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SUWANVARA LAWFIRM
Suwanvara Law Firm Co., Ltd.
SUWANVARA LAWFIRM
SUWANVARA LAWFIRM
Suwanvara Law Firm Co., Ltd.
Samut Sakhon

Divorce Lawyer for Foreigners in Samut Sakhon — Thai-Foreign Marriages, Cross-Border Property, Custody

Divorces between a Thai national and a foreign spouse — or between two foreign nationals who married in Thailand — engage two legal systems at once. We help untangle them: which country has jurisdiction, where the divorce should be registered, how Thai matrimonial property is divided, what happens to overseas pensions and real estate, and whether a Thai decree will be recognised in your home country. Many engagements never see a courtroom because we settle by mutual-consent registration at the amphur; for contested matters, the Juvenile and Family Court is where the case is heard.

Scope of divorce lawyer for foreigners work in Samut Sakhon

  • Uncontested (mutual-consent) divorce registered at the district office
  • Contested divorce filed at the Juvenile and Family Court
  • Division of matrimonial property — Thai-titled real estate, vehicles, business interests
  • Cross-border asset coordination — UK pensions, US 401(k)/IRA, EU property, Singapore/HK accounts
  • Child custody, support, and access — including international relocation consent
  • Recognition and enforcement of Thai decrees in your home jurisdiction (via local counsel)
  • Pre- and post-divorce visa adjustments (Non-O dependent visa, marriage extension)

Process

  1. 1Initial consultation — review marriage location, residence, asset map, children
  2. 2Negotiation with the other spouse and their counsel (often resolves the case)
  3. 3If consent reached: prepare bilingual settlement deed and register at the amphur
  4. 4If contested: file petition at the Juvenile and Family Court with grounds and evidence
  5. 5Post-decree: register decree with foreign embassy, adjust visa status, enforce support

Documents to prepare

  • Thai marriage certificate (or foreign marriage certificate + Thai registration if married abroad)
  • Passport and Thai ID (for Thai spouse)
  • Both spouses' birth certificates of children (if any)
  • Title deeds, vehicle registration, bank statements — for property division
  • Evidence of grounds (for contested divorce only) — photographs, communications, witness statements

About our team in Samut Sakhon

Samut Sakhon (Mahachai) is a hub of fishery, seafood, and processing industries with a large migrant workforce and ports. We handle factory, migrant-labor, customs, and business-contract cases from our Bangkok branch.

We specialize in labor and migrant-labor matters in the fishery/seafood sector, serving Samut Sakhon employers from our Bangkok branch.

Courts we appear at in Samut Sakhon

  • Samut Sakhon Provincial Court
  • Samut Sakhon Juvenile and Family Court
  • Central Labor Court

Samut Sakhon, Mahachai, Krathum Baen, Ban Phaeo, and the coastal industrial area

Contact our Samut Sakhon attorneys

We serve clients across Thailand. Initial consultation.

Frequently asked questions — divorce lawyer for foreigners in Samut Sakhon

3 questions answered

Yes, in most cases. Thai courts generally accept jurisdiction if at least one spouse is a Thai national or has been resident in Thailand long enough to ground residence. The foreign marriage certificate needs to be translated and either registered in Thailand or presented with apostille/legalisation. We'll review your situation before filing to confirm jurisdiction.
It depends on your home jurisdiction. Most common-law countries (US, UK, Australia, Canada) and most EU states will recognise a properly issued Thai divorce decree, provided due process was observed and the decree is translated and authenticated. We coordinate with your home-country counsel to make sure the Thai paperwork is structured for foreign recognition from day one — chasing it later is expensive.
Land titled in the Thai spouse's name (with foreign-funded purchase) is one of the most disputed issues in Thai-foreign divorce. The foreign spouse generally cannot take title themselves, but can claim a share of proceeds on sale, or a long lease/usufruct as part of the settlement. The actual outcome depends on documentation: who paid, what the loan/gift letter says, and whether prenup terms apply. We've handled this many times — bring the paperwork and we'll map the realistic options.