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Legal Disclaimer

This information is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Thai laws are subject to change and may be interpreted differently by authorities. For specific legal situations, consult a qualified Thai attorney. In emergencies, call Tourist Police 1155 (24/7, English).

Accommodation Laws in Cambodia

Where you stay in Cambodia has legal implications beyond just paying rent. Hosts and landlords have reporting obligations, short-term rentals operate in a legal gray area, and your TM30 registration status can affect visa extensions. Understanding these rules prevents headaches at immigration.

TM30 — The Hidden Requirement

Every host, landlord, and property owner who accommodates a foreigner must report the stay to immigration within 24 hours. Hotels do this automatically. Private landlords often don't — or don't know they should. A missing TM30 may not cause immediate problems, but it can block visa extensions and create complications if you interact with immigration for any reason.

Short-Term vs Long-Term Rentals

Rentals under 30 days are classified as hotel operations and technically require a hotel license. This makes most Airbnb listings technically illegal, though enforcement is inconsistent. Rentals of 30 days or more fall under regular lease law, which provides tenant protections but different rules. If you're staying long-term, always get a written lease agreement.

Laws & Regulations

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MediumDigital NomadExpat

TM30 Reporting by Hosts

Immigration Act B.E. 2522, Section 38

Any person (hotel, landlord, Airbnb host) who provides accommodation to a foreigner must notify immigration within 24 hours. Hotels handle this automatically at check-in. Private landlords and short-term hosts often do not, which can cause problems during visa extensions.

Penalties

Host: fine of 800-2,000 THB per unreported foreigner. Foreigner: no direct penalty, but visa extensions can be denied if TM30 is missing for current address.

Common Scenarios

  • Renting a long-term apartment where the landlord never filed TM30
  • Being denied a visa extension because no TM30 exists for your current address
  • Staying with a Thai friend who doesn't know about TM30 obligations

Tips to Stay Legal

  • Ask your landlord to confirm TM30 filing before signing a lease
  • If they refuse, you can file TM30 yourself at the immigration office or via the online TM30 system
  • Hotels handle this automatically — keep your check-in receipt as proof
  • TM30 must be re-filed after every re-entry into Thailand
MediumDigital NomadExpat

Airbnb and Short-Term Rental Legality

Hotel Act B.E. 2547, Sections 4-5, 15

Operating a short-term rental (under 30 days) without a hotel license is technically illegal under the Hotel Act. While Airbnb operates openly in Thailand, unlicensed properties can be shut down. Condos with no-Airbnb rules in their juristic regulations can fine owners.

Penalties

Operating without a hotel license: fine up to 20,000 THB and/or up to 1 year imprisonment. Daily fine of up to 10,000 THB until compliance.

Common Scenarios

  • Renting your Thai condo on Airbnb while traveling
  • Booking an Airbnb and being told to move because the building banned short-term rentals
  • A condo juristic committee fining the owner for unauthorized subletting

Tips to Stay Legal

  • As a guest, you're generally fine — the legal risk falls on the host
  • For stays under 30 days, confirm the host has the proper license or condo approval
  • Longer-term rentals (30+ days) fall under regular lease law, not the Hotel Act
  • If you plan to host, consult a lawyer about hotel licensing requirements
LowDigital NomadExpat

Tenant Rights and Lease Law

Civil and Commercial Code, Sections 537-571; Unfair Contract Terms Act B.E. 2540

Thai lease law provides basic tenant protections: landlords must give 30 days notice for termination, security deposits are limited to 1-2 months rent, and landlords cannot change locks or cut utilities to force eviction. However, enforcement can be difficult for foreigners.

Penalties

N/A — civil law. Landlords who illegally evict tenants can be sued for damages. Utility cut-offs are criminal offenses (coercion).

Common Scenarios

  • A landlord refusing to return the security deposit after move-out
  • Being asked to pay 3+ months security deposit (more than the typical 2-month max)
  • Having a landlord change locks or threaten eviction without notice

Tips to Stay Legal

  • Get a written lease agreement in English and Thai — verbal agreements are hard to enforce
  • Photograph the unit at move-in AND move-out to document condition
  • Normal security deposit is 1-2 months rent — anything more is unusual
  • If a landlord cuts utilities or changes locks, call the police — this is illegal coercion
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Hotel Registration Requirements

Hotel Act B.E. 2547, Section 35; Immigration Act Section 38

All hotels must register foreign guests with immigration (TM30), record passport details, and keep guest records for 5 years. Guests are required to present their passport at check-in. Some budget guesthouses may skip these requirements.

Penalties

Hotel: fine up to 2,000 THB per unregistered guest. Guest: no direct penalty, but unregistered stays can cause immigration complications.

Common Scenarios

  • Checking into a small guesthouse that doesn't scan your passport
  • Losing your check-in receipt and needing proof of stay for immigration
  • A hotel refusing to provide a TM30 receipt for your records

Tips to Stay Legal

  • Always present your passport at check-in — this triggers the TM30 filing
  • Keep your check-in receipt or confirmation email as proof of registered stay
  • If a budget guesthouse doesn't scan your passport, ask them to — it protects you

Need legal help?

Tourist Police: 1155 (24/7, English) | Emergency: 1669 | Police: 191

Frequently Asked Questions

What is TM30 and why does it matter?
TM30 is the form your host or landlord files with immigration to report that a foreigner is staying at their property. Hotels do this automatically at check-in. For apartments and private rentals, it must be filed separately. Without a TM30 on record, visa extensions can be denied. Always confirm your host files it.
Is Airbnb legal?
Short-term rentals under 30 days technically require a hotel license under the Hotel Act. Most Airbnb listings operate without one. As a guest, the legal risk falls on the host, not you. For stays over 30 days, regular lease law applies and no hotel license is needed.
What are my rights as a tenant?
Landlords must give 30 days notice for termination. Security deposits are typically 1-2 months rent. Landlords cannot change locks or cut utilities to force eviction — these are criminal offenses (coercion). Always get a written lease and photograph the unit at move-in and move-out.

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