Last Updated on January 11, 2026 by 28 Immigration

By 28 Company Immigration Consultants – Thailand

Introduction: Why Foreign Employees in Thailand Are Assessed Differently

Foreign nationals working in Thailand under a Non-Immigrant B visa with a work permit form one of the largest applicant groups for the Australian Visitor Visa (Subclass 600).

They are also one of the most misunderstood.

Many applicants assume that being legally employed in Thailand automatically strengthens their application. In reality, Australian immigration officers apply a different risk lens to foreign employees applying from Thailand compared to applicants applying from their home country.

From the Department of Home Affairs’ perspective, the core concern is not employment alone — it is migration pathway risk.

The officer is effectively asking:

Is this applicant a genuine short-term visitor, or someone using Thailand as a launchpad for onward migration to Australia?

At 28 Company Immigration Consultants, we see refusals not because applicants lack documents, but because their Thailand employment narrative is weak, fragmented, or poorly structured.

This guide exists to fix that.

It is designed specifically for:

  • Foreign nationals legally employed in Thailand
  • Holders of Non-Immigrant B visas
  • Work-permit holders applying inside Thailand
  • Applicants funding their trip through employment income
  • Professionals, managers, teachers, technicians, and specialists

This is not a generic checklist.
It is a Thailand-specific Australian visitor visa strategy, aligned with 2026 decision-making logic.


How Australian Immigration Actually Decides Visitor Visas in 2026

Australian visitor visas are risk-based, not checklist-based.

Officers do not approve visas because documents exist — they approve visas because risk is neutralised.

Every Subclass 600 application is subconsciously filtered through three core questions:

  1. Is the applicant genuinely visiting temporarily?
  2. Can they support themselves without working illegally?
  3. What compels them to leave Australia on time?

For foreign employees in Thailand, Question 3 carries the greatest weight.


Evidence Hierarchy: What Actually Influences Approval

Not all documents carry equal value.

Evidence Weight Table (Officer Reality)

Evidence TypeInfluence on Decision
Thai work permit + employment continuity⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Non-Immigrant B extension history⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Salary consistency vs bank activity⭐⭐⭐⭐
Employer credibility in Thailand⭐⭐⭐⭐
Tax & social security records⭐⭐⭐
Previous compliant travel⭐⭐⭐
Travel itinerary & bookings⭐⭐

Critical Insight:
Applicants often over-prepare itineraries while under-documenting employment continuity — the fastest way to weaken an otherwise strong case.


Why Third-Country Workers Are Treated Differently

Applicants applying from their country of nationality benefit from an assumed “home return logic.”

Foreign employees applying from Thailand do not.

Australian officers must be satisfied that:

  • Thailand is the applicant’s real long-term base
  • Employment in Thailand continues after travel
  • Legal right to remain in Thailand is secure
  • The applicant is not economically or emotionally primed to overstay

Without this clarity, the officer may conclude that Australia represents an alternative migration opportunity, not a holiday.

This is why employment structure matters more than job titles.


Understanding Employment Profiles (Risk Differentiation)

Not all foreign employees in Thailand are assessed equally.

Employment Risk Matrix

Employment ProfileRisk Level
Long-term employee (2+ years, same company)LOW
Teacher with annual contract renewalsLOW–MEDIUM
Senior manager / specialistLOW
Recently hired employee (<6 months)MEDIUM
Contract-based or commission incomeMEDIUM–HIGH
Employer-sponsored but low salaryMEDIUM
Multiple job changes in short periodHIGH

Agency Reality:
Visa refusals often occur not because the applicant lacks a job, but because the job appears unstable or disposable.


Section 1: Identity & Travel History

Establishing You as a Compliant International Traveller

Required Documents

  • Current passport bio page (colour scan)
  • All pages of current passport (including blanks)
  • Previous passports (if applicable)
  • Copies of prior visas and entry stamps

Why Travel History Still Matters

Travel history is not about prestige — it is about behaviour.

