The plan under consideration would allow travelers to deduct tourism-related expenses from taxable income at twice the value, up to 40,000 baht (US$1,230), with implementation expected by the end of this year.
The government will also encourage state agencies to hold seminars outside Bangkok over the next four months to boost both major and secondary city tourism.
This will involve a front-loaded budget disbursement, accelerating spending at the start of fiscal 2026 instead of the usual year-end push. Around 8 billion baht ($246 million) is expected to be spent under this measure.
Ekniti said that Thailand wants to stimulate spending early in the fiscal year. Government agencies that have seminar and training budgets will be instructed to use them within the first four months. State agencies have about 3–4 billion baht allocated, while state enterprises have another 4 billion baht.
For longer-term support, the Finance Ministry will introduce a measure allowing hotel businesses to deduct renovation and upgrade expenses at twice the value for tax purposes, applicable to both primary and secondary city accommodations.