Thai Future Tense and Intentions Quiz - Future Quest Game (Free)

Thai Future Tense and Intentions Quiz Banner - Learn how to talk about the future in Thai using the marker ja, intention phrases like yak ja, and future time expressions without conjugating verbs
Thai future tense and intentions vocabulary illustration covering the future marker ja, intention phrases like yak ja and wa ja, and essential future time expressions.

Having learned how Thai talks about the past without changing verbs, you are ready for its mirror image: the future. Just as the past relies on a few simple markers, the future in Thai is built on one small, powerful word - จะ (ja - will) - plus a handful of expressions for intentions, plans, and things about to happen. The verb never changes. This guide to the Thai future and intentions completes your command of time in Thai, giving you the tools to talk about plans, wishes, and what comes next.

This is where the elegance of Thai grammar truly pays off. With the past marker laew and the future marker ja, plus the unchanging verbs you already know, you can place any action anywhere in time. Where English juggles will, going to, about to, plan to, and want to with different structures, Thai handles them all with clean little markers placed before the verb. Learn the small family of future words and you can express everything from a firm plan to a passing wish, all while your verbs stay perfectly still.

This post covers the core future marker ja, the intention and plan expressions like yak ja (want to) and wa ja (thinking of), the about-to marker kamlang ja, and the future time expressions that anchor your plans. It pairs naturally with the past-tense post to complete your timeline toolkit. The Future Quest game at the end builds your fluency across three levels.

Ja — The Future Marker

The heart of the Thai future is จะ (ja), which means will or going to. You place it directly before the verb, and it turns any action into a future one - simple, consistent, and with no verb change at all:

จะjawill
+
ไปpaigo
=
จะไปja paiwill go

The pattern is simply ja + verb. Ja pai (will go), ja kin (will eat), ja maa (will come). This single marker placed before the verb does the work of English will and going to combined. To say what you will do tomorrow, you just add the marker: phrung nii ja pai (tomorrow I will go). Notice the beautiful symmetry with the past - where laew followed the verb to show completion, ja precedes the verb to show the future is yet to come.

🎯 The Quickest Future Word:
เดี๋ยว (diao - in a moment, shortly) is a wonderfully handy word for the near future. Diao pai (I'll go in a bit), diao maa (I'll come shortly). Often paired with ja as diao ja, it signals something will happen very soon. It is the Thai equivalent of "in a sec" and comes up constantly in casual conversation.

Intentions and Plans — Yak Ja and Wa Ja

Beyond simple future, Thai has graceful ways to express wanting and planning. These build on ja, adding a layer of intention that lets you share your hopes and plans naturally:

อยากจะ
yak ja
want to / would like to
yak ja pai - I want to go
ว่าจะ
wa ja
planning to / thinking of
wa ja kin - I'm thinking of eating
ต้อง
tawng
must / have to
tawng pai - I have to go
กำลังจะ
kamlang ja
about to / on the verge of
kamlang ja pai - about to go

The word อยากจะ (yak ja - want to) is built from yak (to want) plus ja, and it is one of the most useful intention phrases you can learn. Yak ja pai thiao (I want to go traveling), yak ja kin (I would like to eat). The softer ว่าจะ (wa ja - thinking of) expresses a tentative plan, perfect for ideas that are not yet firm. And กำลังจะ (kamlang ja - about to) captures that on-the-verge moment - you may recognize kamlang from its use marking ongoing actions, and here with ja it points to something just about to begin.

Future Time Expressions — When It Will Happen

To anchor your plans in time, you pair ja with future time expressions. These tell your listener exactly when something will happen, and they work seamlessly with the future marker:

พรุ่งนี้
phrung nii
tomorrow
มะรืนนี้
maruen nii
day after tomorrow
อาทิตย์หน้า
aathit naa
next week
ปีหน้า
pii naa
next year
ตอนหลัง
tawn lang
later
เดี๋ยว
diao
in a moment

Notice the tidy logic of หน้า (naa - next/coming), which builds future time expressions just as thii laew built past ones. Aathit naa (next week), pii naa (next year) - the word naa means the coming one. This mirrors the thii laew (last/previous) you learned for the past, giving you a clean pair: naa for future, thii laew for past. With these expressions plus ja, you can pinpoint any future moment with ease.

The Complete Timeline — Past, Present, Future

Now you can see the full beauty of the Thai time system in one view. The same unchanging verb sits at the center, and a single marker places it in time. Here is the complete picture using the verb pai (go):

PAST
ไปแล้ว
pai laew
have gone
NOW
กำลังไป
kamlang pai
going (now)
FUTURE
จะไป
ja pai
will go

There it is - the entire Thai tense system in one line. The verb pai (go) never changes; only the marker moves it through time. แล้ว (laew) after it for the past, กำลัง (kamlang) before it for the ongoing present, and จะ (ja) before it for the future. Three small words unlock all of time, with no conjugation to memorize. Once this clicks, you will find yourself moving freely across past, present, and future in your Thai conversations.