Australian officers look for:

  • Lawful entry
  • Compliance with visa conditions
  • Timely departures
  • Absence of overstays

For foreign employees in Thailand, Thai immigration history often outweighs international travel.

An applicant with limited overseas travel but five consecutive Non-B extensions is frequently stronger than a frequent traveller with unstable employment.


Section 2: Proof of Legal Residence & Work Rights in Thailand

The Backbone of the Entire Application

This section determines whether the officer believes Thailand is your real base or merely a temporary stop.

Mandatory Evidence

  • Current Non-Immigrant B visa
  • Latest extension of stay stamp
  • Thai entry stamp
  • Valid re-entry permit (if held)
  • Thai work permit (all relevant pages)

Strong Supporting Evidence

  • 90-day reporting receipts (TM.47)
  • Employment history timeline
  • Thai residence certificate
  • Lease agreement or property ownership
  • Utility bills (3–6 months)

Why Re-Entry Permits Matter

A re-entry permit demonstrates:

  • Forward planning
  • Intent to preserve Thai immigration status
  • Awareness of legal obligations

This subtly reinforces return intent — something officers value more than most applicants realise.


Section 3: Employment Evidence

How Australia Judges Job Stability for Foreign Workers

Employment is not just proof of income — it is proof of return obligation.

Required Employment Documents

  • Employment letter on company letterhead confirming:
    • Job title and duties
    • Start date (longevity matters)
    • Salary (monthly or annual)
    • Approved leave dates
    • Confirmation of return to work
  • Thai work permit (matching job role)
  • Payslips (last 6 months)
  • Thai tax documents (PND 1 / PND 91 if available)
  • Social security contribution records (if applicable)

Internal Consistency Check (Officer Logic)

Officers cross-check:

  • Salary vs bank deposits
  • Job role vs work permit position
  • Leave dates vs flight itinerary

Top Red Flag:
Salary stated in the employment letter does not match bank statement deposits.

This single inconsistency causes more refusals than almost any other factor.


Section 4: Financial Capacity & Source of Funds

The Single Most Common Reason for Refusal

For Australian visitor visas, money is not assessed by amount alone.
It is assessed by credibility, sustainability, and consistency.

From the perspective of the Department of Home Affairs, the financial question is simple:

Does this applicant have genuine, ongoing access to funds that align with their employment and lifestyle in Thailand?

Applicants are refused every day with high balances because the money does not make sense.


Minimum Financial Documentation Standard (2026)

Mandatory Bank Statement Requirements

  • 6 months of statements (absolute minimum)
  • Must show:
    • Account holder name
    • Account number
    • Full transaction history
    • Opening & closing balances
  • Statements must be:
    • Active
    • Sequential
    • Internally consistent

Screenshots, edited PDFs, or “balance certificates only” are high-risk submissions.


How Australian Officers Judge “Sufficient Funds”

Australia does not publish a fixed minimum balance.

Instead, officers assess funds relative to:

  • Length of stay
  • Accommodation type
  • Travel style
  • Employment income in Thailand
  • Historical spending behaviour

Practical Cost Awareness (Officer Expectation)

Applicants should demonstrate the ability to cover:

  • Return flights
  • Accommodation
  • Daily living expenses
  • Internal transport
  • Insurance
  • Emergency buffer

Showing cost awareness is far more persuasive than showing excess cash.


Australia Travel Cost Awareness Table (Indicative)

Australia Travel Cost Reality Table (Indicative – 5 to 7 Days)

Expense CategoryConservative Estimate (THB)
Return flight Thailand–Australia25,000 – 40,000
Accommodation (5–7 nights, mid-range)10,000 – 18,000
Daily expenses (food & local transport)4,000 – 7,000
Travel insurance1,000 – 2,000
Activities & contingencies2,000 – 3,000
Total Practical Budget40,000 – 70,000

Agency Insight:
Showing cost awareness aligned with person

NOTE* You can apply with at least 40,000 THB in your savings account.


