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Entering Thailand on Single Entry Tourist Visa After Non-Immigrant 'B' Working Visa

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Hi All, 

 

I am currently working in Thailand, but would like to quit my job and continue to live in Thailand.

Currently, I have a work permit and Non-Immigrant 'B' Visa.  This was 90 days single entry from the UK, extended in Thailand to 1 year multi-entry. It seems that this will end when I resign. 

I would like to:

1. Leave Thailand to a neighboring country the cheapest way possible

2. Get a 60 day, single entry tourist visa from a consulate there and extend for 30 days from Thailand

3. After 90 days, return to my home country (UK) and stay for around a month ( I want to do this at some point anyway)

4. Get a second 60 day visa from the UK and extend again

 

Some questions:

 

1. What is the likelihood of approval, and at which points would I be at risk of being rejected?

2. Is there a better strategy for staying for a similar length of time or longer? 

3. Where is best to go for step 1? 

 

Thank you very much!

 

Edited by Ewan Davidson

There is no restriction on getting a tourist visa after having having a work permit and a non-b visa. No problem at all for you to get one.

Vientiane and Penang are the best locations to get a tourist visa.

The most important thing is to get your work permit cancelled first. If you don't you can't leave the country by land only by air. A letter from your employer confirming your dismissal will be needed. You then take the letter to immigration with your passport and blue work permit. The police cancel you Non imm B visa and give you 24 hours to leave the country. After 24 hours you are on overstay. You also have to take your work permit to the labour department. Then you can go to Laos and get a single entry tourist or multiple tourist visa.

1 hour ago, Wilsonandson said:

The most important thing is to get your work permit cancelled first. If you don't you can't leave the country by land only by air. A letter from your employer confirming your dismissal will be needed. You then take the letter to immigration with your passport and blue work permit. The police cancel you Non imm B visa and give you 24 hours to leave the country. After 24 hours you are on overstay. You also have to take your work permit to the labour department. Then you can go to Laos and get a single entry tourist or multiple tourist visa.

insightful....if you have resigned don't you return the blue book back to the employer.  

  1. There is a high chance of being rejected after 2 or 3 visas from the same Embassy/Consulate.
  2. Not if you are under 50. If you're planning to stay longer than suggested by your OP then you should consider getting a Multiple Entry Tourist Visa (METV) when you return to the UK.
  3. Vientiane, Loas and Penang, Malaysia are the best places to get new SETV's in Asia. Rotating between the two should enable 6 visas. You can only get METV's from the UK or a few other western countries.
  • Author

Thanks everyone! 

 

To add some details I omitted in my original post: 

 

1. I would like to stay in Thailand at least 6 months, perhaps longer

2. I do not have a letter from an employer or 6 months of bank statements with sufficient funds, which seem to be criteria for multi-entry visas 

3. I am not, unfortunately, over 50! :)

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