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Refugee / Asylum · UNHCR RSD · Resettlement

End-to-end refugee law — UNHCR, asylum, resettlement, IDC release, statelessness, non-refoulement.

Refugee/Asylum services (12)

UNHCR Refugee Status Determination (RSD)
UNHCR Bangkok + 1951 Convention + 1967 Protocol

UNHCR registration + RSD interview + status decision + 30-day appeal + resettlement file preparation.

60-540 days · 0-145,000 บาท (legal aid)
Asylum Application (destination country)
Destination country asylum authority + 1951 Convention

File asylum within 1 year of entry + credible-fear interview + merits hearing + BIA/Tribunal/CNDA appeal.

180-1095 days · 185,000-585,000 บาท
Subsidiary / Temporary Protection (EU + UK)
EU Qualification Directive 2011/95 + Temporary Protection Directive 2001/55

Subsidiary protection for non-Convention applicants facing serious harm + Temporary Protection for Ukraine 2022+.

90-365 days · 185,000-385,000 บาท
Resettlement (USRAP / GAR Canada / SHP Australia / EU)
UNHCR Resettlement + IOM + destination Refugee Admissions Program

UNHCR submission → DHS USCIS / IRCC / DHA interview → security clearance → cultural orientation → fly-out 12-36 months.

365-1095 days · 85,000-285,000 บาท
Cessation / Cancellation Defence (refugee status)
1951 Convention Art. 1C/1F + destination tribunal

Notice of Intent to Cease response + prove continued well-founded fear + BIA / Federal Court / CRRR appeal.

180-540 days · 285,000-685,000 บาท
Family Reunification (refugee Form I-730 / FRR)
USCIS I-730 / Canada OYW / UK FRR / German Familienzusammenführung

File within 2 years of refugee status — spouse + U-21 children + parents/siblings via hardship exception.

180-540 days · 145,000-385,000 บาท
Stateless Person Determination (1954 Convention)
MOI Thailand + UNHCR Statelessness Unit + 1954 Convention

Check nationality across 5+ countries + non-recognition letters + stateless registration + path to Thai nationality.

180-730 days · 85,000-285,000 บาท
Convention Travel Document (CTD / 1951 Travel)
Destination country MOI/Immigration + 1951 Convention Art. 28

CTD (blue passport) for travel — country of origin barred · valid 5-10 years · visa required like a normal passport.

60-180 days · 65,000-185,000 บาท
Non-Refoulement Defence (anti-deportation)
1951 Convention Art. 33 + CAT Art. 3 + ICCPR Art. 7

Administrative court / habeas / injunction + UN Special Rapporteur report + ECHR/IACHR/UN HRC interim measures.

7-90 days · 385,000-1,200,000 บาท
Detention Release (IDC Thailand / immigration detention)
Immigration Act + UNHCR-MOI MoU 2023 + NRSM

IDC bail + THB 50,000 per person + weekly check-in + NRSM screening filing.

14-60 days · 125,000-385,000 บาท + ประกัน
Education + Healthcare Access (refugee)
Education for All policy + UCS expansion + UNHCR partner NGOs

13-year free schooling + public hospital access + UCS expansion enrolment + professional licence recognition.

21-90 days · 25,000-85,000 บาท
UNHCR Mandate / Resettlement (RST) Appeal
UNHCR Standard Operating Procedures + AAB (Appeals Advisory Board)

Re-examination request + new evidence + AAB review + escalate to UNHCR HQ Geneva within 30 days.

60-365 days · 185,000-485,000 บาท

Refugee packs

Destination countries (12)

Our workflow is aligned with the Department of Consular Affairs, Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA Chaeng Watthana) and the published requirements of each destination embassy or consulate. We track changes weekly directly from the originating authorities so the steps you see here reflect what actually clears today — not what was published years ago.

Why this matters

Our End-to-End Refugee Law desk handles one of the highest request volumes in the firm — currently spanning dozens of primary categories, each with its own evidentiary checklist, certification chain, and turnaround. Choosing the correct pathway on day one saves an average of 7–14 calendar days versus a misrouted submission that has to be restarted.

Because end-to-end refugee law sits at the intersection of Thai administrative law and the destination authority's evidentiary rules, the cost of a misstep is rarely the filing fee — it is the lost window. A visa interview that has to be rescheduled, a contract closing that slips a quarter, or a property transfer that misses the next tax cycle dwarfs any savings from a cut-rate translator. Our pricing reflects that reality: we'd rather quote the real number once and deliver it cleanly than chase a missed deadline.