Large Deposits: The #1 Red Flag Area

Large deposits appearing shortly before application are often interpreted as:

  • Borrowed money
  • Temporary balance inflation
  • Funds not genuinely available

High-Risk Deposit Timing Model

Salary Income  ────────────────▶ NORMAL
Small Savings ────────────────▶ NORMAL
Large Lump Sum (Recent) ──⚠️──▶ HIGH RISK
Unexplained Transfers ────❌──▶ REFUSAL ZONE

How to Neutralise Large Deposits Correctly

A Funds Explanation Letter is mandatory when large deposits exist.

The Letter Must:

  1. Identify the source
  2. Explain the timing
  3. Attach documentary proof
  4. Show funds are now stable

Acceptable Examples

Deposit SourceSupporting Evidence
Annual bonusPayslip + employer letter
Contract completionContract + payment receipt
Asset saleSale agreement + bank trail
Family giftDonor letter + donor bank proof

Unacceptable Approach:
Ignoring the deposit and hoping it “won’t be noticed.”
It will be noticed.


Section 5: Salary vs Bank Activity Consistency

Where Most Employed Applicants Fail

Australian officers cross-check income claims against bank statements.

Consistency Matrix

ScenarioOfficer Interpretation
Salary matches depositsLOW RISK
Minor variations explainedACCEPTABLE
Salary stated, no depositsHIGH RISK
Irregular deposits, no explanationREFUSAL LIKELY
Cash salary, no proofVERY HIGH RISK

Agency Reality:
Employment letters are not taken at face value.
Bank statements are treated as truth data.


Section 6: Employer Strength & Credibility

Not All Employers Are Equal

The credibility of the Thai employer directly impacts visa outcomes.

Employer Risk Weighting Table

Employer TypeRisk Level
Established Thai company (5+ years)LOW
International company with Thai branchLOW
Private school / universityLOW–MEDIUM
SME with limited financial footprintMEDIUM
Newly registered companyMEDIUM–HIGH
Family-owned microbusinessHIGH

Supporting Employer Evidence (Recommended)

  • Company registration certificate
  • Business licence (if applicable)
  • Company website or online presence
  • Photos of workplace (optional but powerful)

Employer Dependence vs Return Probability (Logic Model)

High Dependence on Job
│
│        ✔✔✔✔✔   ← STRONG RETURN LOGIC
│        ✔✔✔✔
│        ✔✔✔
│
│        ✔✔
│        ✔
│
└───────────────────────────────
        Weak Employment Link

If the applicant appears easily replaceable, return logic weakens.


Section 7: Mixed Income Scenarios

Salary + Side Income + Savings

Many foreign employees in Thailand have:

  • Base salary
  • Occasional freelance income
  • Savings from previous years

This is acceptable only when clearly explained.

Officer Rule:

Australia does not reject complexity.
It rejects confusion.

A short clarification paragraph in the cover letter often prevents refusal.


Section 8: Real Refusal Scenarios for Thailand-Based Employees

Refusal Scenario 1

“Strong Balance, Weak Logic”

  • High bank balance
  • No clear income source
  • Recent large deposits

Officer Conclusion: Funds not sustainable → risk of illegal work.


Refusal Scenario 2

New Job, Immediate Application

  • Employed <3 months
  • Applies immediately for Australia

Risk:
Employment stability unproven.

Mitigation:
Explain long-term contract, probation terms, and future extensions.


Refusal Scenario 3

Salary Letter vs Reality Mismatch

  • Employer letter states THB 90,000/month
  • Bank shows THB 45,000 deposits

Outcome:
Credibility collapse → refusal.


Refusal Scenario 4

Employer Exists, Applicant Not Essential

  • Business continues fully without applicant
  • No explanation of role importance

Officer Concern:
Weak return obligation.


Section 9: Financial Threshold Reality for Thailand-Based Workers

Australian officers understand:

  • Thai cost of living
  • Regional salary differences
  • Expat employment structures

Key Principle

Consistency matters more than size.

A believable financial profile aligned with employment history will always outperform a suspiciously “perfect” one.


