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David Walden

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Posts posted by David Walden

  1. 2 minutes ago, elviajero said:

    Of course it’s ok, and not corrupt.

     

    You're paying for a service.

    Yes, I think a hundred years or so in Arab countries each town used to have an Assan (good job then).  For a price, if you wanted someone bumped off you would do the business with the Assan he would carry out the deed and keep it secret.  If the Assan was found out he would just say "I'm not guilty as someone paid me to assassinate that person, they are the murderers they paid me to kill that person so it's their fault they done it!  it's not my fault that I killed him you paid me to do it, so it's you are the guilty one.  The payee would be found not guilty and the payer would be shot dead the next day (I think)...can you see what I'm getting at.  I think it's nearly the same in some counties today. TIT.

    • Haha 1
  2. 1 hour ago, Pattaya46 said:

    He could still send this 800k home and then use the 12 x 65k method :wink:

    I think they may have that option covered.  As far as I know, the object for Thailand is for you be able to show that at the end of the 12th month you can prove you have Bt800,000.  Beg steal or borrow it or get it out of your nest egg account. Or go home.

  3. As was the case 6/7 years ago that pharmaceuticals in Thailand were much cheaper than in Australia, US, Europe etc.  Everyone used to talk about how cheap they were, but not so now.  I take Somac (stomach acid suppressant) if I buy it in Australia one month's supply is only $6 under the Aus national health scheme or with a prescription from a docto for a generic brand from Germany Aus $15 for 30 tablets full price ( not on NHS).  It is used as an acid suppressant and is usually used for the treatment of stomach reflux, a hundred million people worldwide take it every day or similar.  If I buy the same product in Thailand one month supply generic brand 28 tablets cost Aus $75.  That is 5 times the non-NHS price I pay in Australia.  It is Bt950 for 14 tablets in Thailand from Cha-am hospital and the same from any chemist anywhere in Thailand that is 67 bt for each tablet.  Yes, a bit more than 5 times more than Aussie price retail of about Bt12 each tablet...another nail in the coffin about saving money with pharmaceuticals in Thailand.

  4. 3 hours ago, lucjoker said:

    yes, i was wrong.......it is not 800 000 but 400 000 thb to bring in every year.

    Plus the extra trips to bank and immigration to prove you are a good boy.

    Plus the need to be in the country to do all these trips.

    Some people dont spend more than a few months a year in Thailand, because ,except for the few winter months , it is too hot for older people .

    And again you are right, English is not my first language, that would be a big handicap .

    English is only my 4th language , not perfect ,but i have not the limited vision of only 1 language, as most "first language" people.I'm sure you speak a lot af languages so i'm not ridiculing you .

    Have a nice day. 

     

     

     

    I think it may be prudent to expect that Thai Immigration assumes that each applicant who deposits Bt800,000 in a bank account to get a retirement visa also has some sort of other pension from somewhere in addition to the qualifying amount.  If the Bt800,000 is all an applicant has in the world and no other ongoing income, well THAILAND as a retirement destination is clearly not for them.

    • Like 1
  5. 4 hours ago, Mango Bob said:

    Tell me Big Joke why do a retired person here have to keep 400,000 baht in the bank all year long and 800,000 in the bank for 5 of those months while a married expat only has to have 400,000 in the bank to season for a few months a year.   Why do I as a retiree need to have more money than a married person who supports his family, her family and half the village need less money then I do?

    Because that is the way they want to do ...get used to it...Thai retirement requirements are mostly softer than others countries...I'll say it again "get used to it"

  6. Having applied for and received my retirement visa in Australia and being able to show that Bt800,000 surrender value of my retirement was adequate.  In a general discussion with the Thai lady at the Embassy who handled my application about the Bt 800.000 requirement she commented and said: "The Bt800,000 is required as it proves you have enough money to live comfortably in Thailand for a year at about Bt65,000p/m." and will not be a problem to Thailand.

