Prior to the dissolution of the House of Representatives, Thailand’s cabinet approved a draft amendment to the Administrative Procedure Act, following review by the Council of State. If enacted, this reform will fundamentally change how state agencies process business applications and appeals by imposing enforceable timelines and legal consequences for inaction. The draft directly targets a longstanding commercial frustration: applications and appeals that vanish into administrative silence, stalling investment and foreclosing judicial review across sectors ranging from real estate and manufacturing to healthcare and finance.
The “Silence Means Yes” Rule for Applications
At the core of the reform is a new automatic “approval by implication” for applications subject to statutory processing deadlines. If an official fails to notify an applicant of a decision within the legally prescribed period, the application will be deemed approved as a matter of law. This presumption shifts the costs of delay from businesses to the bureaucracy and gives applicants a definitive legal position once time expires.
The mechanism applies to routine licensing and registration matters governed by explicit consideration periods in existing statutes or ministerial regulations. Officials may extend the decision period by up to thirty days, but only if they notify the applicant before the original deadline and substantiate that the delay arises from genuinely exceptional circumstances beyond their control.
Certain sensitive applications are expressly excluded from automatic approval, including those that may significantly affect national security or defense, public safety and health, the environment or natural resources, or national cultural heritage.
Once the deadline passes without a decision, businesses can proceed with deployment of capital and operations—construction, hiring, procurement, and market entry—without waiting for formal permission that may never arrive. For time-sensitive projects, this materially reduces regulatory timing risk.
The “Deemed Rejection” Rule for Appeals
The draft introduces a parallel “deemed rejection” mechanism for administrative appeals. Under current practice, applicants cannot seek relief in the Administrative Court until the internal appeal concludes, which often traps businesses in a procedural holding pattern. The draft breaks this deadlock.
If the appeal authority does not decide within specified timeframes—15 days for the issuing official to review and forward the appeal and 30 days for the appeal authority to decide, with one 30-day extension permitted upon notice—the appeal is deemed rejected. This deemed rejection provides immediate access to the Administrative Court without awaiting a formal denial that may never issue.
Mandatory Explanations for “Silent” Rejections
To prevent “black box” denials, the draft entitles appellants who receive a deemed rejection to demand written reasons within the litigation period. The agency must respond within thirty days, setting out the facts, legal grounds, and any discretionary considerations underpinning the outcome. The statute of limitations for filing suit is tolled during this thirty-day explanation window and resumes upon receipt of the reasons. This converts silence into a record, giving litigants a concrete basis to challenge either the underlying order or the process itself.
Digital-First Processes and the End of Redundant Documentation
The draft advances a digital-first administrative state with two key provisions:
Practical Implications for Businesses
Taken together, these provisions reorient Thai administrative practice from an authority-centric system to one grounded in service, predictability, and accountability. They attach legal consequences to official inaction, create reliable planning horizons for investment, and remove administrative silence as a barrier to court access.
Companies should prepare to operationalize the reforms by:
The scope of automatic approval will depend on implementing ministerial regulations that will specify which licenses and permits qualify for automatic approval and which are excluded on public-interest grounds. Businesses should also pay attention to these instruments in order to align transaction timelines and regulatory strategies with the new framework.
Legislative Status and Outlook
Because the House of Representatives has been dissolved, the draft Act on Administrative Procedure will not proceed to parliamentary debate at this time. The draft will either be retained by the secretariat of the cabinet or be returned to the originating agency pending policy direction from the incoming government.
Given its procedural focus and nonpartisan character, the draft is a strong candidate for revival in the next legislative agenda. Its emphasis on administrative efficiency, transparency, and legal certainty aligns with broad public and commercial interests, making eventual passage reasonably likely once legislative priorities are reset.