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Litigation Lawyers in Thailand.

Representation for civil claims, contract disputes, debt recovery, and courtroom litigation strategy.

6 firms on Justenda.

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

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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

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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

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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

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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

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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

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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

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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

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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

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Guide

Working with a litigation lawyer in Thailand

A plain guide to how disputes are resolved in Thailand: the court system, when a case goes to arbitration instead, how long things take, what they cost, and the rules that decide whether a foreign judgment or award can be enforced here.

How the Thai court system works

Civil disputes in Thailand are governed by the Civil Procedure Code and start at a Court of First Instance. A losing party can appeal to the Court of Appeal and then, on a point of law, to the Supreme Court (the Dika Court). The Courts of Justice run this system, and court-annexed mediation is built in, settling a large share of cases before they reach trial.

Some disputes go to a specialised central court instead. The Intellectual Property and International Trade Court, the Labour Court, the Tax Court, and the Bankruptcy Court all sit in Bangkok and hear their subjects from across the country. Which court a case belongs in is one of the first things a litigation lawyer settles.

Only a Thai-licensed lawyer can file and argue a case in a Thai court. For background on how Thai firms are organised, see the main lawyers in Thailand guide.

What litigation lawyers in Thailand handle

Most disputes fall into a few recurring types, each with its own court or procedure.

Contract and commercial. Breach of contract, debt recovery, and shareholder fights are the bulk of the work; see contract disputes.

Property and construction. Boundary, title, lease, and building-defect claims run as property disputes.

Employment. Dismissal and severance claims go to the Labour Court; see employment and labour.

Debt and insolvency. Recovery, restructuring, and bankruptcy and insolvency run through the Bankruptcy Court.

Tax and IP. Tax disputes and intellectual property claims go to their specialised courts.

Injury and family. Personal injury and accident claims, and contested divorce and other family matters, round out the mix.

Litigation or arbitration?

Court litigation is public, follows the Civil Procedure Code, and can run through three levels of court. Arbitration is private, often faster for commercial matters, and binding. Where a contract contains an arbitration clause, the dispute usually has to go to arbitration rather than to court, so the clause is one of the first things a lawyer checks.

Thailand has two main arbitration bodies: the Thai Arbitration Institute, which sits under the Office of the Judiciary, and the Thailand Arbitration Center. Both run e-arbitration systems, and arbitration is governed by the Arbitration Act B.E. 2545 (2002). A litigation lawyer represents a client in arbitration or mediation as well as in court.

Mediation, timelines, and court fees

Most disputes do not reach a full trial. Court-annexed mediation, and private settlement, resolve a large share once the documents and the amount in dispute are clear. When a case does run its course, a contested matter at the Court of First Instance often takes 12 to 24 months, and an appeal adds more.

Court filing fees are charged as a percentage of the amount claimed, up to a statutory cap, and are paid when the claim is filed. Timing also matters in another way: limitation periods under the Civil and Commercial Code can bar a claim that is left too late. The general period is ten years, with shorter periods for certain claims, so a delayed dispute is worth checking early.

Enforcing a judgment or award

Winning is not the end; collecting is a separate step. A Thai court judgment is enforced through the Legal Execution Department, which can seize and auction a debtor's assets to satisfy the judgment.

For foreign parties, the key rule is the difference between a judgment and an award. A foreign court judgment is not directly enforceable in Thailand: to rely on it, a party has to bring a fresh suit in a Thai court and prove the claim again, with the foreign judgment as evidence only. A foreign arbitral award is different. Thailand is a party to the New York Convention, so foreign awards are recognised and enforced under the Arbitration Act B.E. 2545 (2002), and a Thai court can refuse only on narrow grounds.

That gap is why international contracts with a Thai party so often choose arbitration: the result is far easier to enforce here.

Costs and what to send before the call

Contested litigation is usually billed hourly; reported rates at small and mid-size Thai firms run from about 2,500 to 7,500 THB an hour, higher at large Bangkok firms, and some firms add a success element on recovery matters. Court filing fees, certified translations, and expert reports are charged separately.

Send the contract or key documents, the relevant correspondence, a timeline of what happened, the amount in dispute, and any deadline or limitation concern. A clear brief sharpens the fee estimate and lets the firm say early whether the case is better settled, arbitrated, or fought. When a dispute also touches property, tax, or employment, the wider directory of Thai law firms covers those areas alongside.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions about litigation lawyers and attorneys in Thailand

Plain answers to the questions people send us most about Thai courts, litigation versus arbitration, timelines and cost, and enforcing a judgment or award.

How does a civil case work in Thailand?

Civil disputes are governed by the Civil Procedure Code and start at a Court of First Instance. A losing party can appeal to the Court of Appeal and then, on a point of law, to the Supreme Court (the Dika Court). Court-annexed mediation is built into the process and settles a large share of cases before trial. Documents are filed in Thai, and foreign-language evidence usually needs a certified translation.

Should I choose litigation or arbitration?

It often depends on the contract. Where an agreement contains an arbitration clause, the dispute usually has to go to arbitration rather than court. Arbitration is private and can be faster for commercial matters; litigation is public and runs through the appeal levels. A litigation lawyer reads the contract, confirms which forum applies, and represents the client in either. Thailand's two main bodies are the Thai Arbitration Institute and the Thailand Arbitration Center.

How long does a lawsuit take in Thailand?

A contested civil case at the Court of First Instance often runs 12 to 24 months, and an appeal adds more, so a matter that goes the distance can take two to three years. Mediation or a negotiated settlement is usually much faster. The timeline depends on the complexity of the case, the number of witnesses, and the court's workload.

How much are court fees in Thailand?

Court filing fees in civil cases are charged as a percentage of the amount claimed, up to a statutory cap, and are paid when the claim is filed. The lawyer's fee is separate and is usually billed hourly for contested work. Certified translations, expert reports, and enforcement costs are billed on top. The current fee schedule is published by the Courts of Justice.

Can a foreigner sue or be sued in Thailand?

Yes. Foreigners can bring civil claims in Thai courts and can be sued here on matters with a Thai connection. Only a Thai-licensed lawyer can file and argue the case in court, and proceedings run in Thai, so foreign-language documents need certified translation. A foreign party usually instructs a Thai litigation lawyer to run the case and keep them updated in their own language.

Is a foreign court judgment enforceable in Thailand?

Not directly. Thailand does not enforce foreign court judgments automatically. To rely on one, a party has to bring a fresh lawsuit in a Thai court and prove the claim again under Thai law; the foreign judgment can be used as evidence but is not binding on the Thai court. This is one of the main reasons international contracts with a Thai party often choose arbitration instead.

Is a foreign arbitration award enforceable in Thailand?

Generally, yes. Thailand is a party to the New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, and enforcement runs through the Arbitration Act B.E. 2545 (2002). A party applies to a Thai court to recognise and enforce the award, and the court can refuse only on the narrow grounds the Convention allows, such as a breach of public policy. This makes arbitration the more reliable route for cross-border commercial disputes.

How much does a litigation lawyer in Thailand cost?

Contested litigation is usually billed hourly; reported rates at small and mid-size Thai firms run from about 2,500 to 7,500 THB an hour, higher at large Bangkok firms. Some firms add a success element on recovery matters. Court filing fees, certified translations, and expert reports are charged separately. A clear brief at the first meeting makes the estimate more accurate.