Quick Answers to Common Thai Future Tense Questions

For quick reference, here are direct answers to the questions learners most often ask about talking about the future in Thai:

How do you make future tense in Thai?
Place ja (will) before the verb. The verb never changes, so ja pai means "will go" and ja kin means "will eat." You can add a time word like phrung nii (tomorrow) to be specific, as in phrung nii ja pai.
What does ja mean in Thai?
Ja means will or going to. Placed before a verb, it marks the future, as in ja maa (will come) or ja kin (will eat). It is the mirror image of laew, which marks the past after the verb.
How do you say "I want to" in Thai?
Use yak ja plus the verb. Yak ja pai means "I want to go" and yak ja kin means "I would like to eat." It combines yak (to want) with the future marker ja.
How do you say "tomorrow" in Thai?
"Tomorrow" is phrung nii. Future time words often use naa (coming), as in aathit naa (next week) and pii naa (next year). Pair them with ja, as in phrung nii ja pai meaning "tomorrow I will go."
🔗 Connected Posts:
Post 43 - Past & Experience (laew, koei)
Post 33 - Verbs (the unchanging action words)
Post 21 - Days & Time (time expressions)
Post 44 - Future & Intentions (you are here)

The Future Quest game below has three levels. Level 1 matches future markers to meanings. Level 2 picks the right marker for a situation. Level 3 - the hardest - builds complete future and intention sentences. 🎯

🌅 Future Quest
Three levels - match markers, read the situation, build future sentences
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จะไป
ja pai
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Level Complete!

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📋 Future & Intentions Reference

Thai Roman Meaning Type
จะjawill / going toMarker (before verb)
อยากจะyak jawant toIntention
ว่าจะwa japlanning to / thinking ofIntention
ต้องtawngmust / have toIntention
กำลังจะkamlang jaabout toMarker
เดี๋ยวdiaoin a moment / shortlyTime
พรุ่งนี้phrung niitomorrowTime
มะรืนนี้maruen niiday after tomorrowTime
อาทิตย์หน้าaathit naanext weekTime
ปีหน้าpii naanext yearTime
ตอนหลังtawn langlaterTime
จะไปja paiwill goExample
จะกินja kinwill eatExample
จะมาja maawill comeExample
อยากจะไปyak ja paiwant to goExample
ว่าจะกินwa ja kinthinking of eatingExample
ต้องไปtawng paihave to goExample
กำลังจะไปkamlang ja paiabout to goExample

Verbs never change. ja (will) goes before the verb. Add yak (want) or wa (think) for intentions. Future time uses naa (coming): aathit naa, pii naa.

🌅 Completing the Thai Timeline

With the future marker ja in hand, you now hold the complete set of tools for expressing time in Thai - and it is remarkably small. Three markers carry the entire system: laew for completed past, kamlang for ongoing present, and ja for the future. Compare this to the dozens of conjugated forms a learner of a European language must absorb, and the efficiency is striking. The verb itself never bends or breaks; it simply receives a marker like a signpost pointing to when. This design means that once you know a verb, you instantly know how to use it across all of time, which is a profound head start in becoming conversational.

The Softness of Thai Intentions

One lovely feature of Thai future expressions is how they let you calibrate certainty. A firm plan uses ja directly, while a tentative idea takes ว่าจะ (wa ja - thinking of), which softens the statement to a mere consideration. This matters in Thai social life, where leaving room and not over-committing is often polite. Saying wa ja pai (I'm thinking of going) rather than a blunt ja pai (I will go) gives a gentle, non-binding flavor that fits the Thai preference for flexibility and saving face. Learning to shade your intentions this way is a subtle but real mark of social fluency.

Diao and the Flexible Thai Future

The word เดี๋ยว (diao - in a moment) deserves a cultural note, because it reflects a relaxed relationship with time that many visitors come to love. Diao can mean anything from a literal few seconds to a vague soon, and it is used generously throughout the day. A friend who says diao maa (I'll come in a bit) might appear in two minutes or twenty. Rather than imprecision, this reflects a cultural ease about timing that pairs naturally with the warm, unhurried rhythm of daily life in Thailand. Embracing diao - both the word and the spirit - is part of settling into Thai conversation.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

How do you make future tense in Thai?
Place จะ (ja) meaning will before the verb. The verb never changes, so ja pai means will go and ja kin means will eat. You can add a future time word like phrung nii meaning tomorrow to be specific, as in phrung nii ja pai meaning tomorrow I will go.
What does ja mean in Thai?
จะ (ja) means will or going to. Placed before a verb, it marks the future, as in ja maa meaning will come or ja kin meaning will eat. It is the mirror image of laew, which marks the completed past after the verb.
How do you say I want to in Thai?
Use อยากจะ (yak ja) plus the verb. Yak ja pai means I want to go and yak ja kin means I would like to eat. It combines yak meaning to want with the future marker ja, expressing intention or desire.
What is the difference between ja and wa ja in Thai?
จะ (ja) states a firm future action, as in ja pai meaning will go. ว่าจะ (wa ja) softens it to a tentative plan, meaning thinking of or planning to, as in wa ja pai meaning I am thinking of going. Wa ja is gentler and less committal.
How do you say tomorrow in Thai?
พรุ่งนี้ (phrung nii) means tomorrow. Future time words often use naa meaning coming, as in aathit naa meaning next week and pii naa meaning next year. Pair them with ja, as in phrung nii ja pai meaning tomorrow I will go.
How does the Thai tense system work overall?
Thai verbs never change form. Three markers handle all of time: แล้ว (laew) after the verb for completed past, กำลัง (kamlang) before it for the ongoing present, and จะ (ja) before it for the future. The same verb, such as pai meaning go, moves through time with just these markers.

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