On March 30, 2026, Thailand’s Customs Department announced a strategy to raise import duties on a broad range of consumer goods—including plastic items and electronics accessories—to their maximum statutory ceilings, which often sit at 30% or 40%. Many of these goods currently benefit from promotional or incentive rates as low as 5%. For importers, e-commerce platforms, and logistics providers, this development demands immediate attention.
While these increases generally require cabinet approval, they do not require full parliamentary amendment of the Customs Tariff Decree B.E. 2530, as the Customs director-general and the finance minister hold delegated authority to adjust rates within existing statutory bounds. Businesses should not assume that the legislative process will provide significant lead time before higher rates take effect.
Death of the De Minimis: Abolishing the THB 1,500 Loophole
This “ceiling-rate” policy, which is designed to equalize the landed cost of foreign goods with the domestic production costs of Thai manufacturers, builds on a sweeping set of customs reforms that have already begun to reshape Thailand’s trade environment.
The foundation of this new regime was laid on January 1, 2026, when Thailand formally abolished the longstanding THB 1,500 duty exemption for small imported parcels under Customs Notification No. 219/2568. Every imported item is now subject to VAT and applicable import duties for its declared value, regardless of parcel size or transaction amount. By narrowing the scope of exemptions previously granted to low-value goods under the Customs Tariff Decree B.E. 2530, the government has made clear that the era of tax-free cross-border micro-imports is over.
Three-Phased Strategy and Legal Modernization
The March 30 announcement is the second phase of a three-part regulatory roadmap:
E-commerce Platform Tax and Duty Compliance Requirements
Perhaps the most innovative aspect of this regime is the integration of e-commerce platforms into the tax collection chain. Platforms operating in or serving the Thai market are now increasingly required to integrate tax and duty calculations into their digital checkouts, ensure that parcel labels reflect actual transaction prices rather than underdeclared values, and share data directly with the Customs Department to flag systemic tax evasion.
For legal departments and compliance officers, this shifts the burden of duty accuracy away from the individual consumer and toward the platform and the merchant of record.
Preparing for a High-Duty Environment
Beyond the projected revenue of THB 300 million per month from these measures, the broader objective is a fundamental rebalancing of the Thai retail market in response to a sharp influx of low-cost imports undercutting the goods of domestic SMEs. Accordingly, Thailand’s customs regime is shifting from one oriented around trade facilitation to one of rigorous fiscal protectionism.
Relying on low-value exemptions is no longer a viable business model. As the Customs Department moves toward a more digitalized and high-tariff environment, businesses must audit their supply chains, ensure rigorous HS code classification, adopt transparent pricing strategies, and take a proactive approach to the developing statutory framework of the Customs Tariff Decree.