June 29, 2026 01:02 PM
Last edited: June 29, 2026
by Vincent Thairanked
Long time expat in Thailand, loving the food and activities option Thailand has to offer.
On 26 June 2026 the Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT) announced a nationwide push for cross-border QR payments under the "Pay Like a Local" concept. The program aims to let foreign visitors use mobile-banking apps and e-wallets from their home countries to pay at participating Thai merchants.
TAT is coordinating with the Bank of Thailand and a group of banks and payments partners to expand acceptance of cross-border QR codes at tourism businesses across Thailand. Participating banks include a range of Thai and international banks. Key payment and switching partners named in the initiative include National ITMX, Alipay, WeChat Pay and UnionPay.
The program targets travel touchpoints such as attractions, retail outlets, and restaurants and focuses on markets where QR and mobile wallet payments are already common. TAT will combine merchant onboarding with visitor-facing promotion to raise awareness of where and how visitors can use their home mobile-wallets to pay in Thai baht without switching to local apps.
For visitors the initiative should make everyday spending simpler. If a merchant displays an accepted QR sign you may be able to scan and pay directly from a familiar mobile-banking app or e-wallet from your home country, reducing the need to carry large amounts of cash or set up a local payment account. Expect smoother checkouts at participating restaurants, shops and attractions, and fewer small-note hassles when you leave tips or make quick purchases. Before you travel, check guidance on how PromptPay QR codes work for foreigners in our PromptPay QR Codes for Foreigners: Easy Payment Guide (2026) and read context on how digital payments are shaping tourism in our piece about the economic impact of events in Thailand Songkran 2026 Boosts Thai Economy: A Win for Travelers.
Use these practical steps to take advantage of cross-border QR acceptance and avoid payment problems. First, confirm with your bank or e-wallet provider that international QR payments in Thailand are supported and that any cross-border transaction fees are acceptable. Second, keep a small amount of Thai baht for vendors that still accept cash only and for transport where QR signs may not be visible. Third, when you see a QR payment sticker ask staff which mobile wallets they accept to avoid scanning the wrong code. Fourth, download our PromptPay QR guide before your trip to understand how merchants display codes and what information the scan will request: PromptPay QR Codes for Foreigners: Easy Payment Guide (2026). Finally, if you follow wider travel preparation advice you can combine digital payments with proven trip-planning tips from our coverage of tourism trends: Songkran 2026 Boosts Thai Economy: A Win for Travelers.
Source: TAT News
by Vincent Thairanked
Long time expat in Thailand, loving the food and activities option Thailand has to offer.
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