Section 10: Travel Plan Strategy

Supporting the Application Without Creating Risk

Many applicants believe that a detailed itinerary is the most important part of an Australian visitor visa application. In reality, the travel plan is supporting evidence, not the deciding factor.

For foreign employees applying in Thailand, the purpose of the travel plan is to confirm that:

  • the visit is genuinely temporary
  • the trip is realistic and affordable
  • the travel dates align with employment leave
  • the applicant understands Australian travel logistics

It is not intended to compensate for weak employment or financial evidence.


Flights: What Australia Expects (and What It Does Not)

Best Practice

  • Show return or onward travel
  • Dates must align with:
    • approved leave
    • employer letter
    • work obligations
  • Use refundable tickets or held reservations

Agency Insight

Purchasing non-refundable tickets before visa approval does not strengthen an application and often creates unnecessary financial pressure.

Australia does not reward financial risk-taking — it rewards credible planning.


Accommodation Strategy: Hotels vs Staying With Friends

Both options are acceptable, but they carry different risk profiles.

Accommodation Risk Comparison Table

Accommodation TypeRisk LevelKey Requirement
Mid-range hotelLOWMatches income & budget
Serviced apartmentLOWFull stay coverage
Friend / relativeMEDIUMInvitation + host proof
Sponsor-funded stayMEDIUM–HIGHStrong Thailand ties needed
Luxury hotelHIGHMust match income profile

High-Risk Pattern:
Budget salary + luxury accommodation = credibility gap.


Daily Itinerary: What a Strong Plan Looks Like

A strong Australian itinerary:

  • focuses on 1–2 cities
  • includes realistic travel times
  • balances sightseeing and rest days
  • avoids excessive internal flights
  • reflects seasonal logic

Australian officers are trained to identify itineraries that appear copied, rushed, or unrealistic.

A modest, well-researched itinerary always outperforms an ambitious one.


Section 11: Visiting Friends or Relatives in Australia

Additional Scrutiny Applies

When an applicant stays with someone in Australia, officers assess:

  • nature of the relationship
  • host’s immigration status
  • whether the arrangement increases settlement risk

Required Documents

  • Invitation letter from host
  • Host’s passport or visa
  • Proof of Australian address
  • Financial support statement (if applicable)

Critical Rule

Even when staying with someone in Australia, Thailand ties must remain dominant.

If the officer perceives that:

  • the applicant’s strongest personal ties are in Australia, or
  • the host is financially supporting the entire trip

…the risk of refusal increases sharply unless Thailand obligations are overwhelming.


Section 12: The Personal Cover Letter

The Control Document of the Entire Application

At 28 Company Immigration Consultants, we treat the cover letter as the control document.

It is the only place where:

  • facts are connected
  • risks are neutralised
  • inconsistencies are explained
  • the officer is guided toward approval

A strong cover letter does not repeat documents — it explains them.


Recommended Cover Letter Structure (Subclass 600)

1. Introduction

  • State purpose of travel
  • Confirm legal employment and residence in Thailand

2. Employment & Leave

  • Job role and duration
  • Approved leave dates
  • Confirmation of return to work

3. Financial Capacity

  • How the trip is funded
  • Reference to salary and savings
  • Brief explanation of any irregularities

4. Compelling Reasons to Return to Thailand

  • Employment continuity
  • Legal immigration status
  • Assets or long-term commitments
  • Career obligations

5. Compliance Statement

  • Understanding of visa conditions
  • Commitment to depart Australia on time

Sample Cover Letter Paragraphs (Risk-Based)

LOW RISK PROFILE

(Long-term employee, stable salary)

“I have been legally employed in Thailand for over four years under a Non-Immigrant B visa with a valid work permit. My employment is ongoing, and I have been granted approved leave for this short holiday. My professional obligations, income, and legal right to remain in Thailand require my return following my visit to Australia.”


MEDIUM RISK PROFILE

(Shorter employment, mixed income)

“Although I have been with my current employer for a shorter period, my position is contractually secured and forms part of my long-term professional development in Thailand. My income is derived from my employment and established savings, as demonstrated in my bank statements, and my legal residence and work rights in Thailand remain valid beyond my intended travel dates.”


