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Thai Rice Export Regulations 2026: Certificates, Quotas & Compliance Guide

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Thai Rice Export Regulations 2026: Certificates, Quotas & Compliance Guide

Thai Rice Export Regulations 2026: Overview

Thailand is one of the world's top three rice exporters, shipping 7–9 million metric tons annually. This scale requires a structured regulatory framework governing who can export, what documentation each shipment must carry, and how rice quality is verified at origin. Whether you are a Thai rice mill preparing your first export shipment or an overseas importer evaluating a Thai supplier's compliance, understanding these regulations is essential. This guide covers every key regulatory requirement for Thai rice exports in 2026: licensing from the Department of Foreign Trade (DOFT), phytosanitary certification from the Department of Agriculture (DOA), fumigation requirements, certificates of origin (Form D for ASEAN, EUR.1 for the EU), quality testing (ICUMSA, moisture), and customs clearance procedures at Laem Chabang and Bangkok ports.

1. Export Licenses from DOFT (Department of Foreign Trade)

All Thai rice exports require authorization from the Department of Foreign Trade (DOFT), part of Thailand's Ministry of Commerce. DOFT oversees rice export quotas, quality standards, and exporter registration. Who must register with DOFT? Any legal entity wishing to export rice commercially from Thailand must register as a licensed rice exporter with DOFT. Registration requires: Thai business registration (DBD certificate), milling facility documentation or evidence of supply contracts with licensed mills, company financial statements, and a sworn declaration of intent to comply with Thai rice export standards. Export quota system: Thailand does not currently apply strict numeric export quotas on most rice grades (white rice, broken rice, parboiled rice). However, DOFT retains authority to impose temporary export controls during periods of domestic supply shortage or price volatility. During such periods, DOFT may require exporters to hold Certificates of Approval (bai-anumat) before shipment. The Hom Mali (jasmine) rice grade is more closely monitored — DOFT's Thai Rice Exporters Association (TREA) coordinates with the ministry to prevent fraudulent origin labelling of non-Thai rice as Hom Mali. Practical steps for exporters:
  • 1. Register your company with DOFT's rice export licensing system
  • 2. Maintain up-to-date milling records, paddy purchase invoices, and stock ledgers
  • 3. Issue each export shipment with a DOFT Export Declaration (bai-song-ook)
  • 4. For Hom Mali rice, obtain TREA-endorsed documentation confirming Thai origin and variety

2. Phytosanitary Certificates

A Phytosanitary Certificate (PC) issued by Thailand's Department of Agriculture (DOA) is required for every commercial rice export shipment. The PC certifies that the rice is free from regulated plant pests, diseases, and contaminants as required by the importing country's plant protection authority. What the phytosanitary certificate covers:
  • Consignment identification (container number, seal number, bill of lading number)
  • Rice variety, grade, and quantity
  • Confirmation of visual inspection and/or laboratory testing
  • Any treatments applied (fumigation method and chemical)
  • Issuing DOA officer's signature and official stamp
How to obtain a Phytosanitary Certificate:
  • 1. Submit an export inspection application to the DOA regional plant protection office
  • 2. DOA inspector visits the mill or bonded warehouse to physically inspect the rice stock
  • 3. Samples may be collected for laboratory analysis (particularly for aflatoxin, pesticide residues, and insect contamination)
  • 4. Upon passing inspection, DOA issues the PC within 1–3 working days
  • 5. The PC must accompany the original shipping documents to the destination port
Validity: Phytosanitary certificates are typically valid for 14–21 days from issue date — the shipment must depart within this window. For shipments that are delayed at port, a re-inspection and new PC may be required. Country-specific PC requirements: Some importing countries impose additional requirements beyond the standard Thai DOA PC. Nigeria (NAFDAC), Kenya (KEBS), the EU (EFSA), and the USA (USDA/FDA) may require the PC to specifically declare freedom from particular pests, certify specific moisture levels, or include additional treatment declarations. Always confirm the destination country's specific phytosanitary import requirements with your freight forwarder or buyer.

