90-day reporting support
90-day report Phuket support for TM.47 planning, deadline control and cleaner recurring compliance.
Use this page when the real issue is not choosing a new visa route, but making sure your 90-day reporting in Phuket is filed on time, under the correct passport and address history, and without creating avoidable fines or repeat mistakes.
Direct answer
What is a 90-day report in Phuket?
A 90-day report is the required notification of residence for a foreigner who has stayed in Thailand for more than 90 consecutive days. It is not a visa extension and it does not give new permission to stay. It is a recurring reporting duty tied to your current stay, your address and your current passport or entry record.
The main mistake is treating 90-day reporting like a visa renewal. The TM.47 receipt itself even states that it is not an extension of stay. It is a separate compliance step that keeps your reporting history current.
Case pre-check
Before you start 90-Day Report Phuket, check the route, documents and deadline.
A short pre-check helps confirm whether 90-Day Report Phuket is the right page, what documents matter first and whether WhatsApp or the full form is the better next step.
Confirm 90-Day Report Phuket route fit
We first separate the right route from nearby options so the case does not start on the wrong page.
Check the document gaps
The first useful answer is often which files are missing, outdated or inconsistent for 90-Day Report Phuket.
Choose the safest next action
If timing is tight, the pre-check turns the page into a clear next step instead of a long reading session.
Useful comparisons before you enquire
90-day report explained
What is the 90-day report?
The 90-day report is the notification of residence for a foreigner who remains in Thailand longer than 90 days. It is a reporting duty to Immigration, not a new visa and not a renewal of permission to stay.
That distinction matters because many people confuse 90-day reporting with extension work. The official TM.47 form explicitly says that this is not an extension of stay. In practice, it is a recurring address and presence notification linked to your current lawful stay in Thailand.
The practical question in Phuket is usually not whether the rule exists, but whether the due date was calculated correctly, whether the report can still be filed online and whether travel, a new passport or a rejected online submission changed what has to happen next.
- The duty applies to foreigners staying in the Kingdom longer than 90 days under temporary permission.
- TM.47 is the standard reporting form used for the 90-day notification.
- Leaving Thailand before the next due date usually resets the next 90-day count from the most recent entry, not from the old report date.
Decision support
Who needs 90-day reporting and who may not be due yet?
The cleanest 90-day cases are the ones where the stay basis is already valid and the only real task is recurring reporting under the right due date and passport record.
Who needs it
- Foreigners who have been permitted to stay temporarily in Thailand and remain in the Kingdom for more than 90 consecutive days.
- Long-stay residents under retirement, family, education, work or other qualifying stay bases when the next 90-day deadline has arrived.
- Applicants whose last accepted report or latest entry date now triggers the next reporting cycle and who still remain in Thailand.
Who may not need it yet or may need a different fix
- If you left Thailand before the next due date, the next 90-day count usually starts again from your latest entry into the Kingdom.
- If the real problem is that your stay permission itself is expiring, the stronger next step is usually visa extension rather than a 90-day filing alone.
- If you changed passport, missed the online conditions or already fell out of routine compliance, the file may no longer be a simple click-through reporting case.
Required documents
Required documents for 90-day report Phuket cases
The exact handling can differ by channel, but official immigration guidance and TM.47 materials point to the same core reporting records again and again.
- Passport with the current permission-to-stay record and the key passport pages showing identity and latest entry details.
- TM.47 form or the equivalent online TM47 filing data used for notification of residence for more than 90 days.
- The previous 90-day receipt, if this is not the first report and you already have an earlier reporting record.
- Current Phuket address details and any supporting local records Immigration may need to match the reporting file.
- If filing by online system, the registered email account and the exact due-date window that qualifies for online submission.
Reporting process
Process steps
The safest 90-day workflow is to confirm the due date first and only then choose the right submission channel.
Confirm the real due date from the latest report or latest entry
Start by checking whether the next due date runs from your last accepted 90-day report or from your most recent entry into Thailand after travel. Many reporting mistakes begin with using the wrong base date.
Choose the correct filing channel
Thai immigration guidance commonly recognises in-person filing, a representative, registered mail and online TM47 reporting. Online reporting follows narrower timing conditions than general reporting, so the right channel depends on the calendar and the case history.
Prepare the TM.47 details and passport history
Use the current passport, current stay record, prior 90-day receipt if any and the correct Phuket address details. If the passport changed or the history is inconsistent, it is safer to review the file before submitting.
