DTV children dependents and school questions
Child dependent files usually need their own identity and relationship documents, not just the primary applicant's paperwork with one more passport attached.
Official embassy pages can also require full birth certificates, parent IDs, custody documents, notarized consent, or the main DTV holder's approval details depending on the child's travel pattern and the filing post.
Primary-source family reports show that school planning is a separate issue from visa eligibility, so families should confirm what status the school expects before assuming DTV dependents solve everything.
Read the main dependents guide and review where child documents fit in the full file set.
How to use this page
DTV Children Dependents and School Questions is written for people preparing a Thailand Destination Thailand Visa file, including applicants and Thai helpers supporting someone else. Use it as a preparation check before submitting documents, not as a promise that an embassy will approve a specific case.
What child dependent files usually need for DTV, how school questions fit in, and where families mix up dependent planning with education planning. The practical goal is to make the applicant's route, funds, identity documents, and supporting evidence easy for a reviewer to understand.
What to check before relying on it
Read this page alongside the latest embassy instructions for the place where the applicant will apply. DTV practice can differ by post, and public reports are best used as preparation signals. A stronger file usually makes the applicant's category clear, shows funds in a readable way, explains unusual bank activity, and avoids mismatched names, dates, or document versions.
If a Thai friend, partner, assistant, or agent is helping, they can use these notes to translate requirements into a simple document checklist. The applicant should still confirm official rules, because DTVCheck is a preparation tool and not an embassy decision maker.
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