How to Book a VFS Appointment for a UK Visa in Thailand (2026, Step-by-Step)

The one Thai-first walkthrough that covers BOTH halves of the process — apply and pay on GOV.UK first, then book your biometrics at VFS Bangkok, Chiang Mai or Phuket. With 2026 fees in pounds and baht, what to bring on the day, a no-slots fix, and the things Thai applicants get wrong. This is information on how the official process works, not immigration advice — book only via GOV.UK and the official VFS portal.

Booking in brief — the 7 steps in one minute

Here is the whole journey in seven steps. The order matters: you apply and pay on GOV.UK first, and only then book the VFS biometrics appointment. For the full picture of the VFS centres and what they do, see our UK visa VFS centres in Thailand guide.

  1. Apply and PAY on GOV.UK first — the visa fee and, where it applies, the IHS.
  2. You are redirected to VFS Global Thailand (or go to visa.vfsglobal.com → Thailand → United Kingdom).
  3. Create or log in to a VFS account.
  4. Choose the service type and centre — Bangkok, Chiang Mai or Phuket.
  5. Pick a date and time from the calendar.
  6. Pay any VFS or optional fees to confirm the slot.
  7. Download and PRINT the appointment confirmation letter.
This page explains how the official process works — it is general information, not immigration advice. Book only through GOV.UK and the official VFS Global portal, never a third-party agent who promises a slot.

Before you book: the one rule everyone gets wrong

You must apply AND pay on GOV.UK first

The single most common ordering mistake is trying to book a VFS slot before the online application exists. You cannot reach a VFS appointment until the application is submitted and paid on GOV.UK. The fee — and the IHS where it applies — is taken on GOV.UK, not at VFS.

It is biometric enrolment, NOT an interview

Most Thai applicants are not interviewed. You go to VFS to give 10 fingerprints and a facial photo — you are not questioned about your relationship, your finances or your trip. The decision is made later by UK Visas and Immigration from your documents.

“Is there an interview for a UK visa?” — No, for most applicants. The VFS visit is enrolment of fingerprints and a photo. If UKVI ever needs to verify something, they may contact you separately — but the appointment itself is not an interview.

What “ready to book” looks like

Before you open the VFS calendar you should have: your application reference number, your payment confirmation, and the email or redirect link from GOV.UK that sends you to VFS. With those three in hand, booking takes only a few minutes.

Step 1 — Apply and pay on GOV.UK

This is the half that competitors skip. You start your application on GOV.UK for the route you need, then pay the visa fee and the IHS where it applies. Completing the form usually takes about 45–60 minutes and includes up to ten years of travel history. Pick your route below to start the right form: the Standard Visitor visa, the spouse/partner visa, the student visa or the Skilled Worker visa.

What you pay on GOV.UK (2026 fees)

£135
Standard Visitor (6 months)
£2,064
Spouse / partner (entry)
£558
Student visa
£1,035
IHS per year (£776 student/child)
Skilled Worker is from £819 (up to 3 years). The IHS is not payable on visit or transit visas. Fees took effect 8 April 2026 — a rise of about 6–7%. Figures from the gov.uk fees table and healthcare-surcharge page. Last reviewed June 2026.

Successful applicants now receive an eVisa — there has been no passport vignette sticker for visitor applicants since 25 February 2026. That matters later: your passport is usually handed back at the appointment without anything stuck inside it. For every fee, IHS amount and the full 2026 table, see the visa fees hub.

Tip: work backwards from your travel date so you apply and book in good time. The planner below turns a travel date into an apply-by date.

Step 2 — Book your VFS appointment, screen by screen

This is the core of the page: the annotated walkthrough of the VFS portal that almost nobody provides. Six screens, in order.

1
Get to the VFS Thailand portal: the redirect after payment, or visa.vfsglobal.com → Thailand → United Kingdom.
2
Create or log in to a VFS account (New User). Use the same spelling as the Latin name in your passport.
3
Choose service type + centre: Bangkok, Chiang Mai or Phuket (services differ by centre).
4
Pick date & time: the calendar shows open slots (released ~90 days ahead).
5
Pay any VFS-side or optional fees to confirm the slot.
6
Download and PRINT the confirmation letter — required to enter the centre.

