Reference

Β·

Primary source

Mining Royalty Rate β€” Industrial Minerals

5–12% of pit-head value

As ofFY2023Β·Sources3Β·Primary

Under the Minerals Act 2017 and subordinate ministerial regulations, Thai mining royalties for industrial minerals (gypsum, limestone, potash, silica sand) are set at 5–12% of pit-head value, varying by mineral category and concession tier. The royalty replaces earlier specific-rate schedules and is supplemented by a corporate income tax at the standard 20% rate and an annual land-holding fee. The DPIM collects royalties and reports aggregate receipts in its annual mineral-statistics bulletin. For comparison, metallic minerals (tin, tungsten, gold) attract royalties of 5–20% of mine-mouth value depending on market price triggers defined in ministerial notifications.

Figure in context

Under the Minerals Act 2017 and subordinate ministerial regulations, Thai mining royalties for industrial minerals (gypsum, limestone, potash, silica sand) are set at 5–12% of pit-head value, varying by mineral category and concession tier. The royalty replaces earlier specific-rate schedules and is supplemented by a corporate income tax at the standard 20% rate and an annual land-holding fee. The DPIM collects royalties and reports aggregate receipts in its annual mineral-statistics bulletin. For comparison, metallic minerals (tin, tungsten, gold) attract royalties of 5–20% of mine-mouth value depending on market price triggers defined in ministerial notifications.

Under the Minerals Act 2017 and subordinate ministerial regulations, Thai mining royalties for industrial minerals (gypsum, limestone, potash, silica sand) are set at 5–12% of pit-head value, varying by mineral category and concession tier. The royalty replaces earlier specific-rate schedules and is supplemented by a corporate income tax at the standard 20% rate and an annual land-holding fee. The DPIM collects royalties and reports aggregate receipts in its annual mineral-statistics bulletin. For comparison, metallic minerals (tin, tungsten, gold) attract royalties of 5–20% of mine-mouth value depending on market price triggers defined in ministerial notifications.

Time scope

FY2023

Source basis

Primary source

Interpretation notes

What this tells you

Under the Minerals Act 2017 and subordinate ministerial regulations, Thai mining royalties for industrial minerals (gypsum, limestone, potash, silica sand) are set at 5–12% of pit-head value, varying by mineral category and concession tier. The royalty replaces earlier specific-rate schedules and is supplemented by a corporate income tax at the standard 20% rate and an annual land-holding fee. The DPIM collects royalties and reports aggregate receipts in its annual mineral-statistics bulletin. For comparison, metallic minerals (tin, tungsten, gold) attract royalties of 5–20% of mine-mouth value depending on market price triggers defined in ministerial notifications.

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Mining Royalty Rate β€” Industrial Minerals Β· Insight