Have just bought a second-hand car. What is the process for registering it and taxing it? (sorry for the noob question, I really have no idea how it works here).
1,451
views
3
likes
48
all likes
26
replies
1
images
11
users
TLDR : Answer Summary
To register your second-hand car in Thailand, ensure you obtain the green book, bill of sale, and a signed copy of the seller's ID card. You will also need a certificate of residency and your passport. Take these documents to the Department of Land Transport (DLT) to transfer the green book into your name. Additionally, you’ll need to annually take the car for a check-up, as you cannot tax it without the inspection certificate. It's advisable to have the previous owner accompany you to the motor registry office during the registration process.
When I purchase a vehicle, I tell the previous owner that they need to accompay me to the motor registry office and that I will pay once the vehicle is in my name. Never had any objection and always worked well.
Jon ********
Vehicle inspection at Land Transport station if the car is 7 years old
Giorgio ******
How come people don't enquire before starting the process???🤔
Paul ********
You will take the car for a check up once a year can not tax it without the certificate
Apex ********************
Make sure you get the green book, bill of sale, and a signed copy of the sellers ID card. You'll need a certificate of residency and your passport. Take those documents to the DLT to transfer the greenbook into your name. Tax and insurance is paid for there too.
Ciarán *******
Car goes broooooom
JD ********
Cars have Blue Books.. Motorcycles have Green Books
yeah. In Bangkok the service places a tube in the exhaust of your car at idle to test the emission levels while it is running. That's been required for quite a few years now.
Sorry, I'm not sure what a MOT is. The vehicle needs to be inspect, but they do that at the DLT when you transfer ownership. Proof of tax payment is in your bluebook. it documents the owner and tax. Insurance is a separate paper, and the government sells their basic level coverage at the DLT, or you can shop around for a 3rd party insurance company.