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🇹🇼 Thai National ID Card Chinese (Traditional)

Certified translation, Notary Public, Thai MFA legalization, and Chinese (Traditional) embassy attestation — handled end-to-end in one file. 11 min read.

24–48h translation฿400 – ฿1,000 MFA + embassy ready
  • DHL Express worldwide tracked shipping
  • MFA + Chinese (Traditional) embassy legalisation handled in-house
  • ทีมงานพูดภาษาไทย-อังกฤษ-จีนตัวเต็ม (ไต้หวัน/ฮ่องกง) ตอบไลน์ภายใน 15 นาที
  • Free reply within 15 minutes during business hours
  • court-grade translator with ten-plus years of legalisation experience on staff for Chinese (Traditional)
  • 4-hour rush available for Thai National ID Card

Treat this page as the brief we would give an internal junior the first time we asked them to own a Thai National ID Card → Chinese (Traditional) file from intake to courier. Whether this single file is the last item on a relocation checklist or the first item on a probate one, our in-house court-grade translator with ten-plus years of legalisation experience delivers a court-grade translation accepted by Thailand's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the relevant embassy in Bangkok, and the receiving authority in the destination country; the page below sets out fees, timelines and the small details (name spelling, validity periods, supporting copies) that most often cause embassy rejections — so you can plan accurately before the document leaves your hand.

Our Chinese (Traditional) desk has handled thousands of Thai National ID Card cases for purposes ranging from identity verification, banking abroad, notarized true copies. Each case is logged, dual-reviewed and quality-controlled against the standards published by the Department of Consular Affairs and the destination authority. Below you will find authoritative pricing, a step-by-step legalisation workflow, regional notes specific to Chinese (Traditional) reading authorities, supporting-document checklists, and a bilingual glossary of every term that appears on your translated Thai National ID Card.

Why a specialist Chinese (Traditional) translator matters for Thai National ID Card

Behind the one or two pages of a Thai Thai National ID Card sit decades of registry conventions: form codes, district abbreviations, officer titles, stamp colours. A general translator routinely flattens those distinctions and triggers a rejection. Generalists routinely render "ที่ว่าการอำเภอ" as a literal address rather than the registry institution the Chinese (Traditional) office is looking for, and a single mislabelled stamp footer can return the entire packet.

Most overseas authorities prefer a passport rather than an ID card; however a notarized translated copy is sometimes required for property purchase abroad.

Our Chinese (Traditional) desk maintains a glossary reconciled against:

  • The Thai Ministry of Foreign Affairs Department of Consular Affairs
  • The Chinese (Traditional) embassy in Bangkok
  • Relevant universities, professional bodies, and court systems in Chinese (Traditional)-speaking jurisdictions

That consistency is what lets your document clear MFA, embassy and overseas registration on the first attempt — measured across our case log, our first-pass acceptance rate on Thai National ID Card files sits above 98%.

Regional considerations for Chinese (Traditional)

East Asian registries enforce character-level accuracy — Simplified vs Traditional Chinese, Katakana vs Hiragana romanisation, and Hangul↔Romanisation tables routinely cause re-filings when handled by general translators.

สำหรับไต้หวัน · ฮ่องกง · มาเก๊า ใช้ตัวอักษรตัวเต็ม (繁體) — สถานทูตไต้หวันในไทยรับรองตรงโดยไม่ต้องผ่าน MFA

For the Thai National ID Card specifically, our Chinese (Traditional) desk pays particular attention to:

  • Form codes. Original Thai reference numbers and registration codes are preserved verbatim.
  • Name transliteration. Chinese (Traditional) authorities check the translated name against your passport — any mismatch is grounds for rejection.
  • Official seals & stamps. Thai stamps and signatures are described in the target language so overseas officers can verify authenticity.
  • Officer titles. Registrar, Chief District Officer and District Officer are kept distinct, mapped to whichever term the destination registry uses internally.
  • Dates & calendars. The Thai Buddhist year (พ.ศ.) must be converted to the Common Era; we provide both formats side-by-side.

Supporting documents you should prepare

In practical use overseas the translated Thai National ID Card travels with companion documents — the catalogue below covers what most Chinese (Traditional) registrars and consulates expect to see on the same desk.

