Skip to main content
Justenda.

Find attorneys in Thailand.

Directory of attorneys and law firms in Thailand. Browse listings by practice area, city, and language to find the right firm for you.

Ananda Intellectual Property

VerifiedFree consultation · 30 min
BangkokEst. 196616–50 lawyers
English · French · Thai · German · Chinese (Mandarin)
Intellectual Property LawNotarial And Document Services

Top Tier Intellectual Property Law firm specialized in trademark, patent and copyright protection with high expertise in litigation and enforcement.

฿1,50010,000 / hour

View profile

lawyer

What kind of help do you need?

FRANK Legal & Tax

VerifiedFree consultation · 15 min
BangkokEst. 201216–50 lawyers
English · Thai · German
Corporate And Business LawTax LawReal Estate Law+13 more

International boutique law firm in Bangkok and Phuket, providing legal and tax services to investors, businesses, and private clients across Thailand

฿7,00012,000 / hour

View profile

Candiduck

VerifiedFree consultation · 30 min
BangkokEst. 2021Solo practitioner
Thai · English
Immigration LawCorporate And Business LawEmployment And Labor Law+1 more

CANDIDUCK YOUR CANDID CONSULTANT Suthawan Boonmak (Poon) Partner/Lawyer/Notary Public

Pricing on request

View profile

MSC International Law Office

VerifiedFree consultation · 30 min
BangkokEst. 201616–50 lawyers
English · Thai · Chinese (Mandarin) · Cantonese · Russian · German
Corporate And Business LawCivil Litigation And Dispute ResolutionBankruptcy And Insolvency+10 more

International Legal and Cross-Border Business Advisory in Thailand and Asia

Pricing on request

View profile

Blumenthal Richter Sumet & Schuler

VerifiedFree consultation · 1 hr
Bangkok51–200 lawyers
Chinese (Mandarin) · English · German · Thai · Japanese
Arbitration And MediationAviation LawBanking And Finance Law+19 more

Blumenthal Richter Sumet & Schuler is a leading law firm in Bangkok, Thailand. We provide legal services in all practice areas.

Pricing on request

View profile
F

Friedland Law

VerifiedFree consultation · 30 min
Bangkok
English · French · Thai
Immigration LawInternational Trade LawEstate Planning And Probate+2 more

International law firm specializing in immigration and cross-border transactions.

Pricing on request

View profile
H

Harvey Law Group Thailand

VerifiedFree consultation · 30 min
BangkokEst. 2013
English · French · Thai
Immigration Law

Bangkok-based legal team focused on residence visas in Thailand.

Pricing on request

View profile

Herrera and Partners Co Ltd

VerifiedConsultation from ฿10,000 · 1 hr
BangkokEst. 20196–15 lawyers
English · Thai · Spanish
Banking And Finance LawCivil Litigation And Dispute ResolutionCorporate And Business Law+7 more

Herrera and Partners, is a leading law firm in Bangkok, Thailand. With a dedicated team of skilled and international lawyers in Bangkok.

฿10,00020,000 / hour

View profile

GPS Legal

VerifiedConsultation from ฿3,125 · 30 min
BangkokEst. 201416–50 lawyers
English · Thai · Swedish
Corporate And Business LawReal Estate LawFamily Law+10 more

Bangkok-based law firm delivering strategic, business-focused legal advice with deep local expertise and a practical, solutions-oriented approach.

฿3,50015,000 / hour

View profile
BangkokEst. 20166–15 lawyers
Corporate And Business LawIntellectual Property LawImmigration Law+17 more

Experts assisting clients in conducting their businesses and protecting their rights and investments in Thailand across a wide range of legal matters.

Pricing on request

View profile
T
BangkokEst. 197516–50 lawyers
English · Thai · Vietnamese · Burmese · Chinese (Mandarin) · Russian

Thailand Bail is the oldest and largest bail, criminal law, and immigration law focused law firm in Thailand, trusted by the UK and Australia.

Pricing on request

View profile

Before you hire

Lawyers in Thailand: what to know before you hire

Who can represent you, how to check a licence, how to choose a firm, and what fees look like in 2026 — plain context before you shortlist anyone from the directory above.

Who can practise law in Thailand

Legal services in Thailand are regulated by the Lawyers Council of Thailand. Anyone practising as an attorney in Thailand needs a current bar card, even if they trained overseas and are licensed in another country. Bar admission is governed by the Lawyers Act B.E. 2528 (1985). Section 35 of the Act requires Thai nationality, so foreign lawyers cannot become full members of the Thai bar. They can work as foreign legal consultants on cross-border matters, but only a Thai-licensed lawyer can file in court, sign court documents, or appear before a Thai judge.

