Last Updated on January 12, 2026 by 28 Immigration

By 28 Company Immigration Consultants – Thailand

Introduction: Why Foreign Students Are Treated Differently by Australia

Foreign students living in Thailand often assume that being enrolled in a recognised institution automatically makes them strong Australian tourist visa applicants.

Sometimes it does.
Often, it does not.

From the 2026 visitor-visa assessment perspective used by the Department of Home Affairs, a student profile is one of the most carefully scrutinised categories—especially when the applicant is not applying from their country of nationality.

Why?

Because students sit at the intersection of temporary intent and mobility risk.

✔️ Students can demonstrate structured lives, academic timelines, and future commitments
⚠️ Students may also appear flexible, internationally mobile, and open to overstaying if return logic is weak

Visa officers do not ask whether you are studying.

They ask:

Does this student have compelling reasons to return to Thailand and resume their studies after a short visit to Australia?

At 28 Company Immigration Consultants, refusals for students almost never happen due to missing documents.

They happen because the academic story is vague, the timeline is unclear, or the Thailand-based anchoring is weak.

This guide exists to fix that.


Who This Guide Is Designed For

This Premium Agency guide is written specifically for:

  • Foreign nationals studying in Thailand (Bachelor, Master, PhD, diploma, or certificate level)
  • Students on Non-Immigrant ED visas
  • Exchange or pathway programme students legally resident in Thailand
  • Students applying for an Australian Tourist Visa (Subclass 600) for short-term tourism only
  • Applicants submitting from within Thailand (not home country)

This is not a generic checklist.

It is a student-specific Australian visitor visa strategy, aligned with 2026 assessment logic and real refusal patterns.


How Australia Actually Assesses Students (2026 Reality)

Australian visitor visas are assessed under a risk-weighted, behavioural model.

For students, every application is subconsciously filtered through three core questions:

  1. Is this applicant genuinely visiting Australia temporarily?
  2. Does their academic pathway clearly require their return to Thailand?
  3. Are finances realistic for a student profile, not artificially inflated?

For students, Question 2 is decisive.


The Student Risk Paradox

Unlike salaried employees, students:

  • Do not have fixed employment leave
  • Often have flexible study schedules
  • May study online or part-time
  • Can sometimes pause or defer studies

This flexibility weakens automatic return logic unless compensated by strong academic structure.

Officer Thought Pattern

“If this student can study remotely or defer easily, what forces them to return to Thailand?”

Your documents must answer this clearly and repeatedly.


Evidence Hierarchy for Students

What Actually Influences Approval

Not all student documents carry equal weight.

Student Evidence Weight Table

Evidence TypeWeight in Decision
Current enrolment & attendance confirmation⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Academic calendar & semester dates⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
ED visa & Thai immigration compliance⭐⭐⭐⭐
Tuition payment proof⭐⭐⭐⭐
Academic progression history⭐⭐⭐
Personal finances aligned with student lifestyle⭐⭐⭐
Travel itinerary⭐⭐

Common Mistake:
Submitting a student ID card without explaining how the academic timeline forces return to Thailand.


Why Third-Country Student Applicants Face Extra Scrutiny

Students applying from their country of nationality benefit from automatic “home return logic”.

Foreign students applying from Thailand do not.

Australian officers must be satisfied that:

  • Thailand is the applicant’s current academic base
  • The study programme is active, not nominal
  • The applicant has ongoing academic obligations
  • Australia is not a stepping-stone to study or stay unlawfully

This is why Thai immigration compliance and academic continuity must be front-and-centre.


Understanding Student Profiles (Risk Segmentation)

Not all students are assessed equally.

Student Risk Profile Matrix

Student ProfileRisk Level
Full-time degree student, 2+ years completedLOW
Full-time degree student, 1 year completedLOW–MEDIUM
Newly enrolled (<6 months)MEDIUM
Language school / short courseMEDIUM–HIGH
Online or hybrid studyHIGH
Repeated course changesHIGH
Poor attendance historyVERY HIGH

Agency Insight:
Newly enrolled students are not refused automatically—but they require tighter timelines and conservative travel plans.