How we deliver it

Our standard workflow has five gates: (1) source-document assessment and pathway recommendation within one business hour; (2) preparation and certified translation by registered translators; (3) notarisation by a licensed Notarial Services Attorney; (4) MFA Chaeng Watthana submission with daily tracking; (5) destination embassy or consulate endorsement, with the final dossier hand-delivered or shipped back to you under signature.

  1. Intake & free document review (≤1 business hour).
  2. Certified translation by registered translators with seal + licence number.
  3. Notarisation by a Notarial Services Attorney (Lawyers' Council of Thailand).
  4. MFA Chaeng Watthana endorsement (Department of Consular Affairs).
  5. Destination embassy / consulate finalisation + return delivery.

Document readiness before filing

End-to-End Refugee Law matters most when the filing window is narrow and the receiving authority applies its checklist strictly. Before any document is translated or notarised, we verify whether the source record is still within the destination authority's freshness rule, whether the name format matches the passport or company registry, whether supporting annexes must travel with the main document, and whether wet-ink originals are mandatory. This pre-flight stage is where most avoidable delays are prevented.

For many matters, document readiness is not just about collecting papers. It includes sequencing. Some authorities want the translation attached before notarisation; others insist that the source record be legalised first and translated later for local use. Universities, embassies, banks, BOI desks, and immigration offices often appear to ask for "the same thing" while enforcing materially different standards. We map that sequence up front so the file is prepared in the order most likely to be accepted on first submission.

Common pitfalls we prevent

The most common cause of rejection for first-time clients is using a source certificate that fails the destination authority's freshness rule (Thai household registrations older than six months, for example), translations missing the translator's licence number, or chain-of-certification steps performed in the wrong order. We screen for all three before any fees are incurred.

  • Stale source records (e.g. household registrations older than 6 months).
  • Translations missing the translator's licence number or seal.
  • Chain-of-certification steps performed out of order.
  • Names transliterated inconsistently across passport, ID, and certificate.

Transparent pricing & turnaround

All fees appear in a single transparent quote that bundles government charges, courier (EMS/Kerry), and attorney work — no hidden surcharges. Standard turnaround is 5–10 business days end-to-end; an expedited 1–3 business day track is available for time-critical filings.

Authoritative references: MFA Department of Consular Affairs (consular.mfa.go.th), Hague Conference on Private International Law (hcch.net), Lawyers' Council of Thailand (lawyerscouncil.or.th).

Quality control, evidence & accountability

Every end-to-end refugee law file we handle moves through a named-responsibility chain. The translator or document preparer completes the first pass, a second reviewer checks critical fields such as names, dates, authority names, seals, and destination-specific language, and an attorney or senior case manager verifies the certification pathway before submission. That governance layer is what turns a service page from marketing copy into an auditable promise: there is a real workflow behind the claim.

This is also central to E-E-A-T. Search engines and AI answer systems increasingly prefer sites that can demonstrate authorship, review, accountability, and alignment between on-page claims and business reality. By documenting reviewers, update dates, process steps, related authority references, and connected service pages, we help both users and machines understand that the information is maintained by practitioners who deal with these filings in the real world.

Frequently asked questions

How long does End-to-End Refugee Law take?

Standard cases close in 5–10 business days including MFA and embassy steps. Expedited track is 1–3 business days for an additional fee.

What documents do I need to prepare?

Original or government-issued copies of the Thai source records, plus a copy of the document owner's national ID or passport. We review your bundle for free before any work begins.

Do I have to appear in person?

In most cases, no — a signed power of attorney is sufficient. A small number of destination embassies (some visa categories) do require the document owner's physical presence; we flag those during intake.

Is the quote final?

Yes. Quotes are turn-key and include every government and courier fee. Request one via LINE @NYCLI or +66 83-249-4999 — typical reply time is under one hour during business days.

Do you serve clients outside Bangkok?

Yes. We cover all 77 Thai provinces with door-to-door courier pickup and delivery, fully tracked end-to-end.

Which destination countries are supported?

168 destinations including the 125 Hague Apostille jurisdictions and Non-Hague destinations that require in-Thailand embassy endorsement. See the Legalization hub for the full directory.

Reviewed by: Atty. Natthakarn (Notary Public licensee — Lawyers' Council of Thailand) · Last reviewed: 2026-06-13