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Maestro

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Everything posted by Maestro

  1. Excellent. This means that you already have the answer to your question.
  2. Your post makes no sense. Your reference to Cameratas Guide is meaningless. Your comment "After 100 times approx using auto gates prior to December 2021" does not answer the question about the source of your statement that it is now clear that the automatic gates can also used by foreigners for entry into Thailand.
  3. @Leviiirx If I understand your opening post of this topic and your later clarification correctly, your last extension of stay for the reason of studying had 31 May 2024 as the expiration date you left Thailand on 17 May 2024 without a re-entry permit to an unnamed country, where you applied at the Thai embassy or a Thai consulate for and were granted a non-immigrant visa category B (non-B visa, for short) subsequently, you travelled to Thailand with the non-B visa and your passport was stamped with an arrival stamp giving you permission to stay for 90 days you currently have a valid work permit On the basis of the above premises, you are not currently and have not been on overstay and you are not liable to pay an overstay fine. If you had been subject to a fine, it would have been collected from you when you left Thailand on 17 May 2024. Ideally, a member of your HR team should accompany you when you apply for the one-year extension of stay for the reason of employment. If the immigration official insists on fining you for overstaying, make sure that the official shows you the receipt that will be given to you in return for your payment of the fine.
  4. I'd say it is fortunate that your employer's Human Relations department handles your visa and immigration matters because you seem to be confused with what you really have and the terminology. Don't worry about that, even immigration offices and many posters on this forum mix up the terminology. With the clarification you provided, it looks very much like the immigration official who told you that you would have to pay an overstay fine may have been wrong or that you misunderstood what he said. Leave it in the hands of the HR team and all will be fine.
  5. Are you quite sure that it is "clear" that foreigners with a re-entry permit can use the automated gates also for entry?
  6. A copy of what visa are you talking about?
  7. You forgot to post the link to the web page where you noticed that. Could you post it, please?
  8. When you say student visa, do you mean Non-immigrant visa category ED or do you mean extension of stay for the reason of studying?
  9. As a tax resident in Thailand because he lives in Thailand 180 days or longer in a calendar year, the OP is free to declare his worldwide income in Thailand. He does not need a Thai employer and a Thai work permit to file a tax return in Thailand.
  10. You have to wait until the Discover Thailand Visa (DTV) is officially launched and then check the criteria and conditions for it.
  11. For travel planning, I would use this site: https://www.iatatravelcentre.com/passport-visa-health-travel-document-requirements.htm#
  12. There is also no such requirement when applying for a new visa. (Just in case the OP really meant visa)
  13. You did not do a "60 day visa exempt" last year. That must have been a single-entry tourist visa.
  14. In dtv.in.th, "in" stands for info. The URL of Thai government domains often ends with "go.th", where "go" stands for government.
  15. WHOIS search results Whois Server Version 2.1.7 Domain Name: DTV.IN.TH Registrar: THNIC Name Server: HEATHER.NS.CLOUDFLARE.COM Name Server: JUSTIN.NS.CLOUDFLARE.COM DNSSEC: unsigned Status: ACTIVE Updated date: 28 May 2024 Created date: 28 May 2024 Exp date: 28 May 2025 Domain Holder Organization: Personal Information* Domain Holder Street: Personal Information* Domain Holder Country: TH Tech Contact: Personal Information* Tech Organization: Personal Information* Tech Street: Personal Information* Tech Country: Personal Information* >>> Last updated on Sun, 23 Jun 2024 21:58:25 UTC+7 <<< Source: https://sg.godaddy.com/whois/results.aspx?itc=dlp_domain_whois&domain=dtv.in.th
  16. This is correct. Tenants can file the TM 30 on their own. Section 4 of the Immigration Act: Section 38 of the Immigration Act: According to Section 4, whoever is the "chief possessor" of the house (in Section 38 called the dwelling place) is the householder. If a tenant is the chief possessor, the tenant is the householder. If the owner is the chief possessor, the owner is the householder. If another person, natural or juristic, is the chief possessor, that other person is the householder. In my opinion, with a rented property it is best for the householder, ie the tenant, to submit the TM.30 notification. It is he, the tenant, who has the sole authority to decide who resides in the dwelling and it is he who knows when a foreigner, ie himself or an invited guest, arrives and whether this arrival makes a TM.30 notification necessary. In fact, as the owner I would write into the lease contract that the tenant is responsible for compliance with any and all immigration requirements and that I will provide the necessary documents for that purpose.
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