Last Updated on January 27, 2026 by 28 Immigration

By 28 Company Immigration Consultants – Thailand

Introduction: Why Foreigner Teachers Are Assessed Differently for Belgium

Foreign teachers living and working in Thailand often assume they are ideal Schengen applicants:

✔️ Stable employment
✔️ Regular salary
✔️ Legal long-term residence
✔️ Clear return obligations

In many cases, they are — when the employment story is presented correctly.

From the perspective of the Belgian Immigration Office and the Schengen framework, teachers are viewed as semi-mobile professionals.

Teaching contracts:

  • Are often renewable annually
  • Can be terminated or transferred
  • Do not always imply permanent settlement

This means Belgian visa officers do not ask:

“Is this person employed?”

They ask:

“Does this job genuinely require their return to Thailand?”

At 28 Company Immigration Consultants, refusals for teachers rarely happen because of missing paperwork.

They happen because:

  • Employment evidence is generic
  • School commitment is poorly explained
  • Financial patterns are inconsistent
  • The return-to-Thailand logic is weak

This guide exists to eliminate those risks.


Who This Premium Guide Is Designed For

This checklist is written specifically for:

  • Foreign nationals teaching in Thailand
  • Teachers on Non-Immigrant B visas
  • Teachers with Thai work permits
  • Language teachers, subject teachers, and lecturers
  • Teachers applying from within Thailand

This is not a generic Schengen checklist.
It is a teacher-specific Belgium strategy, aligned with 2026 Schengen decision logic.


How Belgium Actually Assesses Foreigner Teachers (2026 Reality)

Belgium issues tourist visas under Schengen Type C rules, but national risk interpretation still applies.

For foreign teachers, Belgian officers assess three core questions:

  1. Is this person a genuine temporary visitor?
  2. Is their employment in Thailand stable and continuing?
  3. Is there a compelling reason to return to Thailand after the trip?

For teachers, Question 2 drives Question 3.


The Teacher Risk Paradox

Teachers are viewed as:

FactorOfficer Interpretation
Regular salaryFinancial stability ✔️
Renewable contractMedium flexibility ⚠️
School term structureStrong return anchor ✔️
Ability to find work elsewhereMobility risk ⚠️

Your application must amplify anchors and neutralise flexibility.


Evidence Hierarchy for Foreigner Teachers

What Actually Influences Approval

Not all documents are weighted equally.

Teacher Evidence Weight Table

Evidence CategoryWeight
School employment confirmation⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Approved leave letter⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Thai visa & work permit history⭐⭐⭐⭐
Salary consistency⭐⭐⭐⭐
Length of employment⭐⭐⭐
Personal finances⭐⭐⭐
Travel plan⭐⭐

Agency Insight:
A strong school letter often outweighs high bank balances.


Understanding Teacher Risk Segmentation

Not all teachers are assessed the same way.

Teacher Profile Risk Matrix

ProfileRisk Level
3+ years at same schoolLOW
Government / international schoolLOW
1–2 years at private schoolMEDIUM
Recently changed schoolsMEDIUM–HIGH
Short-term / probation contractHIGH
Multiple employersHIGH

Section 1: Identity & Travel History

Establishing Compliance Behaviour

Required Documents

  • Current passport (bio page)
  • All passport pages (including blanks)
  • Previous passports (if applicable)
  • Copies of previous visas and entry/exit stamps

How Travel History Is Interpreted

Belgium does not assess travel history by destination prestige.

They assess:

  • Compliance with visa conditions
  • Timely exits
  • No overstays

For teachers, Thai immigration compliance is often more important than European travel history.

A teacher with seven years of lawful Thai extensions is often stronger than a frequent traveller with short-term stays.


Section 2: Proof of Legal Residence in Thailand

The Structural Backbone of the Application

This section determines whether Thailand is viewed as a true base or a temporary posting.

Mandatory Evidence

  • Valid Non-Immigrant B visa
  • Latest extension of stay stamp
  • Thai entry stamp
  • Re-entry permit (if applicable)

Strong Supporting Evidence

  • 90-day reporting receipts (TM.47)
  • Residence certificate
  • Lease agreement or property ownership
  • Utility bills (3–6 months)
  • Thai bank statements showing daily-life transactions

Why Re-Entry Permits Matter

A re-entry permit quietly demonstrates:

  • Forward planning
  • Awareness of immigration rules
  • Intention to preserve Thai legal status

These details reinforce return intent without explanation.