  • Identity verification — typically also needs your passport bio page and a recent photo.
  • Notarized true copies — typically also needs your passport bio page and a recent photo.
  • Banking abroad — typically also needs your passport bio page and a recent photo.

Pricing for Thai National ID Card → Chinese (Traditional)

Indicative pricing for a standard 1-page Thai National ID Card translated into Chinese (Traditional):

  • Translation: ฿400 – ฿1,000 (includes company seal & certifying statement, MFA-accepted).
  • Notary Public (Notarial Services Attorney): ฿1,500 – ฿4,000 per document if required by the destination.
  • Thai MFA legalisation: ฿800 – ฿1,500 per document.
  • Chinese (Traditional) embassy attestation: ฿2,500 – ฿12,000 per document depending on embassy.

The total bill scales with page count, with rush options at +50–100%, and with whether the destination demands additional notarised affidavits. Send a scan via LINE @NYCLI or email nyclegal@ilc.ltd for a fixed quote inside 15 minutes during business hours.

Step-by-step legalisation workflow

Our standard pipeline runs through eight gates; each one is logged in a case file you can audit later:

  1. Document intake. Send us a high-resolution PDF/photo of the original Thai National ID Card. We verify it is a current Amphur or court-issued copy.
  2. Translation into Chinese (Traditional). Performed by our credentialed court-grade translator with ten-plus years of legalisation experience. Names, dates and registration numbers are cross-checked against your passport.
  3. Second-eye QA. A senior reviewer cross-checks every page against the source and flags any name/date inconsistency before the seal is applied.
  4. Delivery. Pickup at our office, courier in Bangkok, EMS across Thailand, or DHL Express to 200+ countries.
  5. Chinese (Traditional) embassy attestation. We submit to the destination embassy in Bangkok and collect the legalised document.
  6. Company certification. We affix our official translator seal and a signed declaration accepted by Thai MFA.
  7. Thai MFA legalisation. Our courier files at the Department of Consular Affairs (Chaeng Watthana) the next working day. Standard return: 3–5 working days.
  8. Notary Public (if required). One of our six in-house Notarial Services Attorneys notarises the translation, which most embassies require.

Turnaround & rush options

Our published service-level for Thai National ID Card → Chinese (Traditional) translation is under 48 hours, and the vast majority of jobs deliver inside 24. Adding MFA legalisation extends the total to 4–7 working days. Embassy attestation adds another 3–10 working days depending on the destination.

For urgent cases we offer:

  • 4-hour rush translation — surcharge of 50–100%.
  • 1-day express MFA — additional government fee, file before the 09:30 cut-off.
  • Embassy priority queues — available with most embassies in Bangkok at a small handling fee.

Common rejections we help you avoid

When we audit a rejected Thai National ID Card brought to us by a new client, the failure cause sits inside this short list nine times out of ten:

  • Names spelled differently across passport, Thai National ID Card and supporting documents — Chinese (Traditional) authorities require an exact match.
  • Missing MFA or embassy gate — most Chinese (Traditional) authorities require both, not just one.
  • Translations done by uncertified translators that lack the MFA-accepted seal.
  • Photocopies submitted instead of originals with attached translation.
  • Out-of-date copies — embassies usually want a Thai National ID Card issued within the last 3–6 months.

Glossary — key terms for Thai National ID Card translation

What follows is the published version of our internal Chinese (Traditional) glossary, reconciled against the Department of Consular Affairs handbook and the destination embassy's posted guidance:

  • Notarisation / รับรองโนตารี — a Notarial Services Attorney certifies the translator's signature or the copy; required by some Chinese (Traditional) authorities.
  • Transliteration — converting Thai script names into Chinese (Traditional) characters; must match the spelling in your passport.
  • Certified translation / คำแปลรับรอง — translation accompanied by a signed declaration of accuracy; required by MFA.
  • Apostille — single-step alternative to MFA+embassy for Hague Convention members (Thailand: not a signatory yet → MFA route applies).
  • Embassy attestation / รับรองสถานทูต — the Chinese (Traditional) embassy in Bangkok validates the Thai MFA stamp.
  • Sworn translator / ผู้แปลสาบาน — translator officially registered with a foreign court or ministry; relevant for Chinese (Traditional) in some EU jurisdictions.
  • MFA legalisation / รับรองกระทรวงการต่างประเทศ — the Department of Consular Affairs authenticates the translator's seal; mandatory for most overseas use.