       This now appears as though it will be standard practice to get a retirement visa in Thailand or in your home country.  It figures that if Thai Immigrations expects you to have this money in a bank account when you apply, it should also expect that you are required to withdraw funds to Bt 65,000 each month during the period of the visa to live on, that's what it is for.  Thai immigration could easily use their influence to have all Thai banks provide accounts so this could happen.  Thus avoiding all the confusion and rubbish and corruption around retirement Visa applications...or would that be just too simple and too easy?

       You may have to beg steal or borrow or take the money from your own bank account.  But how you get the money, well that is another story.

  7. 1 hour ago, Lacessit said:

    The Thai Embassy website says nothing about retirement visa extensions or retirement visas, only visa applications. It also states multiple entry non-immigrant visas will be treated on a case-by-case basis, and any visa application is subject to rejection as seen fit. I suggest you dial down the sanctimony.

     

    This how I get my Visa in Australia using the surrender value of my super pension fund which has to be at least Bt800,000 (available in most countries).  I do not have any funds in Thailand and am not required to so...it all works costs $275 plus police and medical reports

     

    Retirement Visa....from the Royal Thai Embassy web site in Canberra...the extension is granted if you depart and return just before the 1st year of the visa concludes you will get a one year extension at the airport from an immigration officer (free).  You can stay for 2 years and have no money in Thailand (that how I do it).   My present visa is now 18 months old and I'm in the extension period.

    Non-Immigrant Visa Category “O-A” (Long Stay)

     

    Purpose of Visit:  This type of visa is issued to applicants aged 50 years and over who wish to stay in Thailand for a period of not exceeding 1 year.  Employment of any kind is strictly prohibited.

     

    Eligibility:

    • Must be aged 50 years and over on the date of submitting an application;
    • Must not be a person prohibited from entering the Kingdom as prescribed by the Immigration Act B.E. 2522 (1979);
    • Must not have criminal record in Thailand or in Australia or the country of his or her residence;
    • Must have the nationality of or permanent residence in the country where the application is submitted;
    • Must have no prohibitive diseases as indicated in the Ministerial Regulation No. 14 B.E. 2535 (1993) i.e. Leprosy, Tuberculosis, Elephantiasis, drug addiction, alcoholism and third step of Syphilis.

     

    Validity of a Visa:  The validity of a visa is 12 months with MULTIPLE ENTRIES

     

    Period of Stay: Travelers will be permitted to stay in Thailand for a period of not exceeding 12 months.

     

    Visa Processing Fee:  $275.00 AUD per application

     

    Documents Required: (1 original and 2 copies)

    • Your actual Passport or Travel Document. (Passport or Travel Document must not expire within 18 months);
    • Three completed and signed application FORM;
    • Three passport-size photographs (3.5 x 4.5 cm.) taken within 6 months with a full-face view without hat or glasses. (Photocopy not accepted);
    • A completed PERSONAL DATA FORM;
    • A bank statement showing a deposit at the amount equal to no less than 800,000 Baht, or an income statement (an original copy) with a monthly salary of no less than 65,000 Baht, or a deposit account plus monthly income of no less than 800,000 Baht a year;
    • A police name check certificate issued no longer than 3 months prior to submitting the application;
    • A MEDICAL CERTIFICATE indicating that the applicant has no prohibitive diseases as indicated in the Ministerial Regulation No. 14 B.E. 2535 (1993) issued no longer than 3 months prior to submitting the application with a rubber stamp of the concerned doctor or hospital on the certificate confirming its authenticity.

     

    ⇒ In case where the accompanying spouse is not eligible to apply for a retirement visa, he or she will be considered for temporary stay under a Non-Immigrant Category “O” visa.  A marriage certificate must be provided as evidence.

     

    Instruction:

    • When you have prepared all the original documents as required, you must then make 2 copies of each document.
    • Afterward, you must separate the documents into 3 sets. Within these sets, you should arrange the documents in the order given above.  All together you will have 1 set of the original documents and 2 sets of copies.
    • You must take all 3 sets to a Notary Public to bind and notarize each set. The binding and notarization of documents must only be done by a Notary Public or Justice of the Peace.   

