Recent changes on the interest rate, debt repayments and how these would affect your financing in Thailand
On 10 April 2021, the Thai Government enacted The Emergency decree amending the Civil and Commercial Code B.E. 2564 (2021) (the “Emergency Decree”) to amend the Thai Civil and Commercial Code (CCC) (as amended, the "Amended CCC"). Recently, the Bank of Thailand (BOT) issued its notification no. SorKorSor. 9/2563 Re: Default interest calculation and application of debt repayment dated 9 October 2020 (the "New BOT's notification"). This new set of law has changed a Thai legal landscape on the interest calculation and the debt repayment.
What's News?
Interest Rates
1. New Rates under the Amended CCC where there is no specified rate
Before the recent amendment, the CCC allowed a lender to charge an interest and a default interest at the rate of 7.5% per annum if an interest were chargeable but the rate was not agreed in an agreement. The Amended CCC lowers the rate to be at 3% per annum where an interest rate is not specified and at 5% (2% on top of the 3% interest rate) per annum for a default interest rate. These rates are subject to a triennial review by the Ministry of Finance.
However, the laws mostly remain the same on the maximum interest rate and a default interest rate. If the parties agree on the rate of interest or default interest. Unless there is any specific regulation allow otherwise, the rates for both types of interest must not exceed 15%. Thus, the Amended CCC does not affect an agreement to which parties explicitly specify the rate of interest or the default interest.
2. New requirement on a default interest for a commercial bank
For commercial banks, the law permits them to charge an interest and a default interest at a rate in excess of 15% per annum. A commercial bank under the BOT's supervision, including a Thai representative office or branch of a foreign bank (the "Thai Commercial Bank"), is entitled to charge an interest at the rate publicly announced by it. The rate of interest up to 20% per annum is permitted to be charged by a foreign commercial bank.
A change has been made only on the default interest rate under the New BOT's notification. It captured that if a loan meets the following criteria:
- a loan is an installment loan (including a bullet loan) or a revolving loan; and
- the borrower is a retail or SME customer (collectively, the "Qualified Loan"), a Thai Commercial Bank cannot charge the default interest higher than 3% per annum on top of the normal interest rate specified in the relevant agreement.
3. Summary of the chargeable interest under Thai laws
Default interest only for a defaulted amount
Prerequisite for initiating the court case
Application of a partial repayment
The New BOT's notification sets out the new rule on how a Thai Commercial Bank must apply a partial repayment in the following orders:
- for an instalment loan (including a bullet loan), a repayment should be applied:
- firstly, in a chronological order based on the due date of each outstanding amount; and
- if there are two or more amounts due on the same date, the repayment will be apply to those amounts in the following orders; (a) any fee, (b) interest and (c) principal.
- for a revolving loan, a repayment can be applied to all outstanding amounts of (a) any fee, (b) interest and (c) principal without the need to apply it chronologically.
Failure to Comply?
The failure to comply with the new rules would cause the provisions conflicting with those rules to be invalid and unenforceable.
In addition, the Thai Commercial Bank's failure to comply with the New BOT's Notification would cause such bank to be subject to a fine up to THB500,000 and an additional fine up to THB5,000 per day so long as the bank is still in breach.
Effective Date
All changes have already come to effect except for the provisions relating to the "Application of a partial repayment" which will come into effect on 1 July 2021.
Grandfather Rights
The Amended CCC
The New BOT's Notification