เนื้อหาภาษาไทย — แปลบัตรประชาชนเป็นจีนตัวเต็ม (ไต้หวัน/ฮ่องกง)

การส่ง บัตรประชาชน ฉบับแปลจีนตัวเต็ม (ไต้หวัน/ฮ่องกง) ไปใช้ต่างประเทศ ผ่านสามกระทรวงสามขั้นตอน ทีมงานของเราดูแลให้ครบทุกด่านในใบเสนอราคาเดียว ไม่ต้องวิ่งหลายที่

ที่ NYC Legal & Notary เรามีทีม court-grade translator with ten-plus years of legalisation experience ประจำสำหรับภาษาจีนตัวเต็ม (ไต้หวัน/ฮ่องกง) พร้อมระบบ QA สองชั้นที่ตรวจชื่อ-นามสกุล ตัวเลข เลขที่ทะเบียน วัน เดือน ปี (แปลงพ.ศ. ↔ ค.ศ.) ก่อนประทับตราบริษัทและส่งต่อขั้นตอน MFA ภายในวันทำการถัดไป

ราคาภาษาไทย (โดยประมาณ)

  • ค่าแปลบัตรประชาชนเป็นจีนตัวเต็ม (ไต้หวัน/ฮ่องกง): ฿400 – ฿1,000 ต่อชุด
  • รับรองโนตารี: ฿1,500 – ฿4,000 ต่อฉบับ
  • รับรองกรมการกงสุล (MFA): ฿800 – ฿1,500 ต่อฉบับ
  • รับรองสถานทูตจีนตัวเต็ม (ไต้หวัน/ฮ่องกง): ฿2,500 – ฿12,000 ต่อฉบับ

ขั้นตอนการใช้บริการ

  1. ส่งภาพถ่ายหรือ PDF ของบัตรประชาชนมาที่ LINE @NYCLI หรืออีเมล nyclegal@ilc.ltd
  2. รับใบเสนอราคาแบบฟิกซ์เรทภายใน 15 นาที (ในเวลาทำการ)
  3. เริ่มแปล + QA 2 ชั้น ภายใน 24-48 ชั่วโมง
  4. รับรองตราบริษัท · ส่งกรมการกงสุล (3-5 วันทำการ)
  5. ส่งสถานทูตจีนตัวเต็ม (ไต้หวัน/ฮ่องกง) · รับเอกสารกลับมารับรอง (3-10 วันทำการ)
  6. จัดส่งคืน: รับเองที่สำนักงานลาดพร้าว · EMS ทั่วไทย · DHL Express ทั่วโลก

คำถามที่พบบ่อย

ถาม: ต้องนำต้นฉบับบัตรประชาชนมาที่สำนักงานหรือไม่?
ตอบ: สำหรับแปลอย่างเดียวใช้ภาพถ่ายชัด ๆ ได้ แต่ขั้นตอน MFA และสถานทูตต้องใช้ต้นฉบับตัวจริง

ถาม: ใช้เวลานานเท่าไร?
ตอบ: แปลอย่างเดียว 24-48 ชั่วโมง · ครบ MFA + สถานทูต 7-17 วันทำการ

ถาม: ใบเสนอราคาฟรีหรือไม่?
ตอบ: ฟรี — ส่งภาพมาทาง LINE @NYCLI ได้ตลอด

Why NYC Legal & Notary for Thai National ID Card → Chinese (Traditional)

NYC Legal & Notary Services Co., Ltd. is a registered Thai law firm, and the Chinese (Traditional) desk sits inside the translation-and-legalisation division. We operate six in-house Notarial Services Attorneys, a panel of more than 200 certified translators across 205 languages, and a dedicated MFA & embassy liaison team that visits the Department of Consular Affairs at Chaeng Watthana every working day.