     

    Important Reminder:

    • With retirement visa, you require to report to the Office of Immigration Bureau or Police Station in your residential area every 90 days.
    • You may report to the competent authority by sending a Report form (Tor Mo 47) together with a copy the biographic page of your passport and the page showing the latest arrival stamp to the Office of Immigration Bureau, South Sathon Road, Sathon District, Bangkok 10120. It should be send 7 days before reaching the 90 days stay in the Kingdom.
    • FAILURE TO COMPLY MAY RESULT IN THE CANCELLATION OF YOUR VISA.

     

    Submitting Application by Mail:

    • Send all required documents to Royal Thai Embassy – Visa Section, 111 Empire Circuit, Yarralumla, ACT 2600
    • A self-addressed return envelope must be provided.
    • Payment in a Money Order made payable to “the Royal Thai Embassy.” Cash not accepted. (You can buy a Money Order from the post office)

     

    Disclaimer:  Consular officers reserve the right to request additional documents as deemed necessary as well as reject any application without having to provide reason.

     

    Extension of Stay: An extension of stay can be requested at the Office of the Immigration Bureau located at

                Government Center-Chaengwattana

                Building B, No. 120 Moo 3, Chaengwattana Road

                Tungsonghong Sub-District, Lak-si District

                Bangkok 10210

                Tel (662) 141-9889  Fax (662) 143-8228

                ⇒ www.immigration.go.th

     

    The extension of stay and change of certain types of visa is at the discretion of the immigration officer.ssy Canberra

    • Sad 1
  8. 3 hours ago, Lacessit said:

     I'm not aware you can apply for a retirement EXTENSION in Australia. Your method is at risk if for some reason the Thai Embassy decides to reject the next O-A application because you've gone to the well once too often.

    Just look at the Thai Embassy web site under retirement visa before commenting.  Open thine eyes and yee shall see.

    • Confused 1
  9. It's looking more and more simple to apply for your retirement Visa in your own home country through the Thai Embassy as I do. Means going home at least once every 2 years (not so bad if you live in Perth Aus $400 return). All I have to do is show them that the surrender value of my pension fund is at least Bt800.000 in Aus, get a truthful police report ($75) get a doctor to give you a medical to say your not about to die with the Clapp (1/3rd stage) and a bit of paperwork and Aus $275 for a multi-entry visa and you get a O-A  M retirement visa in about 5 working days and arrive in Thailand for just on 2 years with everything in place ...that is of course if they haven't changed that way also...yet!  It is still on the Embassy web site as available.  And you don't have any money in a Thai bank.  My pension fund goes up about 10% each year (not so good lately) you might get 1% interest if you put the Bt800,000 in a Thai Bank.  If you are forfeiting Bt70,000 a year on interest then that is what you are paying for a retirement visa that is about Aus $3000 a year.

    • Like 2
  10. 1 hour ago, Pattaya46 said:

    Please... :angry::angry::angry:

    When will you stop to bring your story of O-A visa in threads that are about Retirement Extension only !!!

    You probably get this request from others more than 10 times already ! But you continue !!! :sad::sad::sad:

    I'll be happy to stop when people stop asking the same question.  I really don't mind.  It will probably take another 100 times to get the full story across to those people with needs to know.  My experience is that even if there are 100 pages of 20 post in each the average poster only reads the last 3 or 4 pages.  They don't go back far, with human nature I don't think that's gunna change soon.

     

  11. 21 hours ago, raysunshineray said:

    Hi Ubon Joe,

    Do you know whether the combination method is also an option when applying for OA visa in home country (UK)?

    If it is an available option, are there similar problems to doing this in Thailand when it comes to proofs of income? 

    I have a state pension and a private pension - all documented, and these can be shown.

    I wonder whether existing documents confirming pension are enough or any additional proofs required?

    Would an additional specific letter from the pension providers perhaps be required, or existing documents legally attested?

    This question arises from the fact that IO in Thailand have asked for further proofs of income (specifically mentioning pensions recently) from certain Embassies (US, UK etc) which they have said they cannot provide. 