Section 3: Employment as a Teacher in Thailand

Proving Stability, Not Just Employment

Belgian officers are not impressed by contracts alone.

They want to see:

  • Continuity
  • Institutional reliance
  • Approved absence

Core Employment Documents

  • Employment contract
  • Work permit (WP3 / WP4)
  • School registration or licence
  • Teacher ID card (if issued)

High-Impact Supporting Evidence

  • Official school letter confirming:
    • Position
    • Start date
    • Salary
    • Approved leave dates
    • Confirmation of return to duties
  • Payslips (6 months)
  • Personal income tax records (PND.91 or equivalent)

Section 4: Leave Approval – A Decisive Factor

For teachers, leave approval is non-negotiable.

Officer Core Question

“Has the employer authorised this absence, and does the job continue afterward?”

Leave Letter Must Clearly State

  • Exact travel dates
  • Leave type (paid/unpaid)
  • Position held upon return
  • Salary continuation (if applicable)

Leave Strength Table

Leave TypeImpact
Paid leave during term break⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Approved unpaid leave⭐⭐⭐⭐
Informal / verbal leave
No leave evidenceREFUSAL LIKELY

Section 5: Financial Capacity for Teachers

Why Salary Consistency Beats High Balances

Belgium does not publish a fixed minimum balance.

Instead, officers assess whether funds are reasonable and earned.

Mandatory Financial Evidence

  • Personal bank statements (6 months)
  • Salary clearly identifiable
  • Regular monthly credits
  • Normal living expenses visible

Financial Credibility Table

PatternOfficer View
Regular salary depositsLOW RISK
Small savings growthNORMAL
Large recent depositsHIGH RISK
Third-party fundingMEDIUM–HIGH

Indicative Belgium Travel Cost Table (7–10 Days)

Expense CategoryEstimated Range (THB)
Return flight Thailand–Belgium25,000 – 40,000
Accommodation10,000 – 18,000
Daily expenses4,000 – 7,000
Travel insurance1,000 – 2,000
Activities & contingency2,000 – 3,000
Total Practical Budget40,000 – 70,000

Agency Insight:
Showing cost awareness aligned with teacher salary is more persuasive than showing excess funds.


Section 6: Source of Funds

The #1 Refusal Trigger for Teachers in Thailand

For foreign teachers, refusals rarely happen because the applicant “doesn’t have money.”
They happen because the money doesn’t look like teacher money.

Belgian/Schengen officers assess finances through credibility, not volume.

They ask:

  1. Is the income legitimate and consistent with employment?
  2. Are bank movements stable and normal?
  3. Is the applicant funding the trip themselves?
  4. If someone is supporting, is that relationship and ability proven?

Funds Risk Table (Teacher Profile)

Funds PatternOfficer InterpretationRisk
Monthly salary + stable expensesNormal lifeLOW
Salary + gradual savingsResponsibleLOW
Salary + occasional bonus (documented)AcceptableMEDIUM
Large recent deposits“Application funds”HIGH
Cash deposits with no sourceUnreliableVERY HIGH
Third-party transfersSponsorship riskMEDIUM–HIGH

Agency Insight:
If deposits increase sharply within 30–45 days before applying, your file must include a clear written explanation.


When a Funds Explanation Letter Is Mandatory

You should include a Funds Explanation Letter if any of the following exist:

  • Large lump-sum transfers
  • Multiple cash deposits
  • Income not matching contract/payslips
  • Support from a partner or family member
  • Savings moved from another account

Acceptable Evidence by Source

Source of FundsEvidence That Makes It Safe
SalaryPayslips + matching bank credits
Teaching bonusBonus letter + payroll proof
Side tutoringTax proof / consistent deposits + explanation
Savings transferPrevious account statements
Sponsor supportSponsor letter + sponsor finances + relationship proof

Fatal Mistake:
Saying “my friend will help” without proving the friend’s legal status, ability, and relationship.


Section 7: Employer Credibility

Belgium Officers Judge the School Too

Foreigner teacher files are strongly influenced by how credible the employer appears.

