Skip to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

Thailand News and Discussion Forum | ASEANNOW

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

gamb00ler

Advanced Member
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by gamb00ler

  1. I guess it depends on which TRD staff you deal with. I'm entered Thailand on non-Immigrant O and I am currently on extension based on retirement. In 2021, after getting my first extension, I went to the TRD office in Nong Hoi. I guessed which door to go in, was soon pointed to the correct door and was given my Thai tax ID within 15 minutes. I told them SCB bank wanted my tax ID to open a new EZ Savings account. I had my bank books, a residence certificate from Thai Imm. and my passport with me.
  2. All VISA and MasterCard credit/debit cards use the same exchange rate that is set once each business day by the card processors (VISA and M/C). The difference is that some banks/financial institutions add a foreign transaction (1-3%) fee so that they make a larger profit on each transaction. Schwab gets high marks because they are one of the few institutions that do not add that extra fee. Schwab gives an even better deal because they also refund the ATM fees (220฿). Check the terms and conditions of your credit/debit cards so you are aware which ones add the foreign transaction fee.
  3. A question that I haven't seen asked yet is: what about Thai PIT in the year that you pass away? I wonder what TRD's rules regarding foreign assessable funds not yet remitted but bequeathed to a Thai tax resident will look like. I don't know the details but there was a lot of tax paid on my mother's behalf when she passed away in Canada about 25 years ago. At the time I had already left Canada so as executor I had to (over)pay an accountant to take care of her last filing.
  4. I can definitely think of instances where this statement is not true. I don't want to go into details but how capital gains are calculated for residential rental properties in the USA would make the heads of TRD staff spin. I think it very likely that TRD would want to use a much simpler method to determine capital gains.
  5. No.... he posted in MAGAlian, 45's native tongue.
  6. I posted this in the other bank interest rate thread: https://assets.aseannow.com/forum/uploads/monthly_2024_04/lhe.jpeg.1da1529cc6d2a6d6f2f8100f78c0ec96.jpeg
  7. Check your exchange rate on your bank statement to make sure you're not also getting charged a 1-3% foreign transaction fee. Record the date you did the withdrawal and then use the appropriate web site to check the exchange rate on that day. VISA: https://www.visa.co.uk/support/consumer/travel-support/exchange-rate-calculator.html MasterCard: https://www.mastercard.us/en-us/personal/get-support/convert-currency.html
  8. The very first album to win the Grammy for Best Album of the Year (1959) The only TV theme music to be included in the National Recording Registry at the Library of Congress.
  9. Dyson vacuums don't have the feature that I need most... and that is a motorized brush for cleaning carpets. Update for other suggestions: As another poster had suggested, I actually placed an order with Amazon.uk... that went sideways pretty quick. They initially said they would ship to Thailand but then claimed the item was damaged on the initial leg of that long journey and then stated it couldn't be shipped. I eventually spoke to an Amazon UK representative from the Indian subcontinent who promised it would be re-ordered and would arrive in 4 days. A couple of days later, my credit card was credited with a full refund. NEXT! I ended up buying from Amazon US.... now I've got to remember to only plug it into my step down voltage converter.
  10. You neglected to mention the busy road 2m from your sidewalk table.
  11. Is there no adjustment for the height of the wheels at the bottom of the door? I'm no expert, but checking out that option shouldn't take much effort.
  12. @thaibeachlovers has the "many people are saying" evidence.
  13. I'm surprised that the reason for this trial went right over your head despite you standing on a soap box.
  14. I use the Wise website to monitor the US$ --> ฿ exchange rate. Today I noticed that the usual fee for using an ACH "pull" to fund a transfer of $1000 to ฿ had increased to $2.79 vs $1.30 as it had been previously. I didn't notice if the fee for the actual exchange had changed. Each monthly transfer of 65K ฿ is going to cost about 3$ more if using the ACH to fund the transfer.