    One can't simply assume that it would be a different matter when applying in one's home country.

    Thanks for your time and valuable advice.

    If you have a state pension in UK and a private pension as well and that private pension in a recognized fund and has a surrender value of equal to BT800.000, your UK Thai Embassy should just accept that as enough to obtain a retirement visa.  That's how I do it in Aus.  I don't even mention the Centrelink Government Pension or the cash I have in my bank. The surrender value of Bt800,000 is all I need.  Like the lovely lady at the Aus Thai Embassy in Canberra says "Don't put in your application about Aus Pension or money in the bank that will only confuse immigration.  The surrender value of Bt800,000 is enough".  Of course, some people have given all their money to a pension fund for the whole of life cover.  They have no surrender value you get a regular payment until you are dead and no refunds.  This type of pension is seldom issued now in Aus and petty well all Super Fund investment policies have a surrender value.  My Surrender value is published on my fund account each day, it changes in sympathy with the share market value.  I can take as much as I like or as little as 6% of the balance each year (that's the law as it is in a tax-free environment).  You don't have to get a download just a statement must an original document from the fund and signed, not a copy (so you can't download it).  The lady at the Embassy agrees that my Aus pension, plus the money I take from my bank managed pension fund each year would also get me the pension.  "But don't do it that way just put the surrender value on your application and say no more, we treat it as money in a bank OK". It's proof you have Bt800,000 to live off for the next 12 months."  Works well, Visa all sorted out is less than 10 days.  Arrive in Thailand with everything in order and you can stay up to 2 years. (see the previous post about that)

    • Like 1
    • Confused 1
  12. 22 hours ago, AAArdvark said:

    If you are doing it at the embassy in DC, there is no need to have it notarized nor to have dated the day before.  If it is done at a consulate like at LA or NYC it might be. 

    Well yes, it is an abuse of process and an insult to require an applicant to have an original bank statement issued by your bank, a police report from the state police commissioner, a medical from your doctor and all documents of the 36 pages of your application signed by a JP.  That is all 36 pages.  But the Thai Embassy in Canberra would not issue the visa unless all 36 pages of the application were signed individually by a JP, my JP is a friend and neighbor.  He just kept on making comments as he signed these 36 pages which were unprintable on these pages and laughing (funnyman)...What all of them?  5555.  We are only here to witness your signature.  He would only sign each of the 36 pages if I signed before him because as he said "I'm only witnessing you signing., I have no idea what's in the documents.  He signed all the pages reluctantly as a friend because I told him they wouldn't give me the visa unless he did sign (TIT in Australia).

        Like I often say   "I sent you a five page letter because I didn't have time to write you a one page letter".

  13. 1 hour ago, brian1314 said:

    David,
    I am a retiree trying to follow this post with regard to the new regulations and the combo method of obtaining extensions, so please, please, please stop posting off topic comments about OA visas

    To use the combo method as I said Australians are in a good position.  The Australian Centrelink Social Service will pay your pension in to your bank account at their expense anywhere in the world each 4 weeks and that is irrefutable proof that you are getting your pension in a Thai bank of about Bt500,000 per year from the Aus Gov.  You should be able to put another Bt300,000 in a Thai Bank a/c for 3 months to qualify to receive a Retirement visa.  The reason why this should be so is that it is simple proof.  To make it work it has to be simple and provable (sadly lacking in the past).  The Embassies and Thai Immigration are not going to peruse long winded profit an loss statements and company structures, shares, family trusts, etc for you so you can get a visa.  In the past, the Embassies sort of pinned the tail on the donkey had a wild guess and Thai Immigration accepted this as it came from an Embassy.  This is simply not going to happen in future (I think, TIT).  When I got my retirement visa in Australia I used the statement from my Bank managed retirement fund showing a surrender value of more than the required amount.  Very simple for the Embassy.  The lady at the Thai Embassy said "some people bring share certificates, bonds company profit and loss statements etc. an all sorts of stuff for us to look at and they will not do it, it could take all day. They have to be able to prove they have Bt800,000 in a bank a/c, or a retirement fund like mine or prove they have proof that they have a pension.  It must be simple preferable a single amount of say Bt300,000 and a pension to add up to Bt800,000 per year and then only after a year at least.  If you do it properly it will all work out in about 10 days and you will arrive in Thailand to be good for 2 years stay.

