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Everything posted by khunPer
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You can make a last will; even a simple will written in your own language and signed by two witnesses is legal. You can sign the will and have it files at the local district office. You can appoint an executor in your will. As the will needs to be translated to Thai language, a lawyer might be a good idea to help you and have the will written in both English and Thai language. When you die it will be a court in the country of your primary residence that will handle the will; i.e. Thailand if you live or mainly stay there. The executor will handle the will after the court has finished, including transfer from eventual US bank account; however check if there are some local US-rules or fees there to be fulfilled. There is no inheritance tax in Thailand at the moment.
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Public hearings underway for Koh Samui’s bridge-to-the-mainland
khunPer replied to webfact's topic in Koh Samui News
According to my calculator: If 34 billion baht is going to be paid by bridge fees for crossing and paid over 30 years, it's 3.1 million baht per day without including interest, maintenance and service expenses. If the fee for crossing is 500 baht – about same as a normal car on a ferry – more than equivalent to 6,200 normal cars need to cross the bridge in average every day, still not including interest, maintenance and service expenses... -
Wissanu asks Thaksin not to return on weekends or public holidays
khunPer replied to snoop1130's topic in Thailand News
All are equal, but some are more equal than others... -
I'm disappointingly boring straight, I just full time enjoy my life...????
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Being non-married don't stop one from creating an heir and being a good parent – I made one (heir) after I decided to move to Thailand...
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Easy, I didn't have a wife – I've never been married...????
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Would you ever marry a bar girl? If so, why?
khunPer replied to bob smith's topic in ASEAN NOW Community Pub
Even that Thais have a reputation of being relaxed, if not lazy, then this might not be the case here. Farm work in a village can harder work than studying; 30% of the population works with farming, even that farming only counts for 10% of GNP. Of course not all, but probably most girls in the bars and nightlife comes from farming-area villages. A village farm girl may not have long enough school – often not completed high school, if even attended one – to fulfill requirements for University or like level education. Furthermore it's a question of money. Education costs – both fees and living costs – and their family might not be able to support them while studying. Also, numerous village girls get married at young age – could be from age 15, some even younger – often a marriage that don't last, but often includes a child, or more, wherefore they also often ends up with as single mum. Village marriages are not registered – even considered as full marriage in the village – so, easy to end. A single mum will find it even harder to get an education, she is often happy to get a well paid job while parents or grannies takes care of her child/children. Some girls finish high school and start education at a university. If their family cannot support the costs, you might be able to meet some of the in the nightlife of the university cities – for example in some of Bangkok's go-go bars – where they find easy support funds for their studies and living costs; they might even be able to find a regular sugar dad and stop in the bar. I know one that managed to study law that way, she later became a very succesful business lady later. By the way, she told me that she only dated foreigners (read: had foreign customers), not to spoil har later eventual career as a Thai lawyer. You might also meet university students on leave (summer holiday) in the nightlife at holiday destinations, where they are earning money for next term – and they are normally not be interested in marriage, especially not in the cliental you mentioned in the opening post. However, a younger handsome succesful investment bank broker could be of interest; and yes, I do know such a case first hand. He was introduced to me – a Brit working in Hong Kong – and he told me that Western girls were too difficult, so he preferred to find an Asian spouse. The past didn't matter, the future did...???? -
Shall I Move to Permanently to Thailand?
khunPer replied to FaltuMora's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
Your $3.5k per month can give you an excellent life 12 month a year in Thailand – it's more than 100k baht a month – however, you'll might need a little more for 7/365 ad hoc sugar-babe dates, but far from $5k, if you don't permanently need exclusive hi-so VIP babes...???? -
Converting from Non-IMM O to Non-IMM OX
khunPer replied to Mike Teavee's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
No. Why do you need to change, it's much more convenient with a non-O based on retirement and annual extensions of stay; i.e. only 800k baht in deposit and no claim for health insurance. -
Non-B to Non-O within Thailand
khunPer replied to KruBrian's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
You don't need to apply for a new visa – you'll need to leave Thailand to do that – you are going to change your extension of stay based on work to one based on the conditions for retirement. Your funds, 800k baht, needs to be deposited in a Thai bank account two month before you apply for extension of stay based on retirement. There is no rule that the money has come from abroad, you can in principle have saved the up domestically from your work salary. I normally suggest – if you can afford it – just to leave the 800k baht deposit in a 12-month fixed bank account and withdraw the interest once a year, so the balance is always 800k baht. It makes it a lot more ease for the immigration officer to check your funds; and also yourself, as you can sleep well without thinking about when to top up from 400k to 800k before next extension of stay. There is no claim for health insurance – it's only when you originally entered on a non-OX visa for retirement – but it's always advisable to have one. -
Would you ever marry a bar girl? If so, why?
