Following is a list of events and scheduled events in the year 2024 in Thailand. The year 2024 is the 243rd year of the Rattanakosin Kingdom of Thailand. It is the ninth year in the reign of King Vajiralongkorn (Rama X), and is reckoned as year 2567 in the Buddhist Era, the Thai calendar.
MP and Secretary-General of the Bhumjaithai Party, Saksayam Chidchob, is found guilty by the Constitutional Court of concealing his stakes in a company and resigns from his political positions.[8][9]
18 January – Thailand halts the import of poultry products from Belgium and three French regions to prevent the spread of Avian influenza.[10]
20 January:
The leader of a credit card theft gang who stole ฿8 million in a month is arrested.[11]
23 January – Sa Kaeo province introduces a 10 pm curfew for minors aged under 15 following the murder of a 47-year old on 11 January by five minors.[13]
German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier begins his two day state visit to Thailand, the first state visit by a German president in 22 years.[15]
31 January: The Constitutional Court rules that the Move Forward Party and its leaders, including Pita, violated the constitution through its aim to amend Thailand's lèse-majesté. The court also orders the party to end their campaign to amend the law.[16]
The Thai government and Muslimseparatists from the southern part of the country agree on a possible peace process to stop an insurrection which started in 2004.[22]
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet visits Thailand to sign several documents on further cooperation between Cambodia and Thailand.[23]
18 February: Former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra is released on parole after spending six weeks in a Bangkok hospital on the account of his age and health.[24][25]
Former Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra is acquitted by the Supreme Court on charges of corruption over a 2013 campaign to promote her government's infrastructure projects involving allegations of mishandling 240 billion baht ($6.7 billion) and failure to conduct proper bidding processes.[26]
The Thai police force informs the family of activist Chaiyaphum Pasae that they will not hold the soldiers responsible for his murder at an army checkpoint. The admission comes three years after the government's decision to not charge the soldiers.[27]
12 April – Hundreds of refugees cross into Thailand from Myanmar after the fall of Myawaddy to ethnic armed organizations.[30]
29 April – Parnpree Bahiddha-nukara resigns as foreign minister shortly after being removed as concurrent deputy prime minister in a cabinet reshuffle.[31]
14 May – Netiporn Sanesangkhom, an activist charged with lèse-majesté, dies in detention after staging a months-long hunger strike calling for reform of the justice system and an end to the persecution of political dissidents.[34][35]
21 August – Thailand reports its first case of clade 1b mpox in a 66-year-old European man who works in one of the African countries with the ongoing epidemic.[51]
13 September – At least ten people are killed by flooding and landslides caused by Typhoon Yagi across Thailand.[56]
24 September – King Vajiralongkorn signs the same-sex bill into law, allowing same-sex marriages to be held in Thailand beginning in 2025.[57]
25 September - Phrase 1 of the digital wallet scheme is launched, providing 14.5 million people with ฿10,000 handouts.[58]
30 September – The Bangkok Criminal Court orders the extradition of Y Quynh Bđăp, a Montagnard activist convicted in absentia in Vietnam of terrorism charges over his role in the 2023 Đắk Lắk attacks.[59]
1 October – A bus carrying students crashes into a highway barrier before catching fire near Bangkok, killing at least 23 people and injuring 16 others.[60]
7 October – Three people are reported killed following days of flooding and landslides in the Chiang Mai area.[61]
28 October – The Narathiwat Provincial Court dismisses charges against security officials implicated in the deaths of Muslim protesters during the Tak Bai incident in 2004, citing the expiration of a 20-year statute of limitations and failure to arrest the seven suspects.[62]
30 November – One fisherman is drowned and another 31 are detained after Myanmar patrol boats open fire to three Thai fishing vessels off the coast of Ranong province.[66]