A beach town in Thailand

Thailand GDP Q1 2025

Thailand: Economy loses steam in Q1

Momentum softens at start of 2025: GDP growth moderated to 3.1% year on year in the first quarter of 2025 from 3.3% in the fourth quarter of last year. Q1’s figure surprised markets on the upside.

On a seasonally adjusted quarter-on-quarter basis, economic growth sped up to 0.7% in Q1 from the previous period’s 0.4% growth.

Domestic sector weighs on Q1’s result: Softer domestic momentum chiefly drove the moderation in annual GDP growth. Household spending increased 2.6% in the first quarter, which was below the fourth quarter’s 3.4% expansion. Persistently high household debt, subdued loan growth from commercial banks and rising economic uncertainty dampened the expansion. Additionally, public consumption growth was the slowest since Q2 2024, expanding 3.4% (Q4 2024: +5.4% yoy). Fixed investment growth waned to 4.7% in Q1, following 5.1% logged in the previous quarter; private investment contracted for the fourth consecutive quarter.

On the external front, exports of goods and services growth sped up to 12.3% year on year in the first quarter, which marked the best reading since Q4 2021 (Q4 2024: +11.5% yoy). Conversely, imports of goods and services growth moderated to 2.1% in Q1 (Q4 2024: +8.2% yoy).

Economy to lose further steam by year-end: GDP growth is set to cool gradually through Q4 2025 as private investment and spending remain lackluster and rising global protectionism caps exports growth. As a result, the economy will lose steam from 2024 in 2025 as a whole, growing at one of the weakest paces in ASEAN. Stronger-than-expected monetary and fiscal stimulus poses an upside risk to economic growth, while weaker-than-expected external demand due to U.S. tariff hikes poses a downside risk.

Panelist insight: United Overseas Bank’s Enrico Tanuwidjaja and Sathit Talaengsatya said:

“Looking ahead, Thailand’s economy is expected to grow at a slower pace, weighed down by subdued domestic and external demand amid ongoing global trade policy uncertainty and a weaker global outlook. While government spending—particularly public investment—and private consumption will continue to provide some support, private investment remains fragile due to negative sentiment and cyclical headwinds, despite a record FDI approval value by the BOI last year. Tighter financial conditions are also expected to constrain domestic demand.”

Free sample report

Access essential information in the shortest time possible. FocusEconomics provide hundreds of consensus forecast reports from the most reputable economic research authorities in the world.
Close Left Media Arrows Left Media Circles Right Media Arrows Right Media Circles Arrow Quote Wave Address Email Telephone Man in front of screen with line chart Document with bar chart and magnifying glass Application window with bar chart Target with arrow Line Chart Stopwatch Globe with arrows Document with bar chart in front of screen Bar chart with magnifying glass and dollar sign Lightbulb Document with bookmark Laptop with download icon Calendar Icon Nav Menu Arrow Arrow Right Long Icon Arrow Right Icon Chevron Right Icon Chevron Left Icon Briefcase Icon Linkedin In Icon Full Linkedin Icon Filter Facebook Linkedin Twitter Pinterest X Download Fullscreen