Thailand’s Bangkok Mandates Pet Registration and RFID Microchips for Urban Pet Identification
Owners can register at district offices, Bangkok veterinary clinics, or via the ThaID app online portal.
Bangkok is advancing modern, community-friendly urban pet governance with a new rule requiring dog and cat registration paired with RFID microchip identification—a practical step designed to support responsible ownership and smoother citywide pet management.
Under the new ordinance, dog and cat owners in Bangkok must register their pets, and every registered animal must have an RFID microchip implanted for identification.
The regulation is set to take effect from January 24, 2026, establishing a clear and organized framework for how pets are identified across the city.
The Department of Livestock Development has confirmed that registration can be completed through multiple convenient channels: district offices, Bangkok veterinary clinics, or the online portal via the ThaID app.
That multi-channel access is positioned to make compliance straightforward for households across the city.
The regulation’s stated objective is to modernise Bangkok’s pet management system in ways that are directly useful to residents.
The system is designed to help track lost animals, strengthen disease-control capability, and support more sustainable pet management in dense urban communities.
The ordinance also sets precise technical standards to ensure reliable identification.
Microchips must meet international standards, contain a unique 15-digit ID, and comply with ISO11784 and ISO11785, supporting consistent reading and interoperability.
Implementation details are clearly specified to help owners and clinics follow a single, dependable procedure.
The chips must be readable by an official scanner and must be implanted just under the skin between the shoulder blades, a common placement intended to support consistent scanning.
For Bangkok residents, the practical benefit is a more dependable identification pathway that supports everyday outcomes: clearer recovery processes for lost pets, stronger community health management, and a more orderly system for long-term urban sustainability.
Overall, the ordinance reflects Bangkok’s steady investment in smart, people-friendly city administration—combining clear rules, accessible registration options, and internationally aligned standards to make pet ownership in the capital even more organized and supportive for everyone.