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DTV Visa for Lithuanian Citizens

Swap grey Baltic skies for year-round tropical sunshine—a growing number of Lithuanian professionals, freelancers and families are making Thailand their long-term base. With the Destination Thailand Visa (DTV), you can leave the long northern winters behind, stretch your euros much further, and keep your remote career or business running from a beach, a mountain town, or the heart of Bangkok. It is a genuine fresh start that feels worlds away from Vilnius, while staying perfectly compatible with EU clients and employers.

Every Lithuanian citizen is eligible to apply

5

Years validity

180

Days per entry

500k

THB proof of funds

$139

Service fee from

100%

Refund if denied*

Why Lithuanian citizens choose Thailand

Living in Thailand from Lithuania

Section 01

Why Lithuanian Citizens Are Moving to Thailand

Lithuanians are used to adapting, but Thailand offers more than a holiday escape. The biggest draws are the dramatic climate upgrade, a far lower cost of living, and a mature remote-work ecosystem. Vilnius winters are long and dark, with daylight dropping to roughly seven hours in December; Thailand sits near the equator and averages 28–32°C all year. The Thai baht stretches the euro a long way, so an everyday standard of living that feels comfortable in Kaunas or Klaipėda becomes genuinely luxurious in Chiang Mai or Bangkok—larger apartments, daily meals out, regular massages and weekend trips, all without overspending.

Destination Thailand Visa at a Glance

The DTV is a 5-year multiple-entry visa. Each entry lets you stay up to 180 days, extendable once inside Thailand for a further 180 days. You show proof of 500,000 THB (~$15,000) in personal funds, you apply from outside Thailand, and DTVThaiVisa.com prepares and submits the full application for you. Service starts from $139, with an optional Denial Protection add-on that gives a 100% refund if your application is denied.

Section 02

Cost of Living: Lithuania vs. Thailand

The financial difference is immediate and substantial. A one-bedroom apartment in central Vilnius typically runs €600–€900 per month; in Chiang Mai a modern condo with a pool and gym can be had for €300–€450, and even Bangkok stays cheaper than the Lithuanian capital. Food is where the gap is widest: a hearty Thai street-food meal costs €1.50–€2.50, and a sit-down dinner with drinks rarely tops €10 a head. Domestic help, transport and entertainment all follow the same pattern, so most Lithuanians find their total monthly outgoings fall by roughly 30–50% while their comfort goes up.

  • One-bedroom apartment (city centre): ~€700/mo in Vilnius → ~€350/mo in Chiang Mai
  • Inexpensive restaurant meal: ~€10 in Lithuania → ~€2.50 in Thailand
  • Monthly local transport pass: ~€30 in Vilnius → ~€20 of BTS/grab rides in Bangkok
  • Coworking hot desk: ~€140/mo in Vilnius → ~€70/mo in Bangkok or Chiang Mai
  • Domestic SIM with generous data: ~€15/mo in Lithuania → ~€8/mo in Thailand
Section 03

Getting to Thailand from Lithuania

There are no direct flights between Lithuania and Thailand, but one-stop connections are frequent and competitively priced. From Vilnius International Airport (VNO) the smoothest routes are via Helsinki with Finnair, via Istanbul with Turkish Airlines, or via Warsaw with LOT—each feeding into Bangkok's Suvarnabhumi (BKK). Kaunas (KUN) is a useful low-cost feeder to those hubs as well. Total door-to-door time to Bangkok is usually 13–16 hours depending on the layover. From Bangkok, onward domestic hops to Chiang Mai, Phuket or Koh Samui take roughly 1–1.5 hours.

Flight Duration & Time Zone

A typical Vilnius–Bangkok journey is 13–16 hours with one stop. Thailand is UTC+7, while Lithuania is UTC+2 in winter and UTC+3 in summer—so Thailand runs 4–5 hours ahead. That offset is handy for remote work: you can clear your morning focus block before Lithuanian colleagues are even online for lunch.