Section 1: Identity & Travel History

Establishing Compliance, Not Prestige

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 for Students

Travel history is not about luxury.

It is about behavioural compliance.

Australian officers look for:

  • Lawful entry and exit
  • Respect for visa conditions
  • No overstays or breaches
  • Consistent immigration behaviour

For students, Thai immigration compliance often outweighs international travel.

A student with limited overseas travel but multiple lawful ED extensions is often stronger than a frequent traveller with unstable residence.


Section 2: Proof of Legal Residence in Thailand

The Backbone of the Entire Application

This section determines whether Thailand is viewed as a real academic base or a temporary convenience.

Mandatory Evidence

  • Current Non-Immigrant ED 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
  • Long-term lease or dormitory contract
  • Utility bills (if applicable)
  • Thai bank statements showing local living expenses

Why Re-Entry Permits Matter

A re-entry permit demonstrates:

  • Awareness of immigration obligations
  • Intention to preserve student status
  • Planned, temporary travel

These factors quietly reinforce return intent.


Section 3: Academic Legitimacy in Thailand

Proving the Study Is Real, Active, and Time-Bound

Australian officers do not approve visas because a school exists.

They approve visas because the academic pathway makes sense.

Core Academic Documents

  • Official enrolment confirmation letter
  • Student ID card
  • Academic calendar / semester schedule
  • Attendance record (if available)
  • Transcript or progress report (for ongoing students)
  • Tuition payment receipts

Officer Assessment Focus

  • Is the student actively studying?
  • Is the programme credible?
  • Are there fixed semesters, exams, or attendance obligations?
  • Would absence disrupt academic progress?

A vague or generic school letter is not persuasive.


Academic Anchoring Logic

Student Return Logic Flow

Active Enrollment (Green)

Fixed Semester Dates (Green)

Exams / Attendance Obligations (Green)

Short, Defined Australia Trip (Green)

Mandatory Return to Thailand → APPROVAL ZONE

Risk Escalation (Amber → Red):
Online study • No exams scheduled • Long travel • Unclear return date


Section 4: Financial Reality for Students (Overview)

Australia does not expect students to show business-level balances.

They expect realistic, lifestyle-consistent funds.

This section will be covered in depth in Part 2, but the core principle is:

Believability beats balance size.


Section 4: Financial Capacity for Foreign Students

Why “Showing Money” Is Not the Same as Being Financially Credible

For foreign students applying in Thailand, Australia does not assess finances the same way it assesses employees or business owners.

From the perspective of the Department of Home Affairs, the financial question is not:

“How much money does this student have?”

It is:

“Is this student’s financial situation realistic, stable, and consistent with a student lifestyle in Thailand?”

Many student refusals occur despite healthy balances because the funds appear:

  • Artificial
  • Recently injected
  • Disconnected from the student’s actual living pattern
  • Inconsistent with tuition and daily expenses

Acceptable Financial Profiles for Students (2026 Reality)

Australia recognises that students typically fall into three funding categories:

  1. Self-funded students
  2. Parent-sponsored students
  3. Mixed funding (self + sponsor)

Each profile is assessed differently.


Mandatory Personal Financial Evidence (All Students)

Regardless of sponsorship, every student must show personal funds.

Required Documents

  • Personal bank statements (minimum 6 months)
  • Account must:
    • Be in the applicant’s name
    • Show regular activity
    • Reflect daily living expenses in Thailand
  • Statements must show:
    • Opening balance
    • Closing balance
    • Full transaction history

Officer Expectation

Personal funds demonstrate independence and daily financial functionality, not trip sponsorship.

A student with zero personal financial activity is immediately higher risk.