Officers may ask internally:

“Is this school legitimate and stable, or is it a short-term contract arrangement?”

Employer Credibility Checklist

Employer DocumentWhy It Matters
School registration/licenceLegitimacy
Employer tax ID / registrationOperational reality
Company affidavit (if a company)Proof of legal entity
HR contact & letterheadVerifiability
Salary structure evidenceFinancial stability

Agency Insight:
International schools and well-known institutions are easier to present, but private language schools can still succeed with the right structure.


Section 8: The Leave Letter

Your Strongest “Return Intent” Document

For teachers, the leave letter is the return ticket logic.

It should not be vague. It must be specific and verifiable.

Leave Letter Must Include (Non-Negotiable)

  • Full name and passport number (recommended)
  • Job title and department
  • Employment start date
  • Confirmed monthly salary
  • Approved leave dates (exact)
  • Confirmation of continued employment upon return
  • Signature, stamp, and contact details

Leave Letter Strength Table

Leave EvidenceDecision Impact
Approved leave + return-to-work stated⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Approved leave only⭐⭐⭐⭐
Contract only (no leave letter)⭐⭐
“May travel” vague letter
No leave evidenceREFUSAL LIKELY

Section 9: Purpose of Travel

Avoiding the “Unclear Itinerary” Problem

Belgium tourist visas are not refused because the trip is simple.

They are refused when the trip is:

  • Unstructured
  • Over-ambitious
  • Too long relative to job flexibility
  • Not matched to finances

Recommended Trip Duration for Teachers (Best Practice)

Teacher ProfileIdeal Trip Length
Full-time teacher (term break)7–12 days
Teacher with limited leave7–10 days
New job / probation5–7 days
Teacher with strong long-term contract10–14 days

Agency Insight:
Trips of 3–4 weeks often trigger the question: “How can this teacher be away that long?”


Section 10: Accommodation & Internal Travel Strategy

Belgium (and Schengen) officers prefer clean, neutral profiles.

Accommodation Risk Table

Accommodation TypeRiskNotes
Hotel bookings (refundable ok)LOWStandard tourism
Serviced apartmentsLOWAcceptable
Staying with friendMEDIUMMust explain relationship
Staying with distant contactHIGHSettlement concerns
Sponsor-funded accommodationHIGHMust prove sponsor strongly

Internal Movement Strategy (Belgium Trip)

A strong teacher itinerary typically:

  • Covers 1–2 main cities
  • Includes day trips (not constant city-hopping)
  • Has rest days
  • Matches the length of the trip

Avoid:
Too many countries in a short time. It can look copied or unrealistic.


Section 11: Travel Medical Insurance (Schengen Requirement)

Schengen rules require travel medical insurance meeting required standards.

Insurance Requirement Checklist

RequirementStandard
Minimum coverageEUR 30,000 (or equivalent)
Coverage areaEntire Schengen Area
Covered itemsMedical emergencies + repatriation
ValidityEntire trip duration

Agency Insight:
Insurance documents should clearly show coverage amount, dates, and geographic scope.


Section 12: Proof of Accommodation, Flights & Reservations

Belgium/Schengen generally accept reservations.
You do not need to take financial risks.

Best Practice

  • Flight reservation (round trip)
  • Hotel reservations for full stay
  • If visiting multiple cities: accommodation evidence for each

Weak Patterns

  • One-way flight
  • Missing accommodation nights
  • Unexplained “free stay” claims

Section 13: Document Presentation & Upload Strategy

Schengen Files Are Judged by Clarity

Even a strong applicant can weaken their case through messy documents.

File Structuring Rules

  • Combine related documents into single PDFs
  • Use clear titles (e.g., “Employment + Leave Letter”)
  • Avoid duplicates
  • Avoid irrelevant documents
  • Keep translations consistent (if needed)

Recommended Document Order (Foreigner Teachers)

  1. Passport + travel history
  2. Thai visa + extension stamps + re-entry permit
  3. Work permit + employment contract
  4. School letter + leave approval
  5. Payslips + tax proof
  6. Bank statements (personal)
  7. Proof of accommodation + flights
  8. Travel insurance
  9. Itinerary / travel plan
  10. Supporting ties (lease, family, assets)

Section 14: Real Refusal Scenarios (Teachers in Thailand)

Refusal Scenario 1: “Strong Salary, Weak Leave Evidence”

  • Contract provided
  • No approved leave letter
    Outcome: officer doubts return-to-work certainty.