HIGHER RISK / PREVIOUS REFUSAL PROFILE

“I acknowledge that I was previously refused a visitor visa due to concerns regarding my circumstances at that time. Since then, my situation has changed materially. I am now legally employed in Thailand with a valid work permit, stable income, and clear professional obligations requiring my return. I respectfully submit that my current application addresses the concerns previously raised.”


Section 13: Online Submission Strategy (ImmiAccount)

Australia assesses applications digitally.
Presentation matters more than most applicants realise.

Best Practices

  • Merge related documents into single PDFs
  • Use clear, logical file names
  • Upload documents in a sensible order
  • Avoid duplicates and irrelevant files

Over-documentation increases doubt, not approval probability.


Recommended Upload Order

  1. Passport & travel history
  2. Thai visa & work permit
  3. Employment evidence
  4. Financial capacity
  5. Travel plan & accommodation
  6. Invitation letters (if any)
  7. Cover letter
  8. Additional supporting documents

Section 14: Frequently Asked Questions

Does holding a Thai work permit guarantee approval?
No. It strengthens an application only when employment continuity and return logic are clearly demonstrated.

Can I apply with a short employment history?
Yes, but the application must be carefully structured to explain stability and future obligations.

How much money should I show?
There is no fixed amount. Consistency and credibility matter more than balance size.

Is travel history mandatory?
No. Strong Thai employment and immigration compliance can compensate for limited international travel.

Should I book flights before approval?
No. Refundable or held reservations are sufficient.


Section 15: DIY vs Professional Agency Applications

Many Subclass 600 applications can be submitted independently.
However, foreign employees applying in Thailand face additional complexity.

Professional assistance is especially valuable when:

  • employment is recent
  • income is irregular
  • previous refusals exist
  • employer credibility is weak
  • finances require explanation

At 28 Company Immigration Consultants, we do not simply submit documents. We:

  • assess risk
  • structure narratives
  • prevent avoidable refusals
  • align evidence with officer logic

Final Conclusion: Why Strategy Wins in 2026

An Australian Visitor Visa is not approved because documents exist.
It is approved because risk is neutralised.

For foreign company employees applying in Thailand, success depends on transforming employment, financial stability, and legal residence into a coherent, credible story that clearly demonstrates temporary intent.

This guide reflects the Premium Agency methodology used by 28 Company Immigration Consultants when preparing Australian Visitor Visa (Subclass 600) applications in 2026.


Australian Embassy Thailand

Address:

Australian Embassy Thailand
181 Soi ArunMcKinnon
Lumphini, Pathumwan
Bangkok 10330
Thailand

Phone: +66 2 344 6300

Email: austembassy.bangkok@dfat.gov.au  

Website: https://thailand.embassy.gov.au/

Australian Consulate-General in Phuket

Address:

6th Floor CCM Complex
77/77 Chalermprakiat Rama 9 Road (Bypass Road)
Muang  Phuket  83000  THAILAND

Phone: +66 (0) 76 317 700
Fax: +66 (0) 76 317 743
Website: http://phuket.consulate.gov.au

VFS Australia Bangkok

Address

Australian Biometric Collection Centre

The Shoppes at Belle Grand Rama 9
Unit – BS003 and BS003/1, 1st Floor,
131/1, 141/1 Rama 9 Rd.,
Huay Kwang Sub-district,
Huay Kwang District,
Bangkok 10310

View on Google maps ->

VFS Australia Chiang Mai

Address

Australian Biometric Collection Centre

191, Siripanich, 6B Floor, Huaykaew Road,
Suthep, Muang, Chiang Mai 50200,
Thailand

View on Google maps ->

VFS Australia Phuket

Address

Australian Biometric Collection Centre

CCM Complex Building, 5th Floor, 77/77 Moo 5,
Chalerm Prakiat Rama 9 Road,
Ratsada, Mueang, Phuket,
Thailand 83000

View on Google maps ->