
BritTim
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Everything posted by BritTim
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I appreciate that you believe approaching Thai officials in the same way you would deal with bureaucracy in your home country should work. Sometimes, indeed, it does. However, if you want to achieve better results more often I advise you to learn to behave like Thais looking for service from officials. Offer them a wai and have a plastic smile on your face while mentally fantasising about the torture you would love to subject them to if you ever had the opportunity. As said, other approaches might work, but are high risk.
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More or less. The TM30 notification reports that a foreigner is staying at a particular address for 24 hours or more. The hotel or occupier of a property is obligated by law to submit this. If staying in a hotel, ask them for a receipt confirming that it has been done, and take it with you to Immigration.
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If you take Option 1), Immigration will not require an onward flight reservation when you apply for the 30-day extension. As far as your question 3) is concerned, according to the letter of the law, it is not theoretically allowed. However, it is 100% tolerated as long as your work has zero relationship with a Thai employer or Thai customers.
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It is allowable, in theory, for immigration on entry to agree to give you a visa exempt entry, leaving the visa untouched. However, they will rarely agree to do so. They are worried about being accused later of missing the visa, and erroneously providing a visa exemption. If they are aware of the visa, they will usually insist on stamping you in on it.
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If you have a genuinely pressing need to do an annual retirement extension early (for instance an appointment and air ticket to receive medical treatment abroad) many offices will agree to process the extension early. This is always at their discretion. However, more often than not, they will be sympathetic if your reasoning is convincing enough. "I would like to go on holiday then" will not be sufficient.
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NON-O without "access" to children/mother
BritTim replied to SuperSaiyan's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
At one time, it was available in Penang, but required financial proof. It is unclear if they still do them. -
Re-Entry Permit
BritTim replied to Isac Szwarc Brasil's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
It has been my belief that any permission to stay can be protected with a re-entry permit. However, a couple of unreliable sources claim that a re-entry permit cannot be given for the permission to stay from a visa exempt entry or an entry with a visa on arrival. The official immigration sources are silent on this. I have tried to contact Immigration in writing to get an official word on the matter, but have received no reply. I would suggest you visit your local immigration office in person, explain the situation, and see what they say. If you do, please report back on what they say about a re-entry permit from a visa exempt entry. -
Work Permit, and Visa Cancellation!
BritTim replied to mrtpp's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
The 7 days to leave the country is final. It is not an extension in the normal sense. Once you have an order to leave the country within 7 days, you must always comply. However, assuming you are eligible for visa exempt entry into Thailand, you can just do a same day border bounce at most land crossings for a 30-day visa exempt entry. -
Important note: Thai Visa Service will no longer accept people on their runs to Savannakhet who have the intention of applying for a tourist visa. The reason is frequent denials.
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Tourist visa after 2 visa exempts
BritTim replied to Sambo5000's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
The Thai embassy in Vientiane does not normally require a flight booking out of Thailand for a tourist visa application. If you have one, it would not hurt to provide it. -
Applying for Single Entry Visa in Kuala Lumpur
BritTim replied to ddddan's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
As the OP has indicated that he considers the thread concluded, it is now CLOSED -
Under consideration stamp
BritTim replied to Janis's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
The 60-day extension to visit your wife exists for every kind of permission to stay with very few exceptions. The most important restriction is that you are only allowed one such extension since the last time you entered Thailand with a visa or visa exempt (entry with a re-entry permit does not entitle you to an additional one if you already used your single allowed one since last entering with a visa). -
Departing with a four-day overstay will mean a 2,000 baht fine (500 baht per day) and an overstay on your immigration history which, while not a big immediate problem, could be held against you in the future. You do have the option of applying for a second extension of your visa exempt entry (paying 1,900 baht) which will be denied, but you are given seven days to leave the country. That can be useful, on occasion, but there ought to be better alternatives with forward planning.
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Under consideration stamp
BritTim replied to Janis's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
Most likely, even if the official in the local office wants to help, they will be unable to offer any guarantees. The application requires sign off at Division headquarters that operates on its own schedule. -
Applying for Single Entry Visa in Kuala Lumpur
BritTim replied to ddddan's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
You need an appointment to apply for a visa, but that does not mean you need to be a month in Kuala Lumpur to get the visa. Once you submit the application, I believe the visa is placed in your passport and returned to you the following day in the afternoon. I have seen no recent reports from those applying for tourist visas in KL. At last report, they were being strict in their requirements, and liable to deny an application for a tourist visa if you have spent long periods in Thailand as a tourist. -
Non-RE has nothing to do with retirement. It just states that the entry for made using a re-entry permit that protects an existing Non Immigrant permission to stay. You will see the same annotation if, for instance, you return with a re-entry permit that protects a permission to stay based on marriage to a Thai. In many countries, the terms "visa" and "permission to stay" are synonymous. That is not the case in Thailand, and a failure to understand that can lead to various serious problems.