A beach town in Thailand

Thailand GDP Q4 2025

Thailand: Economic growth more than doubles in Q4 2025

Economy beats highest market forecast in Q4: Thailand’s GDP increased 2.5% in annual terms in Q4, following a 1.2% expansion in the previous quarter. This beat even the most optimistic economist projections.

On a seasonally adjusted quarter-on-quarter basis, the economy grew 1.9% in Q4, following a 0.3% contraction in the prior quarter.

In 2025 as a whole, GDP rose 2.4%, slowing from 2024’s 2.9% expansion due to slower increases in private and public spending.

Domestic demand fuels acceleration: Relative to the previous quarter’s data, readings in Q4 improved for private consumption (+3.3% on a year-on-year basis vs +2.5% in Q3), government consumption (+1.3% vs -3.9% in Q3), fixed investment (+8.1% vs +1.4% in Q3) and imports of goods and services (+9.1% vs +5.9% in Q3). In contrast, the reading for exports of goods and services worsened in Q4 (+5.6% vs +7.6% in Q3).

On the domestic front, economic activity was lifted by government stimulus, reconstruction efforts following November’s floods and an acceleration in public capex disbursements under the new administration. Regarding the external sector, goods exports decelerated, mainly due to falling agricultural sales amid intensifying global competition, and services exports continued to deteriorate amid persistent weakness in the tourism sector.

GDP growth to slow again in 2026: In 2026, economic growth is forecast to slow again from the prior year on the back of cooling momentum in private spending, fixed investment and exports. As a result, Thailand is likely to remain among ASEAN’s laggards this year due to structural issues, including the highest household-debt-to-GDP ratio in the region and limited reform progress curbing investment prospects. Still, stronger growth in public spending this year should provide tailwinds, and lower interest rates should prevent a sharper deceleration in private spending and fixed investment.

Downside risks to GDP growth include an escalation of conflict in the Middle East leading to a surge in energy prices, logistical disruptions to global supply chains and a further weakening of tourist inflows amid an already struggling domestic services sector.

Panelist insight: Nomura’s Euben Paracuelles and Yiru Chen said:

“Taking into account the better-than-expected Q4 outturn, we raise our 2026 GDP growth forecast to 1.8% from 1.4% […]. As discussed above, the sources of upside surprise in Q4 are unlikely to be sustained, in part due to fiscal support measures, which were likely disrupted, owing to another period of political transition […]. Investment spending is unlikely to be sustained owing to the uncertain external environment, some structural domestic impediments still in play, and relatively high real rates. Household debt remains high and the negative feedback loop between the weak economy and tight financial conditions likely persists, in our view. Cheaper imports from China are exerting some downward pressure on domestic industries, exacerbating other factors already weighing on competitiveness, including deteriorating demographics and limited reform prospects.”

Free sample report

Access essential information in the shortest time possible. FocusEconomics provide hundreds of consensus forecast reports from the most reputable economic research authorities in the world.
Close Left Media Arrows Left Media Circles Right Media Arrows Right Media Circles Arrow Quote Wave Address Email Email Team Member Linkedin Team Member Telephone Man in front of screen with line chart Document with bar chart and magnifying glass Application window with bar chart Target with arrow Line Chart Stopwatch Globe with arrows Document with bar chart in front of screen Bar chart with magnifying glass and dollar sign Lightbulb Document with bookmark Laptop with download icon Calendar Icon Nav Menu Arrow Arrow Right Long Icon Arrow Right Icon Chevron Right Icon Chevron Left Icon Briefcase Icon Linkedin In Icon Full Linkedin Icon Filter Facebook Linkedin Twitter Pinterest X Fullscreen Line Chart Globe Download Share Embed FocusEconomics
Skip to toolbar