Student Financial Credibility Table

IndicatorOfficer Interpretation
Regular small expenses (food, transport, rent)POSITIVE
Monthly top-ups from familyACCEPTABLE
Dormant account suddenly activatedNEGATIVE
Large deposits before applicationHIGH RISK
Account unused for monthsVERY HIGH RISK

Agency Insight:
A student showing THB 20,000–40,000 in consistent personal use is often stronger than a student showing THB 300,000 deposited suddenly.


Section 5: Sponsor-Based Applications (Parents or Family)

Sponsorship is allowed, but it is one of the highest-scrutiny areas for student applicants.

Who Can Sponsor a Student?

Acceptable sponsors include:

  • Biological parents
  • Legal guardians
  • Immediate family members with clear financial authority

Friends, distant relatives, or unrelated sponsors increase refusal risk sharply.


Mandatory Sponsor Documents

Sponsor Identity & Relationship

  • Sponsor passport or national ID
  • Proof of relationship (birth certificate, family registry, affidavit)
  • Clear explanation of financial responsibility

Sponsor Financial Evidence

  • 6 months sponsor bank statements
  • Proof of income:
    • Salary slips
    • Employment letter
    • Business income records (if applicable)
  • Evidence sponsor can fund:
    • Student living costs
    • Australia trip
    • Ongoing studies

Sponsor Financial Strength Table

Sponsor ProfileRisk Level
Salaried parent with stable incomeLOW
Business owner with clear income recordsMEDIUM
Cash-based income, unclear sourceHIGH
Recently funded accountVERY HIGH
Multiple sponsored applicantsHIGH

Critical Rule:
Sponsors must fund both the trip and the student’s ongoing education — not just the holiday.


Section 6: Source of Funds

The #1 Refusal Trigger for Student Applications

Large or irregular deposits are the single most common reason student applications are refused.

How Officers Interpret Deposits

Deposit PatternOfficer Interpretation
Monthly family supportLOW RISK
Tuition-related transfersLOW RISK
Irregular lump sumsMEDIUM RISK
Recent large depositsHIGH RISK
Unexplained cash depositsREFUSAL LIKELY

Acceptable Sources of Funds (With Proof)

SourceRequired Evidence
Parental supportSponsor letter + bank trail
ScholarshipOfficial award letter
Savings from part-time work (legal)Payslips + visa permission
Tuition refundsSchool letter + receipt
Fixed depositsBank confirmation

Fatal Mistake

Labeling deposits as “family support” without showing:

  • Who sent the money
  • Why it was sent
  • Why it was sent at that time

Section 7: Financial Consistency

Where Student Applications Lose Credibility

Australia assesses logic, not volume.

Consistency Matrix (Students)

ScenarioRisk Level
Modest funds + clear sponsorLOW
Consistent monthly top-upsACCEPTABLE
High balance, no spending historyMEDIUM
Lifestyle exceeds visible fundsHIGH
No personal account activityVERY HIGH

Agency Reality:
A student living on THB 12,000/month but showing THB 400,000 unexplained looks less credible, not more.


Section 8: Australia Travel Cost Awareness (Students)

Australia does not require a fixed minimum balance.

Instead, officers assess whether the student understands real travel costs and has funds aligned with a short, realistic holiday.

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

Expense CategoryEstimated Range (THB)
Return flight Thailand–Australia25,000 – 40,000
Accommodation (5–7 nights, mid-range)10,000 – 18,000
Daily expenses (food & 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 a student budget is far stronger than showing excess funds with no explanation.


Section 9: Real Refusal Scenarios (Students in Thailand)

Refusal Scenario 1: “Funded but Financially Illogical”

  • Sponsor deposits THB 500,000 one month before lodgement
  • No prior support history
  • No explanation letter

Outcome:
Funds viewed as artificial → refusal.


Refusal Scenario 2: “Student on Paper Only”

  • Enrolment letter provided
  • No attendance proof
  • No academic calendar
  • Long Australia stay requested

Officer Conclusion:
Study not anchoring applicant → refusal.


Refusal Scenario 3: “Zero Personal Independence”

  • Sponsor funds everything
  • Student has no personal account activity
  • No daily expense evidence

Outcome:
Applicant viewed as financially non-functional → refusal.


