Thailand’s Electronic Transactions Development Agency (ETDA), which describes itself as a “co-creation regulator” working collaboratively with industry rather than imposing top-down rules, has unveiled its regulatory roadmap for digital platform businesses under the Royal Decree on Digital Platform Service Businesses B.E. 2565 (2022). The 2026 regulatory approach is guided by three core principles—“practicable, verifiable, shared responsibility”—aimed at elevating digital services to be safe, transparent, and fair. These principles inform ETDA’s 2026 priorities, which focus on three key dimensions: product and service standards on platforms, fair competition and fee transparency, and online fraud prevention. Product and Service Standards ETDA’s 2026 agenda addresses product and service standards across several platform categories: Online marketplace platforms. The Notification on Additional Measures for Online Marketplace Platforms under Section 18(2) came into force on December 31, 2025, designating 21 marketplace platforms that must verify products and merchants. Among other obligations, covered platforms must remove or suspend substandard products under the “notice and take down” principle. The ETDA has collaborated with the Food and Drug Administration and the Thai Industrial Standards Institute to develop inspection manuals and coordinate compliance procedures. Social commerce. The ETDA is preparing a new notification under Section 18(2) specifically targeting social commerce platforms with sales support functions, aiming to align regulation with evolving digital market conditions. Ride sharing. Since the postponement of the deadline to comply with the ETDA’s notification on ride-sharing platforms to March 31, 2026, the ETDA has supported drivers in registering with the Department of Land Transport through the Driver Verify registration system, which has already issued certifications to approximately 27,900 riders. The ETDA is also examining structural issues relating to appropriate insurance packages, motorcycle engine capacity expansion, and fair leasing fees and contract transfer costs in coordination with the Department of Land Transport, the Office of Insurance Commission,