Skip to content
Richard Knight, ACSI

Tax · 2026-03-22 · 9 min

Double taxation between the UK and Thailand, what the treaty actually does

The UK / Thailand double tax agreement, the credit mechanism, and the edge cases that catch retirees out.

Richard
Richard Knight

Richard Knight, ACSI

General information, not personal financial advice.

The United Kingdom and Thailand signed a double tax agreement in 1981. It remains in force and it is the document that governs which country has primary taxing rights when income crosses between the two jurisdictions. For British retirees in Thailand drawing pension income it is one of the most consequential documents in their financial life, and most have never read it.

The treaty does not mean you pay no tax. It means you do not pay full tax in both countries on the same income. The mechanism is a credit: where both countries have a claim on the same income, the tax paid in one jurisdiction is credited against the liability in the other. The effect is that you pay roughly the higher of the two rates, not the sum of both. What it does not do is remove the obligation to file, or guarantee an outcome you assumed without checking the specifics.

How the credit mechanism works

Suppose you draw pension income from a UK scheme and UK tax is deducted at source. You are a Thai tax resident, meaning 180 days or more in Thailand in that calendar year, and you remit that income to Thailand. Under the 2024 reinterpretation of the Revenue Code, that remitted income is potentially assessable for Thai personal income tax.

The credit allows you to set the UK tax already paid against the Thai liability. If the UK deducted more than Thailand would have levied, the Thai liability is extinguished. If Thailand’s effective rate on that income is higher, you pay the difference. The difficulty is that the credit does not apply itself. You need to file a Thai return, declare the income, calculate the credit, and produce the documentation the Revenue Department requires. Relying on the treaty without filing is not a strategy; it is an oversight.

Which categories of income the treaty covers

The treaty distinguishes between categories of income and assigns primary taxing rights differently to each. State pension income sits in a different article from occupational pension income. Dividends, interest, rental income, and capital gains each have their own article and their own allocation of rights.

So "the treaty" is not a single blanket protection. A retiree drawing a government service pension may find the treaty gives the UK exclusive taxing rights over that income. One drawing from a private company pension or a SIPP is in a different position. The right answer for each type of income requires reading the relevant article, not assuming the outcome from the general principle.

The 2024 remittance change and what it adds

Before 2024 the treaty’s practical effect was muted for many British retirees, because the prior-year convention meant income earned earlier and remitted later was not assessable. The Revenue Department’s reinterpretation closed that for the 2024 tax year onwards.

The treaty did not change. The Thai domestic rule that determines what income is in scope changed. The consequence is that the credit mechanism is now more actively relevant. Income that was, in practice, escaping Thai assessment through the timing of remittances now needs to go through the treaty-credit calculation properly. That is a reason to file correctly and to know which category of UK income you draw, not a reason for alarm.

Residency in the treaty sense versus the domestic sense

There is a difference between Thai tax residency under Thai domestic law and residence in the treaty sense. The treaty has its own tie-breaker rules for cases where a person could be resident in both countries at once: habitual abode, centre of vital interests, nationality, and finally mutual agreement between the two revenue authorities.

Most British retirees settled in Thailand long term are clearly resident only in Thailand for treaty purposes. The complications arise for people who split the year significantly between the two countries or keep a UK home. Where presence in both countries is extended in a long tax year, both domestic residencies can technically apply, and that is where the treaty’s tie-breaker provisions earn their place.

The documentation the Revenue Department asks for

When a foreign resident claims treaty relief, the Revenue Department expects documentary evidence that tax was actually paid in the other jurisdiction. In practice that means a UK tax certificate, such as a P60 or a certificate of tax deducted at source, with an official translation available on request.

Gathering this in advance of filing, rather than retrospectively, is much simpler. HMRC will issue a certificate of UK tax paid on request, but the process takes time. If you plan to file a Thai return claiming treaty credit, begin assembling the UK evidence before the Thai filing deadline arrives.

What the treaty does not cover

The treaty does not cover Thai inheritance tax, because Thailand does not have a general inheritance tax in the UK form. It does not override UK domicile rules for UK inheritance tax. A British national who dies UK-domiciled, however long they lived in Thailand, faces UK inheritance tax on their worldwide estate, and the treaty’s relief for income and gains does not extend to that.

It also does not help US persons. Americans in Thailand carry their own filing obligations under US law, and there is no US-Thailand income tax treaty. That is a separate analysis.

General information, not advice

This article describes the framework of the UK-Thailand double tax agreement and the credit mechanism. It is general information and not personalised tax advice. Treaty interpretation depends on the specific facts of each person’s income, residency position, and filing history.

To work through how the treaty applies to your own pension income and remittance pattern, the Thai tax planning service at /en/services/thai-tax-planning describes the structured review the practice carries out, and the guide at /en/guides/2026-thai-tax-pension-playbook covers the interaction with UK pension income in more depth. For a 30-minute conversation about your situation, book at /en/book.

Senior Consultant · Business Class Asia

Richard Knight, ACSI

  • Associate Member, Chartered Institute for Securities & Investment (CISI)
  • CISI Certificate in Financial Planning and Investments
  • Senior Consultant, Business Class Asia
  • Vice Chair, British Chamber of Commerce Thailand (Hua Hin)
About Richard →

The Expat Finance Brief

Independent analysis, every fortnight.

Written for expats in Thailand. No noise, nothing sold to you. Unsubscribe anytime.

Begin a conversation.

Thirty minutes, by Zoom or in person at the Bangkok, Hua Hin or Pattaya office. Free, and without obligation. You leave with a clearer view of what is in front of you, whether or not the work proceeds.

Book a meeting

Choose a time that suits you.

Thirty minutes with Richard Knight, ACSI directly. By video, phone, or in person. No obligation.

Request a callback

I'll call you on your schedule.

Leave your details and the window that suits you. No preparation needed, and nothing is sold on the call.

How can I help?

Reply within one business day.

A retired expat reading the playbook in Thailand

Free guide

The 2026 expat in Thailand tax and pension playbook.

Richard Knight · richardknightuk.com

Free · About 12 minutes to read

The 2026 expat in Thailand tax and pension playbook.

The 2024 Thai remittance rules changed how pension income is taxed. What that means for you, what a QROPS really does, and the moves that compound over the next five years.

The guide opens on this page. No follow-up unless you ask.