khunPer replied to bob smith's topic in ASEAN NOW Community Pub
Not all bar girls are hardcore gold diggers; i.e., referring to your opening comment. Many girls and ladies head down from a remote village to find the knight on the white horse – or today perhaps rather in the white Bentley – but as they need money to survive, and often also need to support family back in the village, they need to work and make some income while waiting for the right knight to ride by. Working in a factory or like is not a solution – white knights normally doesn't ride there – so a bar, or free-lancer (to keep the knight-style language) in the nightlife, is the better option, if not the very best. So yes, you can meet nice girls in the nightlife – girls from bars might also head on the nightclubs or after parties efter closing time or a short time hotel visit – and those free birds can actually "fall in love" with a good man, especially if that man is also a good provider. I know several former ladies from bar- and nightlife that has been succesful married to some of those knights that rides by, and some of the knights have also been good providers, who even can afford to buy a Mercedes to the wife, when they for example moves home to Germany or Switzerland. I also know of several former both nightlife birds, and so-called nice girls and ladies that has a normal job, whom have been married to a foreigner, moved abroad and got disappointed. The life as housewife in a foreign country was not what they expected. And I know first-hand horror stories about well of men that have been ripped off by their Thai wife, and in the worst cases we are talking about the nice ladies, not those from the nightlife. So, perhaps it's safer to settle with a bird from the nightlife, than those well-educated clever gold diggers...???? And the nice girl you meet on a dating site or in the shopping mall; do you know if she earlier has been working in a bar. Statistically some 80-90% of the flesh-market customers are not foreigners. She could have been working in a karaoke bar, you might never know about... Then of course there are the cases you refer to as "i see them pretty much daily. all over weight, bald, with no teeth", who has better chances to find a companion based on money than their look – don't forget that "handsum" in Thai often refers to the wallet – and even you might have lost hair, being little to the obese side and lost some teeth, you might still be a kind man and can be a good husband. Where I live in Thailand, I don't see many of these men – "...over weight, bald, with no teeth" – but I see many working girls with in real Western-style handsome young or younger men. The reason that there might not be many of the type you mention, could be that the competition from the real handsome type is too hard. I know many of these working girls and ladies that got married to handsome younger men – and some of them got married to good-looking middle-aged men, more like the knight the white Bentley – and as I've known several of both these nightlife birds and nice ladies as friend, I've even been invited as guest to some of their weddings; or just introduced to their husbands. However, it might be different what you see, in different parts of Land-of-Smiles. And by the way, you don't need to marry the bird from the nightlife to live together with her for "long time" after less than a month...???? -
Visa for child support
khunPer replied to thairat's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
You only need to top up to 800k baht 2 month (60 days) before you apply for the next extension of stay. However, your balance cannot be less than 400k baht from 3 month after granted extension of stay and until 2 month before the next. Visa for for supporting a child is the same; i.e., non-immigrant type-O. It's the extension of stay and the conditions that are different. However – as a forum member mentioned it in another thread – your condition for extended stay might have been voided, if your deposit balance is not in accordance with the rules, and you must leave the country. The original non-O visa you entered on, ended with the original 90-days periode in Thailand. You can re-enter either with a new non-O visa or as tourist (visa exempt or 60-days tourist visa), and apply for change to non-O visa domestically. -
As I explained in the post you commented, search for road name with number, for example: Sukhumvit 32...
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Srettha Not Involved in Alleged Tax Avoidance: Sansiri
khunPer replied to webfact's topic in Thailand News
Seller pays tax depending of land status, which can be business – i.e. 3.3% tax of the sales sum + 1% withholding tax of the highest amount, either appraised value or sales price – or private owned land, which will be income taxed after a reduction, depending of owner-ship time. As the income tax is a progressive scale in 5% steps, there will be less tax if the ownership is divided by numerous people instead of just one person. And yes, the sales tax is the seller's responsibility. -
Presumptions, he didn't say that, he only asked about road number.
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Try to search for the specific road number, then a marker might show up on the map.
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Moving with child to Thailand
khunPer replied to KruPlum's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
You can get non-immigrant O-type visa as dependent, either spouse to one with a working permit or parent to a child studying in Thailand. If you enter as a tourist, you can change to an O-type visa while in the country. For work you'll need an B-type visa and to my knowledge you can only obtain that from abroad. However, if you already have an extension of stay, you "can change the reason for your extension to one based upon working, teaching and etc." Source link... -
Are you reliving your youth in Thailand?
khunPer replied to bignok's topic in ASEAN NOW Community Pub
Indeed I'm reliving my youth in Thailand – in many ways it's back to the happy late 60's and early 70's, but with smartphones to remember and selfie everything – and I don't weed to do it... -
You need to register as income tax payer at a custom office. You'll need to prove that you stay in Thailand for minimum 180 days in a calendar year and have taxable Thai income. You will receive a small slip with your TIN (Tax Identification Number). Before March 31st every year you need to fulfil your Tax Return Form, in which you in "Number 3, Assessable Income Under Section 40 (4)", first section find "Interest, bill or debt instrument discount, which the taxpayer is the first holder (if opt not to pay tax at the rate of 15 percent)". Here you can claim to be income taxed of your interest, instead of paying a flat 15 % rate of withholding tax. Today you need to state your Tax return online in Thai language. If it's relative small money, I wouldn't bother. However, in principle you are fully income taxable when staying in Thailand for more than 180 days during a calendar year...
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Digital nomads in Thailand
khunPer replied to LS24's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
Normal advice is: Keep it under the radar...????