Refusal Scenario 2: “Large Deposit Before Application”

  • THB 300,000–800,000 added recently
  • No explanation
    Outcome: funds seen as artificial.

Refusal Scenario 3: “Overlong Trip”

  • 25 days travel
  • Basic teacher contract
    Outcome: trip seen as inconsistent with employment stability.

Section 15: The Master Document Checklist (All-in-One Table)

This table reflects exactly how a Belgium tourist visa file should be structured for foreign teachers living and working in Thailand in 2026.

Belgium Tourist Visa – Foreigner Teachers (Thailand)

CategoryDocumentNotes
IdentityPassport (current)Valid 3+ months after return
All passport pagesIncluding blanks
Previous passportsIf available
Thai Legal StatusNon-Immigrant B visaValid at time of application
Latest extension stampShows lawful residence
Re-entry permitStrongly recommended
TM.47 receipts90-day reporting history
EmploymentEmployment contractSigned and current
Work permit (WP3/WP4)Valid
School licence/registrationConfirms legitimacy
Teacher ID cardIf issued
Employer LetterSchool confirmation letterRole, salary, start date
Approved leave letterExact dates + return
Financial (Personal)Bank statements (6 months)Salary clearly visible
Payslips (6 months)Must match bank
Tax recordsPND.91 or equivalent
Travel PlanDaily itineraryRealistic, time-bound
Flight reservationReturn ticket
Hotel reservationsFull stay covered
InsuranceTravel medical insuranceEUR 30,000+
Ties to ThailandLease or property proofStrengthens anchoring
Utility billsOptional but useful
OptionalCover letterStrongly recommended
OptionalAssets in ThailandOnly if relevant

Agency Rule:
If a document does not strengthen return intent, it does not belong in the file.


Section 16: The Teacher Cover Letter

Strategic, Not Emotional

For Schengen applications, a cover letter is not mandatory — but for foreign teachers in Thailand, it is highly strategic.

It allows you to:

  • Clarify employment stability
  • Reinforce leave approval
  • Explain travel timing
  • Eliminate officer assumptions

What Belgian Officers Want to Understand

They are silently asking:

“Is this teacher returning to Thailand because they must — or only because they say they will?”

Your cover letter must answer that clearly.


Recommended Cover Letter Structure (Teachers)

1. Introduction

  • State tourism-only purpose
  • Confirm long-term legal residence in Thailand
  • State teaching position

2. Employment Stability

  • School name and type
  • Years of service
  • Contract continuity
  • Salary stability

3. Approved Leave

  • Confirm leave dates
  • Confirm return to position
  • Confirm ongoing employment

4. Travel Purpose & Duration

  • Why Belgium
  • Why now (term break / approved leave)
  • Why this duration

5. Financial Capacity

  • Self-funded travel
  • Salary-based savings
  • No reliance on illegal work

6. Return Commitment

  • Teaching duties resume immediately
  • Work permit & visa continuity
  • Professional obligations in Thailand

Sample Cover Letter Tone (Teacher Profile)

LOW–RISK PROFILE

(Long-term teacher, stable school)

“I am employed full-time as a teacher in Thailand and have been working with my current school for several years under a valid work permit and Non-Immigrant B visa. My employer has approved my leave for this short holiday period, after which I am required to return to resume my teaching duties. My travel to Belgium is purely for tourism during my approved leave and does not interfere with my professional responsibilities.”


MEDIUM–RISK PROFILE

(1–2 years, private school)

“I am currently employed as a teacher in Thailand under a valid contract and work permit. My employer has formally approved my leave for the proposed travel dates and confirmed my continued employment upon return. This planned holiday to Belgium falls within my authorised leave period, after which I will resume my teaching responsibilities in Thailand.”