Most law firms in Thailand work in English. Many also handle Mandarin, Japanese, German, French, or Russian clients, especially in Bangkok and the major tourist regions. Outside the capital, English is still common at firms used to international work. If English is your working language, ask directly which lawyer will draft your documents day to day, not just the partner you meet first.

A typical first meeting takes 30 to 60 minutes. Some firms charge for it. Many do not, particularly when the next step is obvious and the firm wants to win the work. Bring written facts, copies of any contracts or letters, and your timeline. A clear brief saves billable time on both sides.

Areas of law that lawyers in Thailand handle

The work splits into a few broad areas. Most law firms in Thailand cover several at once. Smaller and solo firms often specialise in two or three.

Civil and commercial. Civil law covers private disputes between people or companies. Commercial law covers contracts, shareholder agreements, and the day-to-day running of a Thai company. If you are starting a business, see company registration in Thailand. Foreign-owned ventures often go through the Board of Investment (BOI). See BOI applications for the route a lawyer can manage end to end.

Real estate and property. Property transactions have specific rules for foreign buyers. Condominium ownership is permitted up to the 49% foreign quota in each building under the Condominium Act B.E. 2522 (1979); the quota is calculated on saleable floor area, not unit count. Direct land ownership by foreigners is generally prohibited. A property lawyer in Thailand can run the title check, review the sale and purchase agreement, verify the FET certificate for the inward currency transfer, and handle the transfer at the Department of Lands.

Family law. Family work includes marriage, prenuptial agreements, divorce, child custody, and inheritance. Both contested and uncontested divorces are recognised. Uncontested cases, known as administrative divorces, can be filed at the local district office (Amphoe) when both parties agree on the terms. Anything contested goes to family court. Cross-border family matters often need certified translations and consular legalisation.

Litigation and disputes. Civil litigation in Thailand starts at the Court of First Instance. Most disputes settle before judgment. Court-annexed mediation is built into the process and is often required before trial. For commercial disputes, arbitration is common when the contract includes an arbitration clause. Thailand has two main arbitration bodies: the Thai Arbitration Institute (TAI), which sits under the Office of the Judiciary, and the Thailand Arbitration Center (THAC). Both run e-arbitration systems.

Criminal defence. Criminal cases can move quickly. If you face anything more serious than a minor offence, you want a defence lawyer involved before your first police statement. Bail can be granted at the police station or in court, depending on the charge. Foreign defendants are entitled to a court-appointed interpreter, but most English-speaking defendants prefer private representation that can brief in their own language.

Immigration and work permits. Immigration lawyers in Thailand handle visas, work permits, permanent residency, and citizenship. As of 2026, common categories include the Non-O for retirement and family, the Non-B for business, the Long-Term Resident (LTR) visa managed through the BOI LTR portal, the SMART visa for skilled professionals in targeted industries, and the Destination Thailand Visa (DTV) introduced in July 2024 for remote workers and people enrolled in qualifying cultural or wellness programmes. Each route has its own document checklist and processing window. The Immigration Bureau handles in-country extensions and reporting.

Choosing a law firm in Thailand

A few practical checks save time and money before you commit to a firm.

Verify the bar card. Ask for the lawyer's bar number and year of admission to the Lawyers Council of Thailand. A licensed attorney will share both without hesitation. If a firm cannot or will not confirm the admission of the person who will sign your filings, walk away. This single check filters out a surprising number of unlicensed operators marketing themselves as lawyers in Thailand.

Practice area. A law firm in Thailand that handles construction disputes is not always the best fit for a family matter. Practice area focus is usually listed on the firm's profile. Ask directly if it is not clear, and ask how many similar matters the firm has handled in the last 12 months.

Language. If English is not your first language, confirm who will draft and review your documents day to day, not just who you meet first. The partner you meet may speak fluent English while the associate drafting your contract may not. Many firms in Bangkok also handle Chinese, Japanese, and German clients in their own language.

Fees in writing. Reputable law firms in Thailand send a written engagement letter that sets out the scope, the fee structure, and disbursements. Disbursements include court filing fees, official translations, and courier costs. If a firm avoids putting fees in writing, treat that as a signal. The Lawyers Council's code of conduct expects fee clarity.

Firm size. A small firm or solo practitioner is often ideal for a focused job: a property purchase, a will, a single contract review, an uncontested divorce. Larger firms are better suited to multi-jurisdictional cases, M&A work, or matters that need several specialists working in parallel. Justenda focuses on small and mid-size Thai firms, including solo attorneys, who often give a single matter more direct partner attention than the largest practices.