3. Fumigation Requirements

Fumigation is required for the vast majority of Thai rice export shipments to comply with importing country phytosanitary requirements and ISPM 15 (International Standards for Phytosanitary Measures). Fumigation eliminates stored grain pests — primarily rice weevil (*Sitophilus oryzae*), grain moth, and grain beetle — that could infest the shipment during transit. Approved fumigation methods:
  • Phosphine fumigation (PH₃): The most widely used method for Thai rice exports. Rice is sealed in the container or warehouse and treated with aluminium phosphide pellets that release phosphine gas over 5–7 days. Concentration and exposure time are monitored and certified. Safe for human consumption after the exposure period and adequate aeration. Preferred for most export markets including Africa, Middle East, Asia, and Europe.
  • Methyl Bromide (CH₃Br): Historically the standard fumigant, now phased out in many countries under the Montreal Protocol. Still accepted by some importing countries, but increasingly restricted. Check destination country regulations before specifying methyl bromide.
  • Heat treatment: Required by Japan and Australia for some shipments in lieu of chemical fumigation. Less commonly used for containerized Thai rice exports.
Fumigation Certificate: After fumigation, a licensed Thai fumigation company issues a Fumigation Certificate stating: chemical used, concentration (g/m³), exposure time and dates, temperature at time of treatment, container or warehouse identification, and the fumigation company's license number. This certificate is a mandatory shipping document included with every Thai rice export. In-container vs warehouse fumigation: For containerized exports, fumigation is typically conducted inside the sealed container at the port or bonded warehouse before vessel departure. Container seals are broken only upon arrival at the destination port after adequate aeration time has elapsed.

4. Certificate of Origin — Form D (ASEAN) and EUR.1 (EU)

The Certificate of Origin (CO) documents that the rice was grown, milled, and exported from Thailand. Different trade agreements require different CO formats, each conferring specific tariff preferences. Form D — ASEAN Free Trade Area (AFTA): Form D is the ASEAN Free Trade Area preferential origin certificate used for exports to ASEAN member countries (Malaysia, Indonesia, Philippines, Vietnam, Singapore, Brunei, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar). Presenting Form D at the destination country's customs allows the importer to claim preferential (reduced) import tariff rates under AFTA.
  • Issued by: Thai Chamber of Commerce or DOFT-authorized issuing bodies
  • Required information: Exporter and importer details, origin criteria, HS code, description, quantity and weight, and the issuing authority's stamp
  • Application timeline: 2–3 working days before vessel departure
  • Validity: 12 months from issue date
EUR.1 — EU Generalised System of Preferences (GSP): Thailand historically enjoyed EU GSP tariff preferences for rice exports, which reduced the import duty to 0–7% for Thai Hom Mali rice entering EU member states. However, Thailand's EU GSP status has been subject to review due to Thailand's income level crossing the EU GSP eligibility threshold. Importers shipping Thai rice to EU countries must verify the current GSP/EUR.1 status with DOFT before relying on this preferential rate.
  • Issued by: Thai Customs Department or approved exporters
  • For approved exporters: REX (Registered Exporter) system replaces EUR.1 with a self-declaration on commercial invoice
Form AI — Japan: For exports to Japan under the JTEPA (Japan-Thailand Economic Partnership Agreement), Form AI provides preferential tariff treatment. Standard Certificate of Origin: For markets without a preferential trade agreement, a standard non-preferential Certificate of Origin is issued by the Thai Chamber of Commerce. This confirms Thai origin for customs declaration purposes but does not confer a preferential tariff rate.

5. ICUMSA Testing

ICUMSA (International Commission for Uniform Methods of Sugar Analysis) is primarily associated with sugar testing, but the ICUMSA framework's color and whiteness measurement principles are applied to rice milling quality assessment in some export contexts. For Thai rice exports, the more directly relevant quality tests are: Whiteness/Milling Degree: Thai white rice exports are graded partly by milling degree — the extent to which the bran layer has been removed. Milling degree is measured using a Kett or Satake grain whiteness meter, expressed as a whiteness index. Premium 100% milled rice (maximum bran removal) achieves the highest whiteness index and commands the highest price. Standard export grades specify minimum whiteness levels that correlate to the degree of milling. Moisture Testing: Moisture content is one of the most critical quality parameters for exported Thai rice. Thai export standards require moisture content at or below 14% (typically 13–14%). Testing is conducted using approved moisture meters (Kett, Steinlite, or equivalent) on representative samples drawn from the shipment batch. Excessively wet rice (above 14% moisture) is a leading cause of spoilage, mold, and insect infestation during transit — and exporters who ship above-specification moisture face liability claims.
  • Standard method: ISO 712 or equivalent
  • Testing frequency: Per production batch and per container load before sealing
  • Result documented in: Certificate of Analysis (CoA)
Broken Kernel Percentage: The broken kernel test is conducted by sieving a rice sample through standardized screens and weighing the fraction of fractured grains as a percentage of total sample weight. This test determines the export grade (5% broken, 10% broken, 25% broken, etc.) and is documented on the CoA. Purity / Variety Identification: For Thai Hom Mali (jasmine) rice, DNA fingerprinting and sensory aroma evaluation are used to verify variety authenticity. DOFT and DOA conduct periodic market surveillance testing of shipments claiming Hom Mali certification to prevent adulteration or misrepresentation.