Key Rule:
Never mention:

  • Looking for opportunities
  • Visiting schools
  • Exploring work or study
  • “Keeping options open”

Section 17: Approval Logic vs Refusal Logic (Teacher Profile)

Approval Logic Model

AreaOfficer Confidence
EmploymentStable & continuing
LeaveApproved & documented
FinancesSalary-based & logical
TravelShort, realistic
ResidenceLawful & long-term
OverallGenuine tourist

Refusal Logic Model

AreaOfficer Doubt
EmploymentShort-term or vague
LeaveNot clearly approved
FinancesArtificial or inconsistent
TravelToo long or unclear
OverallReturn risk

Section 18: Frequently Asked Questions (SEO Section)

Does being a foreign teacher help or hurt?

It helps only when employment stability is clearly proven.
Without a strong school letter and leave approval, teacher status alone is not enough.


How much money should a teacher show?

There is no fixed minimum.

Belgium looks for:

  • Salary consistency
  • Normal savings
  • Realistic travel costs

A 40,000–70,000 THB practical budget explained well is usually sufficient.


Can I apply if I recently changed schools?

Yes — but you must provide:

  • A strong new contract
  • Clear leave approval
  • Evidence of legal work permit transfer

Is travel history required?

No.

Strong Thai employment and immigration compliance can compensate for limited international travel.


Can I visit other Schengen countries?

Yes, but:

  • Belgium should be the main destination
  • Accommodation must be shown
  • The itinerary must be realistic

Section 19: DIY Applications vs Premium Agency Strategy

Why Teachers Often Underestimate Risk

Teachers assume:

  • “I have a job — I’ll be approved”

But refusals often occur because:

  • Leave letters are weak
  • Finances look manipulated
  • Travel plans are copied
  • Employer credibility is unclear

When Professional Support Is Strongly Advised

  • Short-term contracts
  • New schools
  • Recent job changes
  • Previous Schengen refusals
  • Complex finances

At 28 Company Immigration Consultants, we don’t submit files.

We control officer interpretation.


Final Conclusion: Employment Must Equal Obligation

A Belgium Tourist Visa is not approved because:

  • You are a teacher
  • You earn a salary
  • You live in Thailand

It is approved because your job requires your return.

For foreign teachers applying in Thailand, approval depends on proving:

  • Genuine, continuing employment
  • Approved, time-limited leave
  • Salary-based financial stability
  • Clear, realistic travel intent
  • Ongoing Thai legal residence

This Premium Agency Guide reflects the real assessment logic applied to Belgium (Schengen Type C) tourist visa applications for foreign teachers in Thailand in 2026.


How 28 Company Immigration Consultants Can Help

At 28 Company Immigration Consultants, we specialise in preparing Belgium (Schengen) Tourist Visa applications for foreign teachers living and working in Thailand, where approval depends not just on documents, but on how your employment, finances, and return obligations are interpreted by the visa officer. We go beyond basic checklists by strategically structuring your file to highlight employment stability, approved leave, lawful Thai residence, and genuine temporary travel intent. Our service includes a full profile assessment, employer and leave letter guidance, financial credibility checks, itinerary and cover letter strategy, and professional document presentation aligned with 2026 Schengen decision-making standards. We don’t submit applications blindly — we engineer approval logic, reduce refusal risk, and ensure your application clearly answers the one question that matters most: why you will return to Thailand after your trip.


Contact details

Embassy of Belgium in Bangkok
16th Floor, Sathorn Square Building
98 North Sathorn Road
Silom Sub-District,
Bangrak District
Bangkok 10500
Thailand

T: +66 2 108 18 00
F: +66 2 108 18 08

Outside working hours and in case of emergency only: +66 81 833 99 87

General mailbox (diplomatic affairs):
bangkok@diplobel.fed.be

Consular mailbox (assistance to Belgians):
consular.bangkok@diplobel.fed.be

Visa mailbox (visa information and applications):
bangkok.visa@diplobel.fed.be

TLScontact
Location: 12th floor, Sathorn City Tower,
175 South Sathorn Road,
Khwaeng Thungmahamek,
Sathorn,
Bangkok
10120

Submission of application: Monday 8am – 1.30pm, Wednesday : 8am -12:30pm and 1.30pm – 4pm, Saturday 8am -12pm (please note that an extra fee will apply)

Call centre: +66 2 838 6666 from Monday to Friday 8am -12:30pm and 1.30pm -4.30pm
Website: be.tlscontact.com
Email: contact.th@tlscontact.com