finding a landlord or landlady who puts up with that nonsense might prove impractical. 

11 minutes ago, richard_smith237 said:

 

Going through the Paperwork is a very bureaucratic process for the Amphur Officers - many really do not want to go through the paper work of processing a Yellow House Book for a foreigner - it's 'effort' and takes up to a couple of hours (depending on their familiarity with the process).

 

Thus: 'The 'cannot' approach' is taken - which is not an uncommon response here when someone doesn't know how to or doesn't want to do something - in this case the Amphur officer may try and throw in an excuse such as 'you need to be married' etc... or they may actually believe that having heard of such a regulation from their peers. 

 

When my Wife enquired about the Yellow book for me (she was renewing her ID at the time) - the Amphur Officer told her that my Visa was 'not a real visa' so they can't process an application !!! - which of course is an incredible dumb and transparent response. When pushed, there wasn't an appointment for processing for another couple of months !!! which suited us as we were due to travel. 

On the appointment day - things ran more smoothly as the Amphur Officer had clearly accepted that this was work she was simply going to have to do... 

 

Thus - Experiences clearly vary - but I tend not to believe the excuses of many people here when it comes to a reason for them not to do something that involves a little effort - call me cynical, but I've been here too long to fall for such rubbish.

Yes, thanks for your helpful reply, all that makes sense. Like yourself I've been here a long time and seen many examples of Thais just throwing up some silly excuse just to get rid of someone and save some work. Also I've found having TGF with me when doing any business with other Thais can be more hinderance than help. Usually I will be totally ignored while the Thais discuss my affairs. Even if I leave TGF seated up the back and I go alone to the desk, the Thai at the desk will often be looking over my head or past me and calling out something to TGF. So I think I'll try the amphur again and this time alone but take TGF's blue book and ID card, and have a crack at it alone.

39 minutes ago, Yellowtail said:

Do you have a bank account in your Thai-spelled name? 

 

Do you have Thai medical? 

 

Out of curiosity, what's the benefit of having a bank account with one's name in Thai script? Maybe I'm missing something, but in 20+ years of banking in Thailand, I've never needed that for anything.

 

I do have Thai medical insurance and that doesn't require a "Thai-spelled name" or a pink ID card either.

16 minutes ago, Caldera said:

Out of curiosity, what's the benefit of having a bank account with one's name in Thai script? Maybe I'm missing something, but in 20+ years of banking in Thailand, I've never needed that for anything.

To pay for Thai medical with direct withdrawals and to receive SS payments. 

16 minutes ago, Caldera said:

I do have Thai medical insurance and that doesn't require a "Thai-spelled name" or a pink ID card either.

Thai SS medical? In any event, you would not need the card until you retire, and want to continue the coverage, at least that's what I had to do. 

1 hour ago, Liquorice said:

For ID that requires proof of address, a passport alone is not sufficient.

 

Conversely, for ID that requires proof that you are staying in Thailand legitimately, neither the yellow book nor pink ID card alone are sufficient. 

34 minutes ago, Caldera said:

 

Out of curiosity, what's the benefit of having a bank account with one's name in Thai script? Maybe I'm missing something, but in 20+ years of banking in Thailand, I've never needed that for anything.

 

I do have Thai medical insurance and that doesn't require a "Thai-spelled name" or a pink ID card either.

 

Both are essential if you want to continue paying into the Thai Social Security pot after stopping work (of course some SS offices seem to be able to manage without, but ours isn't one of them). The massive 432 Baht per month fee gives access to government hospitals at the Thai rate.

 

I do maintain actual medical insurance but that's in order to continue to work overseas.

"I don't want to know why you can't. I want to know how you can!"

Took a few weeks to get my yellow book then a week after that for pink card as they had to order one in. I was only the 6th person in my amphur to get one and 1st that year. 

 

Yellow book accepted last year when renewing my drivers licence.

 

Pink card is sometimes useful.

 

Free entry into the Grand Palace.

Thai price at some attractions like elephant village TaTum Surin

Used it for I.D. passing security at airports

Some hotels dont require passport if shown pink I.D. 