6. Customs Procedures at Laem Chabang and Bangkok Ports

Thailand's two primary rice export ports are Laem Chabang Deep-Sea Port (Chonburi province, near Bangkok) and Bangkok Port (Klong Toey). Laem Chabang handles the majority of containerized export cargo; Bangkok Port handles smaller volumes and some bulk shipments. Step-by-step Thai rice export customs procedure: Step 1: Export Declaration (Bai-Song-Ook) The exporter or their licensed customs broker files an export declaration with Thai Customs (Excise Department) via the e-Customs system. The declaration includes: exporter's tax ID, importer details, HS commodity code (HS 1006.xx for rice), quantity, value, and Incoterms. Step 2: Document Submission Required documents submitted to customs: Commercial Invoice, Packing List, DOFT Export Declaration, Phytosanitary Certificate, Fumigation Certificate, and any preferential origin certificates (Form D, EUR.1). Step 3: Customs Inspection (if selected) Thai Customs uses a risk-based targeting system. Most rice shipments from established, registered exporters are released with document examination only (Green Channel). Shipments flagged for physical inspection (Red Channel) undergo container examination and sample testing before clearance. Step 4: VGM Declaration (SOLAS) Since 2016, all containerized shipments must comply with SOLAS (Safety of Life at Sea) VGM (Verified Gross Mass) requirements. The exporter or mill must certify the verified gross mass of the loaded container before loading onto the vessel. VGM is submitted electronically to the shipping line. Step 5: Bill of Lading Issuance After customs clearance and container loading onto the vessel, the shipping line issues the Bill of Lading (B/L). The B/L is the core transport document that the importer uses to claim the cargo at the destination port. Step 6: Document Courier to Buyer Original documents (B/L, Commercial Invoice, Packing List, Phytosanitary Certificate, Fumigation Certificate, CO) are couriered to the buyer or buyer's bank (for L/C transactions) typically within 3–5 working days of vessel departure.

7. Additional Export Requirements by Destination Market

Beyond standard Thai export requirements, many importing countries impose their own pre-shipment inspection and documentation requirements: Nigeria — NAFDAC & SONCAP: Nigeria's NAFDAC (National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control) requires a NAFDAC product registration and SONCAP (Standards Organisation of Nigeria Conformity Assessment Programme) inspection certificate for rice imports. SONCAP is conducted by approved inspection bodies (SGS, Bureau Veritas, Intertek) at origin before shipment. Without SONCAP, Nigerian customs will not release the goods. Kenya — KEBS PVOC: Kenya requires a Pre-Export Verification of Conformity (PVOC) certificate from Kenya Bureau of Standards (KEBS)-approved inspection bodies. This verifies that the rice meets Kenya's import quality standards before departure from Thailand. USA — FDA Prior Notice: Under the FDA Bioterrorism Act, all food shipments to the USA require Prior Notice submission to the FDA at least 8 hours before vessel departure. The FDA may then issue a Full Hold or No Action Indicated. Thai rice exporters shipping to the US must also comply with FDA food facility registration requirements. EU — EFSA & Pesticide Residue Compliance: The EU has strict maximum residue limits (MRLs) for pesticides in imported rice, enforced by EFSA (European Food Safety Authority). Thai rice exports to the EU must carry a Pesticide Residue Certificate from an accredited laboratory showing compliance with EU MRLs. The EU has previously tightened MRL requirements for certain pesticides used in Thai rice cultivation, making accredited lab testing essential for EU-bound shipments. Middle East (UAE, Saudi Arabia) — Halal Certificate: Rice is inherently Halal-compliant, but several Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries require a Halal certificate from a recognized Thai Islamic certification body (CICOT or equivalent) for food imports. This is more relevant for processed rice products, but bulk rice importers to Saudi Arabia and the UAE should confirm current requirements with their importer.

Summary: Thai Rice Export Document Checklist (2026)

For a standard Thai rice export shipment, the complete document set is:
  • 1. DOFT Export Declaration — filed with Thai Customs
  • 2. Commercial Invoice — exporter-issued, full value, Incoterms specified
  • 3. Packing List — per-bag count, container number, net/gross weight
  • 4. Bill of Lading — issued by shipping line after loading
  • 5. Phytosanitary Certificate — Thai Department of Agriculture
  • 6. Fumigation Certificate — licensed Thai fumigation company
  • 7. Certificate of Analysis — moisture, broken %, whiteness, purity
  • 8. Certificate of Origin — Form D (ASEAN), EUR.1 (EU), or standard CO (Thai Chamber of Commerce)
  • 9. Health Certificate — food safety declaration
  • 10. VGM Certificate — SOLAS verified gross mass
  • 11. Destination-specific docs — SONCAP (Nigeria), KEBS PVOC (Kenya), FDA Prior Notice (USA), Pesticide Residue Certificate (EU), Halal Certificate (GCC)
For your next Thai rice shipment, contact TBS Rice Mill — our export team handles all documentation and can provide a full Proforma Invoice within 4 business hours. See our Thai rice product range and use our free container calculator to plan your order.

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