DTV visa holders do not need an Electronic Travel Authorization (ETA) to enter Thailand. The ETA program has been postponed and will reportedly apply only to visa-exempt entries, while individuals holding any type of visa, including tourism visas issued by embassies, will not require the ETA. The implementation of the ETA has not yet been finalized, and updates are awaited.
It's not a rumor, it will happen eventually but no date has been mentioned. Once the ETA system does go into effect, it will ONLY apply to those who do not have a visa.
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Paul *******
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Ok landed in thailand no ETA, thanks for all the answer
Regmi *******
If you are using the DTV visa to enter thailand - then NO.
Elías ********
ETA doesn't exist yet, but it will be supposedly only for people entering on a visa waiver. Reportedly, anybody with any type of visa, including tourism visas issued beforehand by embassies won't need it.
"Thailand is introducing a new Electronic Travel Authorization (ETA) that will be mandatory for all visa-exempt travelers entering the country by air, land or sea."
That is/was the plan... if or when? Well... who knows...? ;-)
It was meant to pilot in December for Aussies I think them fully implemented next year. It has been delayed due to IT issues. I was in IT for 23 years in corporate and a Project Manager for longer. This all sounds very familiar lol
One report stated there was a problem with bringing the banks into it as the idea is to coincide the ETA with the 300 baht tourism tax. So yes I think it's an IT issue which will be resolved next year
If it was linking with other IT systems and a change of scope it really does increase the complexity of the project manifold. Stakeholders think they are adding in simple change requests and if the HIPPO wants it the HIPPO gets it
Yes. I don't know if it's only one bank involved in the 300 baht levy and whether they tender for this, but no doubt the bank will want a cut of the 300, so this will have to be built into the system. The UK also has a similar set up now
Visa-exempt here means people entering as tourists, only with the passport (the people who can enter and stay
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days without any visa). If you've got a student visa, or a marriage one, or even the DTV, you won't need the ETA. Also, unlike the other countries already using it, Thailand is planning, reportedly, to require one ETA for each entry, instead of an approval valid for 1-3 years at once.