Section 10: Financial Reality for Students Living in Thailand

Australian officers understand:

  • Students live modestly
  • Family support is common
  • Income is often limited or restricted
  • Tuition is a major financial obligation

Core Principle

Clarity beats cash.

A modest, well-explained student profile consistently outperforms a large, confusing one.


Section 10: Travel Plan Strategy for Students

Proving Temporary Intent Without Undermining Academic Return Logic

For student applicants, the travel plan is not a sightseeing brochure.

It is a risk-management document designed to prove:

  • The trip is short
  • The timing is academically sensible
  • The student must return to Thailand to continue studies

Australian officers already assume students want to travel.
What they need reassurance on is:

“Why does this student need to be back in Thailand immediately after this trip?”


Duration of Stay: Less Is Stronger for Students

Long trips weaken academic anchoring.

Recommended Stay Length (Students)

Student ProfileIdeal Stay
Full-time degree student (ongoing semester)5–10 days
Semester break travel7–14 days
Newly enrolled student5–7 days
Language / short course student5–7 days
Online / hybrid study5–7 days (high scrutiny)

Agency Insight:
Trips longer than 14 days invite questions about missed classes, exams, or attendance obligations.


Timing the Trip Around Academic Obligations

Your travel dates must clearly align with:

  • Semester breaks, or
  • Short gaps between classes, or
  • Periods with no exams or mandatory attendance

Required Supporting Evidence

  • Academic calendar
  • Letter from institution confirming:
    • No exams missed
    • Attendance not disrupted
    • Continued enrolment after return

High-Risk Pattern

  • Open-ended travel
  • Trip overlapping exams
  • No academic calendar attached

Section 11: Flights & Travel Dates

What Strengthens (and Weakens) a Student Application

Australia does not require paid tickets.

Best Practice

  • Return or onward flight reservation shown
  • Dates clearly fixed
  • Short stay confirmed
  • Departure date aligns with:
    • Classes
    • Semester start
    • Attendance obligations

Weak Patterns

PatternRisk Level
One-way ticketVERY HIGH
Long open-jaw itineraryHIGH
Flexible dates with no explanationMEDIUM–HIGH
Paid non-refundable ticketsUNNECESSARY RISK

Section 12: Accommodation Strategy for Students

Accommodation choices affect settlement-risk perception.

Accommodation Risk Comparison (Students)

Accommodation TypeRisk LevelNotes
Mid-range hotelLOWNeutral, clean profile
Budget hotel / hostelLOWAcceptable for students
Serviced apartmentLOW–MEDIUMAcceptable if short stay
Friend / relativeMEDIUMRelationship must be explained
Sponsor-funded stayHIGHMust show strong Thailand ties

High-Risk Pattern:
Student + free accommodation + long stay = settlement concern.


Section 13: Visiting Friends or Relatives in Australia

A High-Scrutiny Area for Students

Students often know people in Australia. This is allowed, but risky if handled poorly.

Officer Risk Logic

“Is this a holiday — or an informal pathway to stay longer?”

Required Documents (If Applicable)

  • Invitation letter
  • Explanation of relationship
  • Host’s legal status
  • Proof of host address
  • Written confirmation:
    • No work
    • No study
    • No sponsorship beyond accommodation (if applicable)

Critical Rule

Even if visiting someone in Australia, academic obligations in Thailand must dominate the narrative.

If Australia appears more relevant to the student’s future than Thailand, refusal risk rises sharply.


Section 14: The Student Cover Letter

The Most Important Document in the File

For students, the cover letter is non-negotiable.

It is the only place where you can:

  • Explain your study programme clearly
  • Anchor your return to Thailand
  • Justify travel timing
  • Neutralise flexibility risk

Australian officers from the Department of Home Affairs read this letter before interpreting your documents.