  15. @watgate do you have anyone in the US with a mobile that can assist you? If you do will they help you to set up Google Voice (GV) by using their phone number for the initial verification? GV will work for many financial institutions 2FA but not all. It seems the number of banks that accept GV is dropping over the last few years. A good long term solution is to use an UltraMobile PayGo prepaid plan that is $3/month. It is a legitimate US based mobile company and as yet I have not heard of any bank that doesn't accept them for 2FA texts. You would need a helper in the US to install the PayGo sim into a phone and connect to the mobile network to initialize the service and then send the sim card to you in Thailand. To use PayGo in Thailand you would need to swap sims back and forth or have a phone that allows more than 1 sim/esim. I have a PayGo sim and a phone that has my local Thai mobile service via an esim. Calls/texts to the PayGo number are sent/received via WiFi. The link that @GiveMeAColdOne provided is excellent and contains more details of what I just described. https://www.expatfinance.us/united-states/phone-verification
  16. I have an irrigation pump that has blown the "motor run capacitor" twice now. Both capacitors were rated as 30µF 450VAC 50/60Hz. The last one only lasted 2 months. The pump usually only starts once a day, but sometimes up to 4 times. Are there different grades of capacitors that I can use? What is a good brand available easily? Would a 45µF 440 VAC 50/60Hz be advisable and would it last longer? I'm obviously don't know much about these matters... LOL.
  17. Some are perhaps nonsense, but to me most are not... perhaps it's the whimsical tone GG uses that makes his posts seem nonsensical.
  18. I made no claim that Roth contributions are assessable in the eyes of TRD. I limited my statement to strictly the income generated on the contributions inside the Roth account. Your claim that such income is "tax exempt" is true for US taxes. I'm very convinced that the TRD will pay no heed to the fact that such income is exempt from US taxation. The TRD won't care if the income is generated on pre-tax or post-tax assets. I should add that only the income generated inside the Roth after Jan. 1, '24 would be assessable.
  19. It's easy to explain to you.... impossible to make you understand.
  20. The largest solar farms in the US are located in the southwestern deserts. What do you think happens to the heat from the sun that strikes the barren desert ground? Your logic is so flawed that it can't even be called merely wrong!
  21. Of course I haven't examined every type of income in the USA, but there is at least one income source that is not taxed in the US but may be assessable income for Thai tax residents. Income earned in a US Roth account is never taxed by the IRS if taken as a qualified distribution. It is probably assessable in the eyes of the TRD. I don't think you can state that such income is "taxed" in the USA and thus shouldn't be taxed in Thailand.
  22. I finally investigated the reason for our bill showing two consumption amounts. The smaller amount is indeed the units exported to PEA. It is just there to show the amount exported.... we are not charged nor given credit for those units.
  23. I have been assuming that commingling of funds before Jan. 1, '24 is irrelevant. If I'm right, then it's not possible as of yet to have funds that "have been commingled for a long time". Is my original thinking correct? While writing this post I may have thought of one advantage of commingled funds. If you have diverse assets in an account, you may have some assets that appreciate and some that fall in value. It seems likely that you can easily offset the gains of the former with losses from the latter. If the assets are in separate accounts it may not be easy to offset the gains with losses from a different account. I'm referring to the total funds that would be assessable upon remittance.
  24. Your example has confused me. It would make sense to me if you reversed your use of LIFO and FIFO. Using FIFO your first 1M of remittances would not be assessable as those funds existed before 2024. Using LIFO the first 100K of remittance would be assessable and the remaining 1M would not.
  25. Recently, a friend that I've known since before either of us moved to Thailand asked for my help in trying to transfer funds back to the USA. He and his Thai wife had sold properties that had appreciated substantially. The Thai bank did not ever ask him to show that he had brought any of those funds into Thailand. Perhaps that requirement applied in the past but it seems it no longer does. His bank was more preoccupied about the reason he was sending the funds.

Account

Navigation

Search

Search

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.