What legal services in Thailand typically cost

Fees vary by city, firm size, and the complexity of the work. As a rough 2026 guide:

  • Hourly rates at small and mid-size Thai law firms run from 2,500 to 7,500 THB. Large Bangkok corporate firms charge 8,000 to 15,000+ THB per hour, with senior partners higher still. Provincial firms and solo practitioners are often at the lower end.
  • Flat fees are common for predictable work: company registration, a standard will, a condo title transfer, an uncontested divorce, or a power of attorney. Most flat-fee matters land between 15,000 and 60,000 THB.
  • Retainers are normal for companies that need ongoing legal support. Monthly retainers run from 20,000 to 100,000+ THB depending on volume and seniority.

Disbursements are billed separately. Court filing fees in civil cases are calculated as a percentage of the amount claimed, up to a statutory cap; the current schedule is published by the Courts of Justice. Official translations into Thai are charged per page and add up quickly on document-heavy matters. Notarisation, consular legalisation, and Department of Lands transfer fees are paid on top of the lawyer's fee.

Before your first call

Have the basic facts written down: who is involved, what happened, what you want to achieve, and the timeline. Bring copies of any contracts, IDs, passports, or official letters. If there is a hard deadline (court date, visa expiry, transfer date), say so at the start.

A clear brief saves billable time and helps the firm decide quickly whether they are the right fit. It also makes the fee estimate more accurate, because the lawyer can see the scope rather than guess at it.

If your matter is not strictly legal (bookkeeping, an annual audit, a routine visa extension), a lawyer may not be the right starting point. Justenda also lists accountants, visa agencies, and tax advisors for the work that sits next to legal services in Thailand.

FAQ

Law firms in Thailand: common questions

Fees, licensing, languages, and court process — the questions people ask most before they contact a firm.

Do I need a Thai lawyer, or can I use a lawyer from my home country?

Only a Thai-licensed lawyer can file in Thai court, sign court documents, or represent you in front of a Thai judge. Foreign lawyers in Thailand can work as foreign legal consultants on cross-border or international matters, but they cannot fully practise Thai law. Under the Lawyers Act B.E. 2528 (1985), bar admission with the Lawyers Council of Thailand requires Thai nationality. Thai-licensed representation is required for court appearances, court filings, and documents signed before a Thai judge.

How can I check whether a lawyer in Thailand is properly licensed?

Every practising Thai lawyer holds a current bar card from the Lawyers Council of Thailand. Ask for the lawyer's bar number and the year of admission. Reputable law firms in Thailand will share both without hesitation. The Lawyers Council maintains the official roll of attorneys; bar status can be verified through the council if needed.

How much does a lawyer in Thailand cost in 2026?

Hourly rates typically run from 2,500 to 7,500 THB at small and mid-size Thai law firms, and from 8,000 to 15,000+ THB at large Bangkok corporate firms. Flat fees are common for predictable work: a standard will, a company registration, an uncontested divorce, or a condo title transfer usually lands between 15,000 and 60,000 THB. Court filing fees, official translations, and government disbursements are billed separately.

What languages do law firms in Thailand work in?

English is the second working language at most Thai law firms that serve foreign clients, especially in Bangkok, Phuket, Pattaya, Chiang Mai, Hua Hin, and Koh Samui. Many firms also handle Mandarin, Japanese, German, French, or Russian. Always confirm which lawyer will be drafting your documents day to day, not just the partner you meet first.

Can a foreigner sue or be sued in a Thai court?

Yes. Foreigners can bring civil claims in Thai courts and can be sued in Thailand for matters with a Thai nexus. Most civil cases start at the Court of First Instance. Court documents are filed in Thai; foreign-language evidence usually needs certified translation. Court-annexed mediation is a built-in stage and resolves a large share of civil claims before trial.

How long does a typical legal matter take in Thailand?

Routine work (company registration, will, condo transfer, uncontested divorce) finishes in days to a few weeks. Contested civil cases at the Court of First Instance often run 12 to 24 months. Appeals add 12 to 18 months. Arbitration through the Thailand Arbitration Center or the Thai Arbitration Institute is typically faster than litigation when both parties cooperate.

Do I need a lawyer to buy a condo in Thailand?

Strictly required: no. Strongly advisable: yes. A property lawyer in Thailand runs the title search, confirms the building is within the 49% foreign ownership quota set by the Condominium Act B.E. 2522, reviews the sale and purchase agreement, verifies the FET certificate for the inward fund transfer, and handles the transfer at the Department of Lands. The cost is small compared with the size of the transaction.

What is the difference between a Thai lawyer and a foreign legal consultant?

A Thai lawyer (ทนายความ) is admitted to the Lawyers Council of Thailand and can appear in Thai courts, draft Thai-law documents, and sign filings. A foreign legal consultant is not admitted to the Thai bar and advises only on foreign law or cross-border matters. Many international law firms in Thailand pair Thai-licensed attorneys with foreign consultants on the same matter.

Browse by city

Find a lawyer by city in Thailand

Browse law firms in Thailand by the city where you live or where the work needs to happen.