For the Chinese (Traditional) pair your file is handled by court-grade translator with ten-plus years of legalisation experience who is screened on three criteria: native or near-native Chinese (Traditional) command, demonstrated court-grade legal-translation experience, and a clean track record with Thailand's MFA and the relevant embassy. Every translator signs an NDA covering attorney-client privilege.

Concrete reasons clients return

  • Rejection insurance. If MFA or the Chinese (Traditional) embassy rejects our work due to a translation defect, we re-file at no charge and absorb the government re-filing fee.
  • Single-window service. Translation, Notary, MFA filing, embassy attestation and worldwide courier are booked once — you do not chase three vendors.
  • Fixed-fee quotes within 15 minutes. No surprise charges after the work begins; the LINE quote is the invoice you receive on delivery.
  • EN, TH and Chinese (Traditional) support by phone, LINE, WhatsApp, WeChat, KakaoTalk, Telegram and email.
  • Confidentiality by default. Files are encrypted at rest, deleted from working storage 90 days after delivery, and never used as AI training data.
  • Bilingual case manager. One person handles your file end-to-end; ask questions in Thai, English or via your preferred language.

Using your Chinese (Traditional) document abroad

A properly legalised translation is normally accepted on first submission by the destination authority. If the receiving office requests an additional step — for example a sworn translator's signature notarised in the destination country, or a translation re-done into a regional dialect — we provide a follow-up service from our partner network of overseas counsel.

  • Re-issuance — if the destination retains the original, we keep the certified scan on file and produce another legalised copy on 48-hour turnaround.
  • Affidavit of translation accuracy — a sworn statement signed before a Notary Public in the destination country; we prepare the bilingual template.
  • Apostille substitution letter — for receiving authorities that mistakenly request an Apostille (Thailand is not yet a Hague signatory), we provide a notarised explanation letter accepted by most foreign registrars.
  • Long-term archiving — your translated and legalised file is archived for 7 years; request a fresh certified copy at any time without re-paying for translation.

FAQ

Q. How much does a Thai National ID Card translation into Chinese (Traditional) cost?

Indicatively ฿400 – ฿1,000 for translation alone, plus optional Notary (฿1,500+), Thai MFA (฿800+) and embassy attestation (฿2,500+) depending on the receiving authority. Call 083-249-4999 for a 15-minute fixed quote.

Q. Is the translation valid for use in multiple Chinese (Traditional)-speaking countries?

In most cases yes — the MFA stamp is universal, but each destination embassy adds its own attestation. We can stamp additional embassies during the same workflow on request.

Q. What if my passport name differs from the name on the Thai National ID Card?

Send us both documents; we annotate the discrepancy in a notarised covering letter that Chinese (Traditional) authorities accept in lieu of a name-change certificate for transliteration mismatches.

Q. Can I send the document by email or do I need to come in person?

For translation alone a clear photo or PDF is sufficient. For MFA and embassy gates we need the original Thai document — courier it to our Lat Phrao office; we courier the legalised originals back.

Q. Will the Chinese (Traditional) embassy / receiving authority accept your translation?

Yes — our Chinese (Traditional) translations are produced by court-grade translator with ten-plus years of legalisation experience and accepted by Thailand's MFA, the destination embassy and overseas registries. We process thousands of Thai National ID Card files every year.

Q. แปลบัตรประชาชนเป็นจีนตัวเต็ม (ไต้หวัน/ฮ่องกง) ราคาเท่าไร?

ค่าแปลโดยประมาณ ฿400 – ฿1,000 ต่อชุด ยังไม่รวมรับรองโนตารี (฿1,500+) MFA (฿800+) และสถานทูต (฿2,500+) โทร 083-249-4999

Q. ใช้เวลาแปลและรับรองจีนตัวเต็ม (ไต้หวัน/ฮ่องกง)กี่วัน?

แปลอย่างเดียว 24-48 ชั่วโมง รวม MFA 4-7 วันทำการ รวม MFA + สถานทูต 7-17 วันทำการ มีบริการเร่งด่วน 4 ชั่วโมง / 1 วัน

Other documents into Chinese (Traditional)

Thai National ID Card into other languages

Get a fixed quote in 15 minutes

Send a photo of your Thai National ID Card via LINE or email; we reply with a fixed price and timeline.