Daily life in Thailand — where Lithuanian citizens settle on the DTV
Life in Thailand — your home base on the 5-year DTV
Section 04

Where Lithuanian Expats & Nomads Settle in Thailand

Lithuanians spread across the country according to lifestyle. Bangkok suits urban professionals who want world-class infrastructure, fast networking and endless dining. Chiang Mai is the heartland of the digital-nomad scene—cheap, creative, surrounded by mountains and packed with coworking spaces and meetups. The southern islands of Phuket and Koh Samui appeal to those who want the sea on their doorstep, while Pattaya blends coastal living with big-city convenience and an easy two-hour drive back to Bangkok.

  • Bangkok: best for urban professionals, networking and food culture.
  • Chiang Mai: affordable, excellent coworking and the strongest nomad community.
  • Phuket & Koh Samui: ideal for beachside living, diving and water sports.
  • Pattaya: golf, nightlife and a short hop from Bangkok and the airport.
Section 05

Money & Banking for Lithuanians in Thailand

Lithuania uses the euro, and managing euros in a baht economy is straightforward. Opening a Thai bank account is possible for long-stay visa holders, but many Lithuanians start out with multi-currency apps and international transfers. Wise and Revolut offer strong exchange rates and low fees, letting you top up a Thai account or pull cash from ATMs—though local machines charge a fixed fee of around 220 THB per foreign-card withdrawal, so it pays to take out larger amounts less often. Cards are widely accepted in malls, hotels and chain restaurants, but cash still rules in local markets, taxis and street-food stalls.

Smart Banking Tip

Tell your Lithuanian bank you are travelling so cards are not blocked, and carry a backup card from a separate provider. Use a fee-friendly card such as Revolut or Wise to avoid foreign-transaction charges, and batch your ATM withdrawals to spread the ~220 THB per-withdrawal fee. For larger sums, a SWIFT transfer from your Lithuanian account to a Thai bank remains the most reliable route.

Section 06

Documents & Translation

Lithuania's official language is Lithuanian, so supporting documents issued at home—bank statements, employment contracts, qualification certificates—will usually need a certified English (or Thai) translation before they can be used for your DTV application. A sworn translator can produce an official English version that Thai authorities accept, and this can all be arranged online before you leave Lithuania. The good news is that this is a routine step: DTVThaiVisa.com reviews your file in advance, tells you exactly which documents need translating, and flags anything missing so there are no surprises.

  • Passport valid well beyond your intended stay.
  • Proof of 500,000 THB (~$15,000) in personal funds, e.g. recent bank statements.
  • Evidence supporting your DTV category (remote work, freelance contracts, or soft-power activity).
  • Certified English or Thai translations of any Lithuanian-language documents.
Section 07

Daily Life & Community in Thailand

Beyond the paperwork, day-to-day life in Thailand is a steady source of small pleasures. Private healthcare is excellent—hospitals such as Bumrungrad and Bangkok Hospital match or beat EU standards at a fraction of the cost, and many staff speak English. Internet is fast and cheap, with 5G across the cities and reliable fibre even in smaller towns, so remote work never suffers. Violent crime is low and Thais are famously hospitable. You will also find small but active Lithuanian and wider Baltic groups in Bangkok and Chiang Mai, usually organised through Facebook and Telegram, where people swap advice, arrange meetups and occasionally trade a šaltibarščiai recipe to survive the heat.

  • High-quality, affordable private healthcare with English-speaking doctors.
  • Fast, inexpensive internet ideal for remote work and video calls.
  • Low violent-crime rates and a warm, welcoming local culture.
  • Lithuanian and Baltic community groups in Bangkok and Chiang Mai for support and meetups.
Lithuania — your starting point before relocating to ThailandLithuania
From Lithuania to Thailand

Make the move from Lithuania

Trade Lithuania for up to five years in Thailand on the DTV. We prepare and submit your entire application from wherever you are — proof of funds, category evidence and passport — so you can focus on the move, not the paperwork.