You have plenty of time at this step. Slots are released roughly 90 days ahead, and you have up to 240 days after submitting the online application to attend — so if the first centre is full, you are not locked out.

Rescheduling You can usually change your appointment up to 24 hours before the booked time, and more than once if needed — only through your VFS account on the official portal.

The three UK visa centres in Thailand (Bangkok vs Chiang Mai vs Phuket)

Nearly every competitor omits Phuket. Here are all three centres side by side. Choose by where you live and which services you need; the detail pages for each centre cover transport and local tips.

Centre Address Hours (verify) Services
Bangkok (main) The Shoppes at Belle Grand Rama 9, Rama 9 Road (MRT-accessible) Weekdays; full booking hours Full premium & optional services
Chiang Mai 6th floor, Siripanich Building, 191 Huay Kaew Road Weekdays; reduced hours Reduced services; extra centre fee may apply
Phuket (temporary centre) CCM Complex, 77/77 Moo 5, Chalerm Prakiat Rama 9 Rd, Ratsada, Mueang, Phuket 83000 Weekday mornings, limited (verify) Limited hours & services

Addresses and hours can change and the Phuket enrolment centre runs limited hours and services — always confirm on the official VFS Global Thailand portal before you travel. Last reviewed June 2026.

Which centre should I choose?

Choose by where you live and which optional services you want. Bangkok offers the full menu; Chiang Mai and Phuket are convenient for the north and south but offer fewer services. See the centre pages for the Bangkok centre, the Chiang Mai centre and the Phuket centre.

What to bring on biometrics day

Pack these the night before. The list is short, but a missing confirmation letter or a passport with no blank page can turn you away at the door.

Bring on the day

  • Your printed appointment confirmation letter (required to enter).
  • Your passport — valid, with at least one blank page.
  • Supporting documents: originals plus the copies you uploaded online.
  • Any document the form specifically told you to bring.
Certified Thai→English translations are prepared earlier for the application — you do not translate anything at the centre. If your documents still need translating, get a certified translation quote before your appointment.

Biometric-quality rules

Fingertips should be clean and unobscured — avoid fresh cuts, henna or nail decoration that covers the fingertip. Your full face must be visible, with no head covering except for religious or medical reasons. Where a printed photo is needed, the spec is 45×35mm.

On-the-day logistics

Arrive about 15 minutes early. You must attend in person — there is no proxy for biometrics. Children under 5 give a photo only (no fingerprints) but still attend. A typical visit takes 30–60 minutes.

Build a printable, route-aware list of exactly what to bring:

What happens at the appointment

At the centre, staff scan your 10 fingerprints, take a facial photo and capture a digital signature; any documents not uploaded online are scanned. For most applicants there is no interview. The whole thing is usually over in under an hour.

In the eVisa era your passport is usually handed back the same day with no sticker added — unless you bought Keep My Passport While Applying. Your visa arrives as an eVisa, so after approval you create a UKVI account on gov.uk and generate a Share Code (valid 90 days) to prove your status before you travel. The VFS guide explains the after-appointment steps in full.

Costs: VFS optional services + your 2026 total

The standard biometrics appointment carries only the basic service charge. Everything below is optional. The baht figures come from third-party listings, so treat them as indicative and confirm the live menu on the official VFS portal.

Optional VFS service Indicative ฿ What it gives you
Premium Lounge ≈ ฿4,000 Comfort & faster handling — not a faster decision
Prime Time appointment ≈ ฿3,850 Out-of-standard-hours slot
Document scanning ≈ ฿880 Staff scan & upload your documents
Domestic courier return ≈ ฿480 Documents couriered back to you

Indicative baht figures from third-party agent listings, not verified on the official VFS portal — verify vs VFS, last checked June 2026. Other add-ons (Keep My Passport, out-of-hours collection, Comfort Plus, Flexi Appointment) also exist; the menu varies by centre.

Faster decisions (paid, optional)

Priority is about £500 (usually around 5 working days, but for out-of-country family/settlement applications usually up to 30 working days). Super Priority is about £1,000 (usually by the end of the next working day) and is generally an in-UK option, not offered for most out-of-country settlement routes. Both are bought during the application and depend on availability.

Priority and premium services change the SPEED or COMFORT of the process only. They do NOT improve your chances of approval — the decision is made by UK Visas and Immigration on the merits of your documents.

