Thailand
Playground no more: Thais sick of badly behaved tourists hail stricter visas
Government cites crime and drunken antics of foreigners as it shortens their stays – with ordinary Thais welcoming the crackdown
Natasha May
Tue 2 Jun 2026 02.05 BST
It’s late afternoon at Bangkok’s Khaosan road, the city’s backpacker strip. Bar staff are calling after passersby, enticing them inside with drinks promotions. The smell of cannabis, widely sold in the city, wafts into the street, where vendors sell anything from fake tattoos, flip-flops and icy fruit shakes.
This street, and its famously noisy nightlife, has attracted visitors from around the world for decades. But increasingly, some in Thailand are growing tired of the country’s party-loving visitors.
Some assume Thailand can be treated “as a playground,” says Minnie, who runs Thai’d Up with Minnie, a social media channel teaching visitors about the Thai language and culture.
Last month, Thailand, famed for its hospitality, drew a line in the sand. The government announced it would tighten visa rules, cutting the length of visa-free stays for visitors from more than 90 countries from 60 days, replacing this with a new allowance of up to 30 days in most cases. It is unclear when the new rules will come into effect.
The changes have been welcomed by many in Thailand, fed up by a constant stream of news about misbehaving tourists, including reports of visitors refusing to pay restaurant bills, viral clips of drinkers brawling in the streets and foreign couples deported for reportedly having sex in a tuktuk.
Videos have also shown abusive treatment of locals; in one case, a foreign visitor apparently blew mucus from his nose at a street food vendor.
Tourists visit restaurants along Bangkok’s Khaosan Road. Photograph: Steve Vidler/Alamy
There’s “a growing response of unhappy Thais who are really starting to see now that we don’t want this kind of behaviour,” says Minnie, who asked not to give her second name. “[It] hurts the people who do live here.”
The anger among local people has been picked up on by the government, who have issued their own warnings against badly behaved tourists.
“Foreigners who enter Thailand cannot act like influential figures, do illegal things, bully the people of the host country, or behave in ways that go against Thailand’s morals, culture or traditions,” said Arsit Sampantharat, permanent secretary of the interior ministry earlier this month in comments reported by local outlet The Nation.
Despite these strong words the government is trying to strike a balance between public order and the economy, which relies heavily on foreign visitors. The tourism sector contributes up to 20% of GDP, and drives employment across the economy – from Thailand’s luxury hotels and spas to its food sellers and taxi drivers.
‘A loophole for people without good intentions’
It is not only reports of unruly behaviour that is troubling Thailand, but also concerns that foreign visitors are running businesses illegally, or exploiting visa rules to use the country as a base for more serious transnational crimes.
Above: People gather around an artificial pond at Wat Arun Buddhist temple.
Right: Foreign tourists pose for a photograph with the Wat Arun temple in the background. Photograph: Lillian Suwanrumpha/AFP/Getty Images
South-east Asia has become a hub for criminal scam compounds over recent years, with syndicates often transporting human trafficking victims through Thailand into neighbouring countries such as Myanmar, to work in scam facilities. When announcing the visa changes, officials referred to “national security” without specifying further details.
The current system created “a loophole for people without good intentions to take advantage,” said Rachada Dhnadirek, a Thai government spokesperson.
Authorities have launched crackdowns on foreigners setting up businesses or illegally owning land in tourist areas without the correct papers, but opposition politicians in Thailand have called for further immigration crackdowns, including tighter screening of people who hold long-term visas and elite residency programs.
“What we worry [about] is not … the real tourists but the people who enter with the tourist visa but stay here, and make a business here illegally,” says Chutima Jeeramongkol, president of the Pattaya Business and Tourism Association.
Chutima says the tightening of visa laws will allow for better screening of tourists, and that the impact will be minimal as most tourists typically do not stay for an extended period.
Outside Wat Arun, one of Bangkok’s most famous temples, sunbaked tuktuks are lined up waiting for customers, while shop owners display glittering silk dresses, ready to hire for temple photoshoots.
Tourists dressed in traditional Thai attire pose for souvenir photographs at the Wat Arun temple. Photograph: Rungroj Yongrit/EPA
Most tourists passing through say the immigration changes would not have affected their holiday plans. Juan Luna is visiting Thailand with his husband and two children. Despite only being here for four days, he says the new rules would still give plenty of time to travel in Thailand, if they had wanted to explore further.
Some had planned to stay longer, however. Rudolf Guzsaly, who is visiting from Hungary, says he had hoped to stay for at least six weeks. “I understand, because there are many troubles with the tourists now,” he says, but he’s not convinced the changes will stamp out bad behaviour.
“Most of the tourists just come for two weeks so if they want to make trouble, they make trouble in two weeks,” says Guzsaly.
Many, like Minnie, hope the visa changes will help protect the things that make Thailand special.
In Thailand, people often try to be considerate of others and not impose – a concept known as being “greng jai”, she explains, adding that this can lead people to be passive in the face of tourists behaving badly.
Attitudes are now changing though. “I think Thailand now is trying really hard to preserve its culture.”
Additional reporting by Rebecca Ratcliffe