Recommended Cover Letter Structure (Students)

1. Introduction

  • Purpose of travel (tourism only)
  • Confirmation of lawful student status in Thailand

2. Academic Overview

  • Institution name
  • Programme
  • Start date and expected completion
  • Attendance and progression status

3. Travel Purpose

  • Short holiday only
  • No study or work in Australia
  • Fixed duration

4. Financial Capacity

  • Personal funds
  • Sponsor support (if applicable)
  • Reference to explained deposits

5. Compelling Reasons to Return

  • Semester dates
  • Exams / attendance
  • Tuition already paid
  • ED visa validity

6. Compliance Statement

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

Sample Risk-Aligned Cover Letter Logic (Students)

LOW-RISK PROFILE (Established Degree Student)
“I am currently enrolled full-time in a degree programme in Thailand and am required to attend classes and assessments as scheduled. This short visit to Australia has been planned during a period that does not conflict with my academic obligations, and I must return to Thailand to continue my studies.”

MEDIUM-RISK PROFILE (New Student)
“Although I am early in my programme, my studies represent my primary commitment in Thailand. I have structured this short trip carefully to ensure no disruption to my attendance, and my continued enrolment and visa status require my return as planned.”


Section 15: Online Submission Strategy (ImmiAccount)

Australia assesses presentation and clarity digitally.

Best Practices

  • Combine related documents into single PDFs
  • Use clear, descriptive file names
  • Upload only relevant documents
  • Avoid duplication

More documents do not equal a stronger application.
Clear documents do.


Recommended Upload Order (Students)

  1. Passport & travel history
  2. Thai visa & immigration status
  3. Academic documents
  4. Tuition & enrolment evidence
  5. Personal financial evidence
  6. Sponsor documents (if applicable)
  7. Travel plan & accommodation
  8. Invitation letters (if any)
  9. Cover letter

Section 16: Frequently Asked Questions (SEO Section)

Does being a student guarantee approval?
No. Approval depends on academic anchoring and return logic.

Can newly enrolled students apply?
Yes, but trips must be short and carefully timed.

How much money should a student show?
There is no fixed amount. Funds must be realistic and explained.
40,000–70,000 THB is a practical short-trip benchmark.

Is sponsorship allowed?
Yes, but sponsors must be credible and documented.

Is travel history required?
No. Strong Thai student compliance can compensate for limited travel.


Final Conclusion: Why Students Must Prove Academic Anchoring

An Australian Tourist Visa is not approved because a student is enrolled.

It is approved because the study programme forces the student to return to Thailand.

For foreign students applying in Thailand, success depends on clearly demonstrating:

  • Genuine, active enrolment
  • Fixed academic timelines
  • Lawful Thai immigration status
  • Realistic financial support
  • Short, well-timed travel
  • Clear intent to resume studies

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


Complete Document Checklist Table (Student Profile – Thailand-Based Applicants)