Add it all up — GOV.UK visa fee + IHS + any VFS optional fees — in pounds and indicative baht with the live-FX calculator below.

The calculator shows indicative baht at a live rate; the pound figures from gov.uk are the source of truth. Add VFS optional fees separately from the menu above.

No slots? Fully booked? What to do

Fully booked centres are the top source of booking anxiety. There is almost always a way through.

Scam warning — “guaranteed slot” agents

VFS does NOT sell or guarantee appointment slots through third-party agents. Anyone promising a “guaranteed slot” for a fee is a scam. Book only through GOV.UK and the official VFS Global Thailand portal.

Common booking problems for Thai applicants (and fixes)

Problem Fix
Card declined on the GOV.UK payment (Thai/foreign card) Enable international/online payments with your bank, try another card, or call your bank. The fee is taken on GOV.UK, not at VFS.
Name mismatch (Thai vs Latin spelling) Enter your name exactly as the Latin transliteration in your passport. The VFS account, GOV.UK form and passport must all match.
Typo found after booking Amend or reschedule through your VFS account, usually up to 24 hours before the appointment.
Wrong centre chosen / need another city Reschedule to another centre subject to available slots — no new application needed.

Official sources & when to get regulated advice

Verify everything on GOV.UK and the official VFS Global Thailand portal — fees, addresses, hours and the booking flow can all change. This guide, and our service, cover document preparation, certified translation and appointment booking only.

For a judgement about your eligibility, a refusal, or an appeal, that is outside what an informational guide or a document-preparation service can do — speak to a regulated, IAA-registered adviser or a solicitor. See our information on what to do if a visa is refused for where to turn.

Related guides & next steps

Frequently asked questions

Do I book VFS before or after applying on GOV.UK?
After. You must submit and pay on GOV.UK first; only then are you redirected to VFS to book your biometrics appointment.
Is there an interview for a UK visa in Thailand?
No, for most applicants. The VFS visit is biometric enrolment — fingerprints and a photo — not an interview.
How long do I have to book after applying?
Generally up to 240 days after submitting your online application to attend; slots open around 90 days ahead. Book early in peak season.
Can I reschedule my VFS appointment?
Yes, usually up to 24 hours before the booked time, and more than once if needed — through your VFS account only.
What do I bring to the VFS appointment?
Your printed confirmation letter, your passport with at least one blank page, and your supporting documents (originals plus uploaded copies).
What if there are no slots?
Keep checking (off-peak and after cancellations), consider another centre, and use the 240-day window. Use only official channels — never a “guaranteed slot” agent.
Where are the UK visa centres in Thailand?
Three: Bangkok (Belle Grand Rama 9), Chiang Mai (Huay Kaew Road) and Phuket (a temporary centre). Confirm hours and services on the official VFS portal.
Do premium services improve my chances of approval?
No. They add speed or comfort only; they do not change the decision on your visa, which UKVI makes from your documents.
How much are the VFS optional services?
Indicative ฿: Premium Lounge ≈ 4,000, Prime Time ≈ 3,850, scanning ≈ 880, courier ≈ 480. Confirm the live menu on the official VFS portal.
Can someone attend the appointment for me?
No. You must attend in person to give biometrics. Children under 5 give a photo only but still attend.

Last reviewed: June 2026. This page is general information based on public gov.uk and VFS Global sources, not regulated immigration advice. Fees, addresses, opening hours, the booking flow and the VFS optional-service menu all change — always confirm on GOV.UK and the official VFS Global Thailand portal before you apply, pay or travel. Government fees are charged in pounds; baht figures are indicative at ~฿43.5/£1 and your bank may differ.

Let us book your VFS appointment for you

We help with document preparation, certified translation and booking your VFS appointment — so the apply-pay-book sequence is handled correctly. Tell us your route and we'll come back with a clear plan and price. No obligation; we are not solicitors or IAA-registered advisers.

Your details are kept private (PDPA / UK-GDPR). General information, not regulated immigration advice.

Sunaree Ko, Founder of UK Visa From Thailand
About the author

Sunaree Ko — Founder

Sunaree founded UK Visa From Thailand and writes and reviews the guides on this site. We're a document-preparation and certified-translation service — not a law firm and not IAA-registered — and every figure here is sourced from GOV.UK. Read Sunaree's full bio →