Following is a list of events and scheduled events in the year 2025 in Thailand. The year 2025 is the 244th year of the Rattanakosin Kingdom of Thailand. It is the tenth year in the reign of King Vajiralongkorn (Rama X), and is reckoned as year 2568 in the Buddhist Era, the Thai calendar.
1 January – A tour bus crashes into a tree in Surat Thani province, killing five and injuring more than 30.[1]
4 January – Myanmar repatriates 151 Thai prisoners.[2][3]
7 January –
Missing Chinese actor Wang Xing is found in Myanmar by Thai officials after being lured to Myanmar, with the case attracting attention on Chinese social media.[4][5][6]
Former Cambodian opposition MP Lim Kimya is shot dead in Bangkok shortly after arriving from Cambodia.[7] His suspected killer is arrested in Cambodia the next day.[8]
8 January - 2025 Bangkok smog: PM2.5 levels in Bangkok exceeded acceptable health standards, beginning the annual air population season.[9]
A court in Khon Kaen province convicts Olympic gold medalist and boxer Somluck Kamsing of sexually assaulting a 17-year old girl in 2023 and sentences him to more than three years' imprisonment.[14]
24 January – 2025 Bangkok smog: 352 schools in Bangkok are forced to close as a result of the city's poor air quality.[15]
28 January – The Paetongtarn cabinet approves ฿620 million to combat PM 2.5 dust pollution, forest fires and haze.[16]
5 February – The Thai government stops the supply of electricity, fuel and the internet to several Burmese towns along the border with Thailand that are known to host scam operations.[21][22]
10 February – Seabed drilling on a bridge connecting Ko Samui to the mainland begins.[24]
13 February – Thai soldiers prevent a group of Cambodian visitors at the disputed Prasat Ta Muen Thom temple from singing the Cambodian national anthem, creating some tension between the two countries.[25][26]
15 February – The military in Tak province receives over 260 people, mainly Ethiopians, who were held in scam centres across the border in Myawaddy, Myanmar.[22]
20 February –
After a decade-long manhunt Suthee Chuamthaisong, who was convicted of corruption by the Supreme Court in 2019 in relation to the rice pledging scheme under Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra, is found by Thai authorities.[27]
Around 200 Chinese nationals who were held in scam centres in Myanmar are repatriated to China via Mae Sot Airport.[28][29]
21 February – The Embassy of Israel in Bangkok issues outlines encouraging Israelis in Thailand to behave amid tensions between the Israeli community and locals in Pai.[30][31]
26 February – A tour bus carrying adults on a study trip overturns and falls into a ditch in Prachinburi province, killing 18 people and injuring 23 others.[35]
27 February – Forty Uyghurs held in Thailand for over a decade are deported to China at the request of the Chinese government.[36]
14 March – The United States imposes sanctions on unidentified incumbent and former Thai officials for their role in the deportation of 40 Uyghurs to China in February.[40]
31 March — Former MP Sira Jenjaka is sentenced to a one-year prison term for his running for a constituency seat in Bangkok during the 2019 Thai general election despite being ineligible to do so due to a fraud conviction in 1995.[46]
11 April – Nopparat Benjawattananan, a former head of the National Office of Buddhism who fled Thailand following a corruption scandal in 2017, is arrested in the United States.[48]
22 May – The Supreme Administrative Court convicts former prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra of severe negligence over anomalies in rice sales to other countries and failing to act on possible corruption in her government's rice subsidy scheme and sentences her to pay more than 10 billion baht ($304 million) in losses.[59]
6 June – The body of Thai national Nattapong Pinta, who was taken hostage by Palestinian militants during the 7 October attacks in Israel in 2023, is retrieved by Israeli forces in the Gaza Strip.[63]
16 June – Thirteen foreign nationals are arrested in a raid on a rented house in Samut Prakan province on suspicion of running an Internet fraud operation that amassed $1.2 million from overseas victims, mostly from Australia.[64]
18 June – The Bhumjaithai party leaves the ruling coalition following criticism over a leaked phone call between Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra and former Cambodian Hun Sen in which the former is heard disparaging a Thai military commander. Paetongtarn apologizes over the remarks the next day.[65]
2 July – Transport minister and deputy prime minister Suriya Jungrungreangkit takes office as interim prime minister.[72]
3 July – Phumtham Wechayachai takes office as interim prime minister by virtue of a prearranged cabinet reshuffle by Paetongtarn Shinawatra that saw him become her deputy.[73]
11 July – A pile-up along Suksawat Road in Bangkok injures 55 people.[74]
15 July – A woman is arrested in Nonthaburi province on suspicion of seducing several senior Buddhist monks into sexual relationships with her and extorting 385 million baht ($11.9 million) since 2022 in blackmail efforts against them.[75]
23 July – Thailand recalls its ambassador from Cambodia and expels Cambodia's envoy following a landmine incident that injured five Thai soldiers on their disputed border in Ubon Ratchathani province.[76]