    • Confused 2
  14. 53 minutes ago, Jingthing said:

    Well, not exactly.

    I'm not frustrated by newbies in general.

    I am specifically frustrated with your posts here about O-A visas and reentering with them while still valid when the actual topic has nothing to do with that.

    The actual topic here is about applications for annual extensions based on retirement done at immigration offices in Thailand using the combo method.

    At this point, combo method applications with embassy letters should be expected to be accepted as they have been for many years, but combo method applications without embassy letters appear to be much more problematical. I hope like others that situation will improve but I wouldn't bank on that.

    I think the best advice without embassy letters is to do an 800K seasoned bank application if you can until the uncertainty about combo method applications without embassy letters is resolved (if ever). 

    We will indeed start to see more reports of such attempted applications over time as there will be people not prepared to make any other type of application that also failed to get their embassy letter last year when they could (referring here of course to nationals impacted by the stoppage of letters). 

    A bigger wave of such reports can't really be expected until several months from now until after the letters obtained last year run out of validity time (reportedly six months). So I guess starting in about JULY is when this stuff really hits the fan for larger numbers. 

    It is very hard to understand anything about these posts.  Like I say I've been trying for 7 years.  There are lots of issues that need to be cleared up before many people can get satisfactory results from their retirement visa applications...Thai Immigration has painted themselves into a corner with pedantics.

  15. 2 hours ago, Jingthing said:

    My understanding is that O-A visas are always issued these days with multiple reentry permits by default.

    You can only get an O-A  M Visa which the Thai Embassy refers to it as a Retirement Visa in you apply to Thai Embassy in Australia and elsewhere, so people know they are applying to the Embassy for a Retirement Visa.  Sorry if my comments sound ridiculous but pedantics is what Thai Immigration is all about in Thailand...much simpler if you get your Visa in your home country.  Much fewer pedantics. 

  16. 2 hours ago, Jingthing said:

    Oh geez, dude, this is getting ridiculous.

    Yes, if entering on an O-A still valid for additional one year stay stamps at a land border they should grant that as well. But they likely see those much less frequently than airport arrivals so it would probably make sense to talk to them before handing over your passport. 

     

    Again, the topic here is about formal applications for annual extensions of stay based on retirement done at immigration offices in Thailand.

     

    The rules for that having NOTHING at all to do with the experience of having a still valid O-A visa and entering at borders and getting new one year stamps.

     

    At a later date if you wish to stay in Thailand, after you can no longer get additional one year stays based on a valid O-A visa, then you also would be applying for an annual extension of stay based on retirement at an immigration office in Thailand. Got that? Or you could go back to your home country and get a new O-A. Some expats do serial O-A visas, but most long term people don't. 

    Ahhhh now that all sounds simple.  I have been studying it all for 7 years now and I'm still trying to get a handle on it.  Are you getting frustrated with these obvious questions that will pop up when laymen try to enter Thailand honestly to retire?  I bet that 95% of the first time applicants following these posts still have not a clue about getting a Retirement Visa or permission to stay, extensions to stay etc. or in a Thai Embassy overseas.  It's all a disgrace.

  17. 1 hour ago, Jingthing said:

    Yep, nothing to do at all with applications for annual extensions to stay at immigration offices in Thailand. Airport entry points are not immigration offices and there is no application process when entering on an O-A that is still valid for continued additional one year stamps. 

    So if I went to Cambodia and back on a bus what do I get when I cross the border as I return (on a bus) or is that not possible due to red tape.?  When I got my extension, permission to stay or anything you want to call it, I did the business at an immigration entry point at DMK speaking to and receiving Thai Immigrations authority stamp to stay provided where it says Visa by an Immigration Officer (was on his badge) and you say and Thailand says it's not an Immigration Office.  That sort of logic would only apply in Thailand.  Yes, TIT.