Keep the receipt and protect the next deadline
After approval, keep the receipt with the passport and calculate the next due date carefully. A successful report only helps if the next cycle is also tracked correctly.
Step-by-step process
How 90-Day Report Phuket support usually works
The process is designed to confirm route fit first, then tighten documents and next steps before timing turns into a problem.
Case review
Start by clarifying the real goal, the current status and whether this page is the right route before deeper work begins.
Document gap review
Check what is already available, what is missing and what needs to be cleaned up before the next step becomes urgent.
Submission or coordination
Move into the practical step itself, whether that means application support, reporting, local admin handling or business-side coordination.
Status follow-up
Confirm completion, keep records straight and make sure the current task does not create a later reporting or timing issue.
Timing
Deadlines and timing rules for 90 day report Thailand cases
Timing is the whole case in 90-day reporting because the duty itself is simple, but the window and channel rules are easy to misuse.
Online filing uses a stricter window
Official TM47 online guidance says online reporting must be submitted within 15 days before the next due date. The system also notes that review and approval can take about three days, so last-minute online filing is weak planning.
General reporting guidance is broader than online-only rules
Official local immigration guidance commonly explains that 90-day reporting can be made 15 days before or up to 7 days after the due date, but once the online window is missed you may need to report in person instead of expecting the internet system to save the case.
Travel changes the next count
If you leave Thailand before the next due date, the next 90-day count usually restarts from the most recent entry into the Kingdom. That is one of the most common reasons people miscalculate the next reporting date.
Common mistakes
Common 90-day reporting mistakes in Phuket
Most 90-day problems are not complex legal questions. They are deadline mistakes, passport-history mistakes or confusion between reporting and extension work.
Treating the 90-day report like a visa extension
A TM.47 report does not extend your stay. If the stay permission itself is expiring, you still need to solve the extension side separately.
Using the wrong due date after travel or a previous report
Many applicants report too early or too late because they count from the wrong date. The correct baseline is usually the last accepted report or the latest entry after leaving Thailand.
Relying on online filing after the valid window has passed
Official online guidance is narrower than the broader reporting rule. If the online window has closed or the online application is rejected, the safer path is usually in-person follow-through instead of waiting longer.
Forgetting to update reporting logic after a passport change
Official local immigration guidance notes that a new passport can break the normal online flow until the record is updated with Immigration. That means a routine online report can suddenly become an in-person admin task.
Trust and reassurance
Why local 90-day reporting support in Phuket helps
The 90-day report looks simple, but repeat compliance stays clean only when the due date, passport history and next admin step are all handled correctly.
Fewer repeat mistakes
Most 90-day reporting friction disappears when the real due date is recalculated correctly after each approval or re-entry.
Better filing choice
The safe path is not always online. Stronger support means using the right channel for the timing window and passport history you actually have.
Cleaner ongoing compliance
Phuket-based support is useful because 90-day reporting often sits next to visa extension, re-entry planning and other local admin steps that share the same stay history.
FAQ
90-day report Phuket FAQ
Direct answers for residents comparing 90 day report Phuket, 90 day report Thailand and 90 day reporting service support.
What is the 90-day report in Thailand?
It is the required notification of residence for a foreigner who has stayed in Thailand for more than 90 consecutive days. It is not a visa extension.
Who needs to file a 90-day report?
Foreigners who have been permitted to stay temporarily in Thailand and remain in the Kingdom for more than 90 consecutive days usually need to report under the TM.47 process.
Can I file the 90-day report online?
Yes, but official TM47 online guidance says the online filing must be submitted within 15 days before the due date and approval can take about three days. If that window is missed, in-person follow-through may be safer.
Does leaving Thailand reset the 90-day count?
In official local immigration guidance, leaving Thailand before the next due date usually means the next 90-day count starts again from the latest entry into the Kingdom.
Is the 90-day report the same as extending my visa?
No. The TM.47 receipt itself states that it is not an extension of stay. Reporting and extension are separate compliance tasks.
Request a case review
Tell us about your 90-day reporting case
Share your current stay basis, your latest entry date, the due date you are working from, whether you changed passport and whether you are trying to file online or in person. That is the fastest way to see what the correct next step is.
- Useful when 90-Day Report Phuket still needs a route-fit or process check.
- Useful when documents, timing or local follow-through still need review.
- Pairs a structured enquiry with a direct WhatsApp path for faster clarification.