Bluebird Inn Bluebird Inn – Pattaya is a small “family business” hotel-restaurant located in the heart of Pattaya City, Thailand.

18/06/2022

Finally Thailand is getting back to normal life,
published in Bangkok Post earlier today:

Barriers lifted

The Thailand Pass registration and Covid-19 insurance requirements will be lifted
for all people arriving in Thailand from July 1.

The decisions were made at a meeting of the Centre for Covid-19 Situation Administration
(CCSA) on Friday, spokesman Taweesilp Visanuyothin said.

Arrivals will need only show their vaccination certificates or Covid-19 test results.

Without such proof,arrivals will be given random, professional antigen tests upon arrival at airports.
Random testing will continue until the government lifts measures issued under the emergency decree
imposed to deal with Covid-19, Dr Taweesilp said.
The Thailand Pass registration system will remain in place but be used only for travellers to report
suspected symptoms of dangerous and other communicable diseases, as determined by the Public Health Ministry,
Dr Taweesilp said.

Foreign nationals will not have to be insured for Covid-19, and thermal scanning will end at border checkpoints, he said.

A certification of fitness for entry, issued by a Thai consulate, will also no longer be required.
At present, visitors are required to have US$10,000 (352,640 baht) Covid-19 insurance coverage. From July 1,
the government will still encourage visitors to have such insurance, the spokesman said.

The CCSA also agreed that all 77 provinces will be declared green (surveillance) zones where full
business and other activities can resume, Dr Taweesilp said.

Currently there are 14 green zone provinces, 46 yellow high surveillance provinces and 17 blue zone provinces.
It is not clear if that change will also take effect from July 1. Dr Taweesilp only said it will become effective
after it is published in the Royal Gazette.

Regarding a proposal to extend the opening hours of nightlife entertainment places until 2am, Dr Taweesilp said they
are still required to close at midnight.
He said there are at least three laws stipulating different closing hours, so the CCSA instructed the National Security
Council secretary-general Supoj Malaniyom, who serves as chief of the CCSA's operations, to study legal details before
submitting the proposal to the cabinet.

"The prime minister wants the matter to proceed quickly. If possible, the government also wants it to take effect from
July 1," Dr Ta­weesilp said.
From June 1, pubs, bars, karaoke bars, massage parlours and other nightspots in 14 reclassified green zones and 17 blue
zones were allowed to resume business, but they are still required to close at midnight.

The CCSA also agreed to ease the requirement for wearing a face mask, making it purely voluntary outdoors or in uncrowded places.

Dr Taweesilp further said that people would be able to take off their face masks when they were in open-air places and
during activities or at work where masks were not normally required.
Face mask wearing will still be required in crowded and poorly ventilated areas such as on public transport, markets and at
concert venues.

Dr Taweesilp said Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha thanked people for their full cooperation in wearing masks.
Gen Prayut said most people are still wearing masks as they recognise their usefulness, said Dr Taweesilp.

He said the Covid-19 situation was improving and the country is on the way to entering a post-pandemic era on July 1.
He said that from June 1-15 there were 348,699 foreign arrivals, with most coming from Malaysia (61,486), India (51,800),
Singapore (31,580), Vietnam (18,885) and the US (15,708).

Tourism and Sports Minister Phiphat Ratchakitprakarn said the number of foreign visitors is expected to rise from
20,000-25,000 per day to 25,000-30,000 when the Thailand Pass registration requirement ends and hit 50,000 in October.

19/05/2022

Dear Friends!
Looks like Thailand is removing the Thailand Pass program from June 1st 2022, so travelling to Thailand for fully vaccinated tourist will be smoother again. So don't forget Thailand, and specially Pattaya when you're planning your holidays!
Bluebird Inn is open and welcomes you to stay!

27/11/2021

Some news from Thailand, originally posted by Bangkok Post

Thailand will no longer have a curfew starting next month after lifting the nighttime ban being enforced in the last remaining six provinces as part of the measures to revitalise the economy and tourism sector.

The country will also allow travellers to enter the country by land and sea, change the Covid-19 testing method for air travellers and allow tourists to visit more provinces.

These measures will be implemented in December, according to the Centre for Covid-19 Situation Administration (CCSA), which held a meeting chaired by Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha on Friday.
The decision to open the country more was made even as a new coronavirus variant had been detected in South Africa and Hong Kong. The news sent stock markets reeling in Asia and prompted Britain to ban flights from six southern African countries.

CCSA spokesman Taweesilp Visanuyothin did not mention the new variant in the routine briefing after the meeting.

The Covid-19 task force will remove Tak, Nakhon Si Thammarat, Pattani, Yala, Narathiwat and Songkhla from the most dangerous list from Dec 1, ending the curfew in the last remaining six provinces, said Dr Taweesilp.

The centre also agreed to the Public Health Ministry's proposal to adjust testing rules for air travellers from 63 countries and territories by replacing RT-PCR testing with antigen testing from Dec 16.