Check eligibility
Step by step

How Lithuanian citizens apply for the DTV

1

Check you qualify

Almost every nationality can apply. Take our free 60-second eligibility checker to confirm your route — remote work, soft power, medical or family.

2

We prepare everything

We assemble and review your documents: proof of 500,000 THB (~$15,000), your category evidence and passport — so nothing gets rejected.

3

We submit for you

You apply from outside Thailand. We file at a Thai embassy or consulate (such as Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh, Jakarta, Vientiane or London) within one business day.

4

Get approved & move

On approval you get the 5-year, multiple-entry DTV — up to 180 days per stay, extendable once. Then make Thailand home.

Questions

DTV FAQ for Lithuanian citizens

How long can I stay in Thailand with the Destination Thailand Visa as a Lithuanian citizen?

The DTV is a 5-year multiple-entry visa. Each entry allows a stay of up to 180 days, and you can extend that once by a further 180 days without leaving the country. Across the visa's five-year life you can enter and exit Thailand as often as you like.

What is the financial proof required for the DTV?

You must show proof of at least 500,000 THB (approximately $15,000) in available personal funds. This is typically demonstrated with recent bank statements or other liquid assets, and confirms you can support yourself during your stay.

Can I work remotely for a Lithuanian company while on the DTV?

Yes. The DTV is built for remote workers, freelancers and digital nomads. You can live in Thailand while working for your Lithuanian employer or clients, as long as your income comes from outside Thailand.

Do I apply for the DTV from Lithuania or from Thailand?

You apply from outside Thailand—usually from Lithuania or another country where you have legal residence. DTVThaiVisa.com prepares and submits your complete application on your behalf, so you do not have to handle the process alone.

What does DTVThaiVisa.com's service include for Lithuanian applicants?

We provide a full application preparation and submission service starting from $139. That covers document checks, guidance on certified translations of your Lithuanian-language paperwork, and expert support throughout. An optional Denial Protection add-on means that if your application is denied, you receive a 100% refund.

Will my Lithuanian-language documents need translating?

Most likely, yes. Because Lithuania's official language is Lithuanian, documents such as bank statements and contracts usually need a certified English or Thai translation. A sworn translator can prepare these before you leave home, and we will tell you exactly which documents are affected.

How does the time difference between Lithuania and Thailand affect remote work?

Thailand is 4–5 hours ahead of Lithuania (UTC+7 versus UTC+2 in winter or UTC+3 in summer). Many remote workers find this comfortable: your Lithuanian colleagues are starting their day as you move into your afternoon, leaving easy windows for overlap without long late nights.

Is there a Lithuanian expat community in Thailand?

Yes. The communities are not large, but there are active Lithuanian and Baltic groups in Bangkok and Chiang Mai, mostly on Facebook and Telegram. They share local tips, organise meetups and sometimes mark Lithuanian holidays together—an easy way to settle in.

How do flights from Lithuania to Thailand work?

There are no direct flights, but one-stop routes are plentiful. From Vilnius you can connect via Helsinki (Finnair), Istanbul (Turkish Airlines) or Warsaw (LOT) to Bangkok, with a total journey of roughly 13–16 hours. Kaunas works well as a low-cost feeder to those hubs.

Is Thailand really cheaper than Lithuania?

In most categories, yes. Many Lithuanians cut their overall cost of living by 30–50%, especially on rent, dining and entertainment. Imported goods and Western-style meals cost more, but leaning on local markets and Thai food keeps everyday spending very low.

What happens if my DTV application is denied?

With the optional Denial Protection add-on, a denial means you receive a 100% refund. We prepare your file carefully to minimise that risk, and if anything does go wrong we will advise you on the best next steps.

Ready to move to Thailand from Lithuania?

Check your eligibility in under a minute, or let our team prepare and submit everything — with a 100% refund if your application is denied (with the optional paid Denial Protection add-on).