  18. 2 hours ago, JackThompson said:

     

     

    I will never understand this "self-flagilating expat" mindset - blaming out own people like some sort of Expat-Stockholm-Syndrome.  It was a FELONY to lie on those stat-docs - no small thing.  Immigration could have reported any cases where lying was evident at any time.  To my knowledge, no published study/report has indicated a high percentage of false incomes reported.

     

    Meanwhile, immigration actively-encourages completely faked financials via agent applications.  Therefore, it is clear they Do Not Care about whether the incomes reported are legit.  No - they simply saw embassy-letters as taking a "cut of their agent-action."  Given many of their staff act criminally on a daily-basis, many do likely believe everyone else has a similar criminal-mind, so assume "they must be lying" on embassy-letters.  The thief thinks everyone else is really a thief at heart, too (or a fool, for having principles - therefore, a sucker to be extorted).

    WE are the golden-geese laying "free foreign money job-creating" eggs, and immigration is the one killing us, for no sane-economic reason, at every turn - out of selfish greed for maximizing their corrupt money streams.

    Could not have put it better myself...thank you

  19. 13 minutes ago, Jingthing said:

     

    For the nationals effected we are beyond the debate about why the letters were nixed.

     

    It happened and now the nationals impacted must deal with it.

     

    The focus here is income methods for retirement extensions in Thailand. The new memo covers the 65k monthly import option again for extensions in Thailand. Not relevant to OA visa from home country.

     

    There appears to be problems with immigration acceptance of combo method applications sans embassy letters.

     

    Bank method still stands either for an OA visa from home country or annual extensions in Thailand. Money for an OA typically show money in home country. Money for 800k bank method for annual retirement extensions must be shown with money in a Thai bank account properly seasoned. Money shown outside Thailand is not ever accepted for retirement extensions.

     

    Sent from my Lenovo A7020a48 using Thailand Forum - Thaivisa mobile app

     

     

     

    So do you think I've lied?.  I've never had money in any Thai bank in all the time I have been coming to Thailand...Retirement Visas permission to stay, extension etc.etc.  I rest my case.

    • Confused 1
  20. 1 hour ago, jacko45k said:

    UJ isn't a Thai. Wrong terminology means wrong information!

    I have 3 entries in my passport in regard my 3 arrivals to my present O-A   M Retirement Visa.  Being visa class non im O-A.

    1...Arrived on 4th Oct 2017.  Admitted till 3rd Oct 2018.  (364 days) (Departed 11th Dec 2017)

    2...Arrived on 22 March 2018.  Admitted till 21st Mach 2019 (364 days)  (departed 11th July 2018).

    3...Arrived on 29th Aug 2018.  Admitted till 27th Aug 2019  (still here).

          Even the Immigration officers just call the visa an  O-A visa as shown in the passport.  There is a border to the stamp made up from a whole lot of coded letters and numbers.  Perhaps you or Thai Immigration know what these characters mean. I haven't got a clue?  So how come you know so much when even the Immigration Officers at DMK haven't got a name for it???  Assuming your correct could you put it into layman's terms so that ordinary people can understand what Immigration is talking about...please 

  21. 7 hours ago, Jingthing said:

    I find your comment incredibly naïve. The U.S. embassy is likely done with this. They rudely stopped issuing embassy letters disrupting the residence stability of a great number of U.S. citizens. Then they talked about an alternative for using the income method. For a while they gave some weak tea lip service to trying to "train" Thai immigration to accept U.S. income documents such as social security benefits letters. Nothing came of that. Nothing, and it's clear it never will.

