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SUWANVARA LAWFIRM
Suwanvara Law Firm Co., Ltd.
SUWANVARA LAWFIRM
SUWANVARA LAWFIRM
Suwanvara Law Firm Co., Ltd.
Bangkok

Thai Will & Estate Lawyer for Foreigners in Bangkok — Drafting, Probate, Cross-Border Estates

Foreigners with assets in Thailand — a condominium, a Thai bank account, a vehicle, an interest in a Thai company — should have a separate Thai will covering those assets. Trying to administer Thai-situs assets via a foreign will is possible but takes longer, costs more, and routinely fails when documents need translation/legalisation that the foreign executor cannot easily produce. A short, properly drafted Thai will sidesteps all of that. We draft Thai wills for foreign residents, coordinate with home-country counsel for the rest of the estate, and handle probate at the Thai Court when the time comes.

Scope of Thai will and estate lawyer for foreigners work in Bangkok

  • Thai will drafting — bilingual English/Thai with witness and registrar protocols
  • Coordination with home-country wills to avoid contradiction or revocation issues
  • Executor appointment, including non-resident executor letters
  • Probate at the Thai Court — application as administrator/executor
  • Condominium and bank-account transfer to heirs
  • Cross-border estate coordination — Thai property + foreign property allocation

Process

  1. 1Initial consultation — asset map, dependants, existing foreign wills
  2. 2Draft bilingual will and review with you
  3. 3Sign in front of witnesses (or register at the district office for added evidentiary weight)
  4. 4Store originals safely; provide certified copies to nominated executor and counsel
  5. 5On death: Thai probate filing, asset transfer, final tax matters

Documents to prepare

  • Passport and any Thai visa or residence document
  • Asset list — condo title, bank accounts, vehicle registration, company shareholdings
  • Family information — spouse, children, dependants
  • Existing wills from any other jurisdiction

About our team in Bangkok

Service for Bangkok and its metropolitan area — Thailand's capital and its financial and industrial hub. We have a Bangkok branch office in Lat Phrao and appear at the Civil, Criminal, Central Labor, Central Tax, and Central IP & International Trade Courts. We cover factories and operators across Bangkok-area industrial estates such as Lat Krabang, Bang Chan, Gemopolis, Nava Nakorn, Bang Kadi, Bangpoo, and Bang Phli — labor and wrongful-termination cases, import-export customs, BOI investment, and commercial-contract advisory.

We specialize in Bangkok's specialized courts — IP, Central Tax, Central Labor, and Central Administrative — plus M&A, foreign investment, and advisory work for factories in industrial estates: labor and termination disputes, factory and environmental compliance, customs procedures, and BOI privileges. We keep a Bangkok branch office in Lat Phrao and our partners travel to Bangkok regularly, serving clients at lower cost than a downtown-capital firm.

Courts we appear at in Bangkok

  • Bangkok South Civil Court
  • Civil Court
  • Criminal Court
  • Central Labor Court
  • Central Tax Court
  • Central Intellectual Property and International Trade Court

Bangkok and metro (Nonthaburi, Pathum Thani, Samut Prakan), including the Lat Krabang, Bang Chan, Gemopolis, Nava Nakorn, Bang Kadi, Bangpoo, and Bang Phli industrial estates

Past matters in Bangkok

  • International IP case at CIPIT Court

Contact our Bangkok attorneys

We serve clients across Thailand. Initial consultation.

Frequently asked questions — Thai will and estate lawyer for foreigners in Bangkok

2 questions answered

Strongly recommended for any Thai-situs assets. A foreign will can in theory be probated in Thailand, but in practice it must be translated, legalised by your embassy, and then processed by the Thai Court — months of delay during which assets are frozen. A short Thai will limited to your Thai assets, drafted to dovetail with (not revoke) your foreign will, removes that bottleneck and is inexpensive to prepare.
Yes, subject to the foreign-quota rule. If the building's foreign quota has room, the heir can register the condo in their own name. If the quota is full, the heir must dispose of the unit within a reasonable period (commonly understood as one year) and inherit the sale proceeds instead. Planning ahead — knowing the quota status now — avoids forced-sale stress later.