CategoryDocumentMandatory / ConditionalPurpose in AssessmentAgency Notes (2026 Logic)
IdentityCurrent passport (bio page)MandatoryEstablish identity & nationalityPassport validity should comfortably cover travel period
All passport pages (incl. blanks)MandatoryTravel & compliance historyBlanks show no hidden overstays
Previous passports (if any)ConditionalPast travel behaviourEspecially important if travel history exists
Australian Visa FormsOnline Subclass 600 applicationMandatoryFormal visa requestMust match all supporting documents
Visa declaration & consentMandatoryLegal complianceErrors here cause technical refusals
Thai Immigration StatusCurrent Non-Immigrant ED visaMandatoryLawful residence in ThailandCore anchoring document
Latest extension of stay stampMandatoryContinuity of stayShows long-term compliance
Thai entry stampMandatoryEntry legalityOften overlooked but critical
Re-entry permit (if held)ConditionalIntent to preserve ED statusStrong return-intent signal
TM.47 (90-day reports)Strongly RecommendedImmigration complianceMultiple reports = stability
Residence in ThailandLease / dormitory contractStrongly RecommendedPhysical anchoring to ThailandLong-term leases preferred
Residence certificateOptionalAddress verificationHelpful for students without leases
Utility billsOptionalLiving footprintNot required for dorm students
Academic StatusEnrolment confirmation letterMandatoryProof of active studyMust state full-time / ongoing
Student ID cardMandatoryStudent legitimacySupplementary, not standalone
Academic calendarMandatoryReturn logic anchorOne of the highest-weight documents
Attendance recordConditionalStudy participationVery strong if available
Transcript / progress reportConditionalAcademic continuityEspecially for long-term students
Tuition payment receiptsStrongly RecommendedFinancial + academic commitmentPaid tuition = strong return logic
Travel HistoryCopies of previous visasConditionalBehavioural complianceNot required if none exist
Entry/exit stampsConditionalOverstay checkThailand history often outweighs overseas travel
Personal FinancesPersonal bank statements (6 months)MandatoryDaily financial functionalityMust show real living expenses
Explanation letter (if needed)ConditionalClarify anomaliesPrevents misinterpretation
Sponsor (if applicable)Sponsor ID / passportConditionalSponsor identityParent/guardian only preferred
Proof of relationshipConditionalSponsorship legitimacyBirth certificate / registry
Sponsor bank statements (6 months)ConditionalFunding capabilityMust show sustainability
Sponsor income proofConditionalSource legitimacySalary slips / business proof
Sponsor support letterConditionalFunding clarityMust cover trip + studies
Source of FundsTransfer recordsConditionalTraceabilityShows money movement
Scholarship letterConditionalLegitimate fundingMust be official
Part-time income proof (if legal)ConditionalIncome explanationMust align with ED conditions
Travel PlanTravel itinerary (Australia)MandatoryTemporary intentShort, realistic, student-appropriate
Flight reservation (return)MandatoryExit intentionNo one-way tickets
Accommodation bookingMandatoryStay legitimacyHotels preferred
Accommodation in AustraliaHotel bookingStrongly RecommendedNeutral profileCleanest option
Host invitation (if staying with someone)ConditionalRelationship clarityRaises scrutiny
Host ID & visa statusConditionalHost legalityRequired if hosted
Travel InsuranceInsurance policyStrongly RecommendedRisk awarenessShows preparedness
Cover LetterStudent cover letterMandatoryNarrative controlOne of the most important documents
Additional Supporting DocsPrevious visas / approvalsOptionalCredibilityOnly if relevant
Assets (if any)OptionalExtra tiesNot required for students
Submission QualityProper file namingMandatory (Practical)Officer navigationImpacts interpretation
Logical upload orderMandatory (Practical)Decision clarityReduces refusal risk
Financial Reality CheckBudget alignmentMandatory (Logical)Cost awarenessMust align with 40,000–70,000 THB
Compliance StatementVisitor visa conditions acknowledgementMandatoryIntent confirmationOften embedded in cover letter

How 28 Company Immigration Consultants Supports Student Applications

At 28 Company Immigration Consultants, we do not treat student visitor visa applications as a checklist exercise. We treat them as a risk-management and narrative-engineering process.

Foreign students applying for an Australian Tourist Visa from Thailand face unique scrutiny: flexible schedules, third-country residence, sponsorship complexities, and heightened return-intent assessment. Our role is to control how these factors are interpreted by the Australian Department of Home Affairs.

We support student applicants by:

  • Analysing academic timelines to ensure travel dates strengthen—not weaken—return logic
  • Structuring financial evidence so student funds and sponsor support appear realistic, stable, and credible
  • Identifying and neutralising red-flag transactions before lodgement
  • Aligning travel plans with semester schedules and attendance obligations
  • Crafting student-specific cover letters that clearly anchor the applicant to Thailand
  • Organising ImmiAccount uploads to guide officer interpretation, not overwhelm it

We do not submit applications hoping for approval.
We design files so that approval becomes the logical outcome.

This is the methodology behind every Australian Tourist Visa (Subclass 600) student application prepared by 28 Company Immigration Consultants 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 ->