     

    The alternative came from Thai immigration in a MEMO that fails to mention the combination method. The rules in the memo are extremely onerous even for people with the full 65K income. Must show 12 monthly transfers. Each must be at least 65K. Each must be from abroad. Each and every year for as long as the expat is getting annual extensions in Thailand. No room for any flexibility or mechanical/timing issues with money transfers / exchange rate dips (if your income is close to 65K) at all which actually in real life are not particularly rare. It basically pushes many people into using the 800K bank method which is fine for people that can meet that and are willing. In my view, this new "memo" scheme (the income method without embassy letter) is probably the MOST ONEROUS scheme in the world for nations that have retirement legalization programs. But the 800K method remains which is significantly less onerous so it's not all bad news, as at least that methods stands. As far as the U.S. embassy is concerned they likely think they've already done their job after messing people up stopping the letters. Now there is that income method alternative without letter which didn't exist before. Should there be pressure to make the combo method actually apply to income applications without letter? According to our top guru here it already does but it's already clear in real life some or many offices do not see it that way. Yes, of course. I'm very skeptical the U.S. embassy is going to be very involved in such efforts, and even with success, it's the same inflexible MONTLY IMPORT rules, but with the combination method instead. Why am I skeptical? Look at that totally unclear memo we got from Thai immigration as far as combo. Look at the total lack of flexibility in the memo rules. The U.S. embassy was supposedly involved in suggesting things to Thai immigration in that. I don't see how the results can be seen as anything but very expat-unfriendly. The U.S. embassy was supposedly interested in encouraging Thai immigration to accept U.S.  based income documents. (Will never happen.) If these are the type of results we can expect from proactive action from the U.S. embassy, then to expect much more at this point is as I said before, quite naïve. 

    1...I believe the reason why letters letter of income are no longer supplied is that they were based on a sworn declaration in the form of affidavits or stat decs.  the information used in these affidavits to create these letters is mostly based on false information or to put it bluntly is "lies and BS". 

     

    2...There is only one real requirement you have to present to obtain a Retirement visa and that is you have to show you have Bt800,000 in your home country bank or in a Bank a/c in Thailand and some paperwork.  To achieve that outcome Thai Immigration has been allowing some flexibility in establishing proof of how you achieved proof of this money.  It has become evident that many people that applied for these letters did not have the required money and the information on your affidavits or stat dec is a "cock and bull story". If you do have the money in a bank you don't need the letter.  I'm sorry for the genuine ones who have been affected by this.  All Australian have been caught up in these letters issue.  We make a declaration (Statutory declaration) stating we have the required funds.  The Embassy simply witnessed our signature on our document.  Thai Immigration accepted that as fact. The "cock and bull way " is no longer accepted by the Embassies and Thai Immigration.  Yes, someone killed the goose that laid the golden eggs.  Too much BS.

    • Like 1
    • Sad 1
  22. 7 hours ago, Jingthing said:

    I find that hard to believe. The average U.S. social security pensions is significantly under 65K per month. So I don't believe combination applications have been at all rare in the past. It's been a well accepted method.


    HOWEVER, it's a totally new ballgame with income applications WITHOUT embassy letters. That's obviously because the "memo" explaining the alternative way to income qualify for retirement ONLY talks about monthly imports of at least 65K and nothing else. 

     

    It should not surprise anyone that immigration offices are taking that literally. Of course they should still do combination applications without embassy letters but in my view it's an error in the MEMO not to spell that out EXPLICITLY.

     

    In the interview on 103 FM the US Consul indicated that the combo method had been discussed between him and Thai immigration extensively.  I believe his comments on this subject could indicate the US Embassy is likely to use their influence to have US citizen use the combo method more often if required and they would assist by counseling applicants on how to go about it better, perhaps by using their influence to get Thai immigration to implement this method more simply.  He also indicated that the US Embassy in Thailand had 1,600 staff whose main aim is to assist issues like this and invited US Citz not to held back. Perhaps if a few people make the application it will get the ball rolling.

    • Sad 1
  23. 6 hours ago, ubonjoe said:

    You got a one year permit to stay allowed by your valid OA visa not a extension of stay when you entered the country.

    I prefer to use simple English so that people know what I'm trying to tell them.  I am talking about my personal experience.  I was given a permit or extension or permission to stay in Thailand which is valid for a year after my original visa expired...I don't care what the Thais want to call it.  I'm using it as a verb, not as a noun.

    • Confused 3
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