"In the land of the blind the one eyed man is king"
Really that easy?
Cannot find out from Thailand if my USA vaccine card will pass until it is submitted. must buy duplicative insurance policies acceptable to Thailand, and the rumor (reality?) of positive test fraud and mandatory hospitalization scheme. separate negative test ignored as not admissible.
I'm skeptical. just bought a ticket to Colombia, then after 30 days maybe Philippines if Thailand is still in half lockdown. Id like to come to Thailand, i love the men and the food. wanted to experience Songkran but....
The entry requirement is that you must have a "Thailand Pass". The requirements for a Thailand Pass are (you will need to verify these after 1 March)
- Evidence of vaccination status and vaccines received
- Evidence of an insurance policy should you need to be hospitalised for COVID while in Thailand for the cover of USD 20,000 (previously 50,000)
- Evidence that you have a 1-night Test & Go hotel booking for your first night in Thailand (same as proposed arrival date)
- Proposed date of arrival (a firm booking is assumed)
The requirements are the same if you fly into DMK if you're using one of the Bangkok airports; they don't just apply to BKK
As I understand the new requirement for the Day Five Test is that your Test & Go hotel will give you a Rapid Test Kit when you check out; you must self-administer the test on Day Five, take a photo of the result in the Test Kit, and end it to the hotel (that's my understanding; you would need to verify)
A copy of your paper US CDC vaccine card is acceptable for the Thailand Pass approval.
A US insurance policy is also acceptable, as long as it meets the current requirements. It does not have to be an insurance policy purchased from a Thai company. So there is no need to purchase a duplicate policy.
I recently returned home from a one month long trip to Thailand. The approval of my Thailand Pass using my US vaccine card and a US insurance policy took less than one week.
Last edited by daydreamer; February 27th, 2022 at 07:46. Reason: grammar
Blueskytoday (February 28th, 2022)
Thank you. I was under the impression that a Thai insurance scheme was required. This does sound much more reasonable that it was before.
Friends of mine used a policy bought through InsureMyTrip. No COVID policy sold by a Thai company will insure anyone older than their mid-seventies. One Thai site he looked at that would insure someone older was called "Mister Prakan" where the only policy on offer was for something like 2 million baht coverage, way more than the current requirement, and wanted to slug him 5,000 for a month's coverage. If you're old and decrepit Thailand doesn't welcome you any more
Thaiger provided details of a number of BKK -based companies that don't have an age limit. Go to their site. I made my choice a month or so back.
I regard Thaiger as the least reliable site for anything in Thailand; in particular they appear to have commercial relationships with any company they mention (also known as "kickbacks"). I certainly can't find anything on their site that you mention except the usual gang of Thai insurance companies, none of whom will touch anyone over 75. Every Thai insurance company I checked today was still offering policies for 50, 100 or even 200,000 USD cover, at appropriately inflated prices. None of them was offering a policy with the new 20,000 USD cover required