Reference
Β·Primary source
Mining Royalty Rate β Industrial Minerals
5β12% of pit-head value
Under the Minerals Act 2017 and subordinate ministerial regulations, Thai mining royalties for industrial minerals (gypsum, limestone, potash, silica sand) are set at 5β12% 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 5β20% 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 5β12% 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 5β20% 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 5β12% 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 5β20% 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 5β12% 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 5β20% of mine-mouth value depending on market price triggers defined in ministerial notifications.
What not to do with it
Use the linked report for interpretation and keep basis differences explicit.
Related figures
Adjacent numbers that add context without drowning the value.
Thailand Gypsum Production Volume
Department of Primary Industries and Mines, Thai Mining Industry Association
Thailand Cement-Grade Limestone Output
DPIM, SCG Annual Report, TPI Polene Annual Report
Thailand Potash Proven Reserves
DPIM, ASEAN Potash Mining, academic surveys
TPI Polene Mining Concession Area
TPI Polene Annual Report, SET filings, DPIM concession registry
Thai mining and quarrying sector revenue (2020-2024)
Department of Primary Industries and Mines, NESDC National Accounts, USGS Mineral Yearbook
Phang-Nga lithium recoverable resource (Reung Kiet / Bang I-Tum)
Department of Primary Industries and Mines, Pan Asia Metals ASX disclosures, Bangkok Post mining coverage
Report context
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