Stock Market Tax Thailand 2025 — Investor Guide
Thailand has one of the most investor-friendly stock tax regimes in Asia. Capital gains from SET-listed stocks are tax-exempt for retail investors. However, dividends and foreign stock gains are taxed differently. Here’s the complete guide.
Capital Gains Tax on Thai Stocks (SET)
Capital gains from selling shares listed on the Stock Exchange of Thailand (SET) are tax-exempt for individual Thai investors. This is a significant advantage — you can buy and sell SET-listed stocks with zero capital gains tax on profits.
This exemption applies to: stocks listed on the SET, stocks listed on the Market for Alternative Investment (mai), and investment units of Thai mutual funds traded on the SET.
Dividend Tax in Thailand
Dividends from Thai companies are subject to 10% withholding tax, automatically deducted before dividends are paid to you. You have two options:
- Accept the 10% withholding as final tax — no need to include in annual tax return
- Include dividends in annual return — may be beneficial if your marginal rate is below 10%, allowing a refund
Foreign Stock Tax (US Stocks, ETFs)
Gains from foreign stocks (US stocks, ETFs like VOO/QQQ) are treated differently:
| Income Type | Tax Treatment |
|---|---|
| Capital gains (foreign stocks) | Assessable income — personal income tax rates apply |
| US dividends | 30% US withholding tax deducted + Thai income tax |
| Foreign dividends (non-US) | Varies — generally assessable income in Thailand |
If you invest in US stocks through a broker like Interactive Brokers from Thailand, capital gains from selling US stocks are technically assessable income in Thailand. In practice, many Thai investors do not declare these — but compliance is the legally correct approach. The rules here are complex and a tax professional should be consulted.
Thai Mutual Funds and ETFs
- Thai ETFs (SET-listed) — capital gains exempt, dividends subject to 10% withholding
- Thai mutual funds (registered RMF/SSF) — special tax incentives apply, tax deductions on contributions
- RMF (Retirement Mutual Fund) — deduct up to 30% of income (max 500,000 THB) from taxable income
- SSF (Super Saving Fund) — deduct up to 30% of income (max 200,000 THB) from taxable income
Tax-Efficient Investment Strategy for Thai Investors
- Maximise RMF and SSF contributions — both offer immediate income tax deductions
- Hold SET-listed stocks directly for capital gains tax exemption
- Consider THB-denominated foreign ETFs listed on SET to access global markets tax-efficiently
- For foreign stocks via IBKR, keep records and consult a tax professional on reporting obligations
See also: Best Investment Platforms Thailand | Best ETFs for Thai Investors
⚠️ Disclaimer: Informational only — not tax advice. Consult a qualified Thai tax professional for your specific situation. Last updated: March 2025.