2026 Getting a Yellow House Book

If you are a foreigner in Thailand, that built or bought a house, and want to get a yellow book, this is what you need to do.

As an American citizen, you normally apply for a Yellow House Book (เธ—เธฐเน€เธšเธตเธขเธ™เธšเน‰เธฒเธ™เน€เธฅเนˆเธกเน€เธซเธฅเธทเธญเธ‡ / Thor.Ror.13) in Thailand. This is the foreigner version of the Thai house registration book. It proves your registered residential address in Thailand, but it is not proof of ownership, citizenship, visa status, or permanent residency.

The application is handled at your local district office (Amphur / Khet office) where the property is located.

What documents Americans usually need in 2026

Requirements vary by district office, but these are the documents most commonly required across Thailand:

1. Your U.S. passport

Bring:

  • Original passport
  • Copies of:
    • photo page
    • current visa page
    • latest entry stamp
    • extension stamp (if applicable)

Most offices want a Non-Immigrant visa or long-stay status:

  • Retirement visa
  • Marriage visa
  • DTV
  • Business visa
  • Education visa
  • LTR visa
  • O-A / O-X
  • Some offices accept long-term visa exemption stays, but many do not.

2. Certified Thai translation of your passport

Many Amphur offices require:

  • Passport translated into Thai
  • Translation certified/legalized

Some offices require legalization through:

  • Thai Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA)
  • Sometimes embassy notarization first

This varies heavily by province. Rural offices can actually be stricter than Bangkok.


3. TM30 registration

Usually required:

  • TM30 receipt showing your current address
  • Sometimes printed from Immigration system

This helps prove you actually reside at the address.


4. Proof of legal residence at the property

If you OWN the house or condo:

Bring:

  • Chanote/title deed copy
  • Sale agreement (sometimes)
  • Existing blue house book

If your Thai spouse or partner owns it:

Bring:

  • Their Thai ID card
  • Blue house book
  • Consent from house owner

If renting:

Bring:

  • Lease agreement
  • Landlord ID copy
  • Blue house book copy
  • Landlord present (often required)

5. Existing Blue House Book (Tabien Baan)

The property already has a blue book attached to the address.

You usually need:

  • Original blue book
  • Signed copies

The โ€œhouse masterโ€ (เน€เธˆเน‰เธฒเธšเน‰เธฒเธ™) normally must attend in person.


6. Thai witnesses

Many Amphur offices require:

  • 1โ€“2 Thai witnesses
  • Usually neighbors or local residents
  • Must carry Thai ID cards

Some offices waive this; others insist on it.


7. Marriage certificate (if married to Thai)

If applying through a Thai spouse:

  • Original marriage certificate
  • Kor Ror 2 / Kor Ror 3 documents
  • Thai translation if married overseas

If married in the U.S.:

  • legalized U.S. marriage certificate
  • Thai translation
  • MFA legalization

8. Photos

Bring:

  • 2โ€“4 passport photos
  • Some offices take photos digitally now

9. Application forms

The Amphur office provides:

  • Residence registration forms
  • House registration forms

Usually completed in Thai.


Important practical reality in Thailand

Thailand does not have one universal national checklist for Yellow Books.

Every district office can impose additional requirements such as:

  • embassy certification
  • police verification
  • neighborhood witness statements
  • minimum visa duration
  • minimum stay history
  • immigration letters

Some offices issue the book same day.
Others can take several weeks.


Typical process step-by-step

  1. Gather documents
  2. Translate/legalize documents if required
  3. Go to local Amphur office with:
    • owner/house master
    • witnesses
  4. Submit application
  5. Officer reviews documents
  6. Your name is entered into yellow book
  7. You receive:
    • Yellow House Book
    • often a Thai foreigner ID number

Some offices can also issue the pink Thai foreigner ID card at the same time.


Benefits of having a Yellow House Book

It can make many things easier:

  • Thai driverโ€™s license
  • vehicle registration
  • bank accounts
  • utilities
  • visa renewals
  • proof of address
  • tax matters
  • easier dealings with government offices

It is especially useful for long-term residents.


What it does NOT do

A Yellow Book does NOT:

  • give residency rights
  • replace a visa
  • give citizenship
  • prove ownership
  • allow voting
  • create immigration status

Documents checklist (simple version)

Bring originals + copies of:

  • Passport
  • Visa pages
  • Entry stamps
  • TM30
  • Thai translation of passport
  • Title deed or lease
  • Blue house book
  • House owner Thai ID
  • Marriage certificate (if applicable)
  • Passport photos
  • Witness Thai IDs

Best advice for success in Thailand

Before going:

  1. Call the exact Amphur office first
  2. Ask for THEIR required document list
  3. Ask specifically:
    • โ€œDo you require MFA legalization?โ€
    • โ€œDo you require witnesses?โ€
    • โ€œDo you require embassy certification?โ€
    • โ€œCan DTV holders apply?โ€
    • โ€œCan renters apply?โ€

Requirements in places like Bangkok, Pattaya, Phuket, Chiang Mai, and rural Isaan can differ substantially.

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