The change will allow visitors to start travelling in Thailand sooner since the antigen testing takes a much shorter time for the results to be known. At present, visitors must spend a night at hotels waiting for RT-PCR results before they can be out and about.

The spokesman cited as the reason the low proportion of infected visitors since Thailand reopened on Nov 1. Health authorities found 63, or 0.08%, of 81,000 air visitors infected with the virus, according to Public Health Ministry data on Thursday.

Thailand will also add Kanchanaburi, Nonthaburi and Pathum Thani to the list of provinces tourists can visit, in addition to Bangkok, Krabi, Phuket and Phangnga, starting Dec 1.

The CCSA will also allow border entry, starting on Dec 24 with Nong Khai, the province opposite Laos. Details of entry by sea will be announced later.

But the CCSA still kept all night entertainment venues closed at least until mid-January, despite pleas from operators to allow them to open next month to cash in on New Year holidays.

It cited concerns about the resurgence of Covid-19 clusters caused by congestions.

"The country missed the new year celebration last year because of clusters found in entertainment venues," Dr Taweesilp said.

The meeting on Friday also extended the state of emergency by two months to the end of January.

22/10/2021

Conditions for no-quarantine arrivals
The government on Friday outlined conditions for quarantine-free entry from Nov 1 for arrivals by air from 46 countries, which also apply to people who recently left Thailand for those countries.

It also gave details for arrivals under other criteria.

Apisamai Srirangson, a spokeswoman for the Centre for Covid-19 Situation Administration, said on Nov 1 Thailand would end quarantine for fully vaccinated arrivals from Australia, Austria, Bahrain, Belgium, Bhutan, Brunei, Bulgaria, Cambodia, Canada, Chile, China, Cyprus, Czech, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Latvia, Lithuania, Malaysia, Malta, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Slovenia, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom, the United States and Hong Kong.
Visitors from any of these countries must be fully vaccinated and have stayed in that country for at least 21 days prior to departure, she said.

They must have received their second Covid-19 vaccine dose at least 14 days before their flight to Thailand.

They must have an RT-PCR test that returns negative for Covid-19 no more than 72 hours before their flight. They must also have general health insurance cover of at least US$50,000.

Upon arrival, visitors will be given another RT-PCR test and can travel on without quarantine if the test returns negative. Pending the result, they must stay one night at one of specified hotels.

They must download application software that will track their whereabouts.
People who had earlier left Thailand to visit any of the 46 countries, but stayed there less than 21 days will not be quarantined and will not be required to have health insurance cover of $50,000, Dr Apisamai said.
These no-quarantine measures apply to arrivals by chartered flights at Suvarnabhumi, Don Mueang, Chiang Mai, Phuket, Samui, U-Tapao and Buri Ram airports.

Arrivals by other kinds of flights must enter "sandbox" programmes in, for example, Phuket, Koh Samui, Koh Phangnga and Krabi.

They must be fully vaccinated, have health insurance of at lest $50,000, and reserve accommodation for seven days at standard hotels in sandbox areas, and their RT-PCR tests must also have returned negative no more than 72 hours before their flight.
The people who have not been vaccinated, received only one dose, had the second jab less than 14 days before their flight, or arrive from countries than the 46 designated will be quarantined at specified places, including hospitals for foreign patients seeking medical treatment in Thailand.

They will be tested on arrival and again before the end of their quarantine.

The measures were subject to change, depending on the Covid-19 situation, Dr Apisamai said.

These arrivals will be retested for Covid-19 upon arrival and on day 6 or 7 afterwards, before leaving their sandbox zones. If the first test returns negative upon arrival, visitors can tour sandbox areas.

FIRST PUBLISHED : 22 OCT 2021 AT 15:18 by Bangkok Post

11/10/2021

Dear customer´s and friend´s!
Finally today Thailand announced officially opening Thailand for fully vaccinated tourists without quarantine from November 1st 2021. At the moment announced Great Britain,Singapore, Germany, China and USA. More countries coming later.
Bluebird Inn is ready to Welcome all old and new customers.
Hope to see you soon.
Meanwhile, please keep safe!

31/03/2020

Dear Valued Customers and Friends!
Thank you for staying at Bluebird Inn, and welcome back when it's possible!
In these hard times, please keep safe !

Happy New Year 2019!!
30/12/2018

Happy New Year 2019!!

Bluebird Inn Wishes All Merry Christmas and a very Good New Year 2018 (2561)
25/12/2017

Bluebird Inn Wishes All Merry Christmas and a very Good New Year 2018 (2561)

Bluebird Inn (Pattaya) Like to thank all our customers for year 2016 and wish a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year 201...
26/12/2016

Bluebird Inn (Pattaya) Like to thank all our customers for year 2016 and wish a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year 2017 (2560) an hope to see you soon again!

Bluebird Inn Wishes All Merry Christmas and a very Good New Year 2016 (2559)
24/12/2015

Bluebird Inn Wishes All Merry Christmas and a very Good New Year 2016 (2559)

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315/8 M9 , Banglamung
Pattaya
20150

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+6638110606

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