1 hour ago, grain said:

As others have mentioned already I think many amphurs use marriage as a way to get rid of us. I went to the local amphur about a year ago, was with my TGF, were not married but have been together 11 years now and I live in her house, so she's my landlady. Anyway at the amphur (Pak Thongchai, Korat) I was totally ignored, lady behind desk asked my TGF are you married, and when she replied no, we were told to go away and get married then come back. And that was the end of the conversation. However I think I'll give it another shot and go again without TGF. 

You need the house's regsitered host's or house master's permission to be obtained in a house book, the yellow one is for foreigners. Furthermore, you must have minimum an official translation of the name page of your passport, so you name is pronouanced correctly when read with Thai characters. I paid 5,000baht for mine, including several pages with the translator's qualification and official rubber stamps. Some provinces also request two witnesses – of which one shall be state employee and one preferably a neighbour – that know you well, and some places furthermore an interview. Where I live, all was needed. To be registered in a house book has nothing to do with marriage or Thai partner. Me, for example, owns my house – yes, a foreigner can own a house, but not the land under it, if you didn't enter on an investor visa – so I am the one that can approve people to be obtaines in my house's house book; including approve myself...:thumbsup:

I wanted to share my personal experience with the Pink ID Card for Foreigners and why, for me, it has been worth getting.

 

I first received my Yellow House Book (Tabien Baan / Thor.Ror.13) back in 2013, and later got the Pink Thai ID Card in 2016. Since then, I’ve used it regularly and it has made a lot of everyday processes in Thailand much easier.

 

Here are some of the things I’ve successfully done using only my pink ID:

Opened several Thai bank accounts (SCB, krungsri, GSB). 

Renewed my Thai driving license in Bangkok, including during COVID when it helped smooth the process. 

Got a vaccine appointment during the period when they were prioritizing Thais.

Registered at my local government hospital (Bhumibol Hospital, Sai Mai, Bangkok). 

Received Thai prices at various attractions and services. 

Sold a car this year.

Picking up parcels at Thailand post.

Checking in at hotels. 

Using it as general ID for domestic flights accepted by staff at check-in similar to Thai IDs (but still carry my Thai driving licence just in case.

 

For me, after nearly a decade of using it, the pink ID has definitely been worth doing. It doesn’t replace a passport and it’s not a residence permit, but for day-to-day life in Thailand—banks, hospitals, licensing, and local services—it has made things noticeably more convenient.

 

Just sharing my experience a long time resident in Bangkok since 2006 😉

18 minutes ago, khunPer said:
2 hours ago, grain said:

As others have mentioned already I think many amphurs use marriage as a way to get rid of us. I went to the local amphur about a year ago, was with my TGF, were not married but have been together 11 years now and I live in her house, so she's my landlady. Anyway at the amphur (Pak Thongchai, Korat) I was totally ignored, lady behind desk asked my TGF are you married, and when she replied no, we were told to go away and get married then come back. And that was the end of the conversation. However I think I'll give it another shot and go again without TGF. 

You need the house's regsitered host's or house master's permission to be obtained in a house book, the yellow one is for foreigners. Furthermore, you must have minimum an official translation of the name page of your passport, so you name is pronouanced correctly when read with Thai characters. I paid 5,000baht for mine, including several pages with the translator's qualification and official rubber stamps. Some provinces also request two witnesses – of which one shall be state employee and one preferably a neighbour – that know you well, and some places furthermore an interview. Where I live, all was needed. To be registered in a house book has nothing to do with marriage or Thai partner. Me, for example, owns my house – yes, a foreigner can own a house, but not the land under it, if you didn't enter on an investor visa – so I am the one that can approve people to be obtaines in my house's house book; including approve myself...:thumbsup:

 

Its an MFA Verified translation of a certified copy of your passport...

 

Ultimately - 3 stages:

1) Consular Certified Copy of your Passport (~ 2000 baht depending on Embassy / Consul costs)

2) Translation of your Passport copy into Thai (~ 300 baht at MFA building Chaeng Wattana - takes an hour) - qualifications not needed - just the stamp (probably as MFA was already familiar with that translator within the same building - you were heavily ripped off at 5000 baht).

3) MFA Verification of the Translation (which is then posted to you within about week - cant remember cost - about 40 baht for postage plus whatever MFA costs are - a couple of hundred baht at a guess).

 

2 Witnesses - I used one (Mother in Law) - this is the first I've heard that the witnesses needed to be a state employee.

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