WhatsNext
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How many millions of baht does one need to retire in Pattaya?
WhatsNext replied to advancebooking's topic in Pattaya
Very true i have a house myself in Hua Hin and this is paid in cash of course, i do know some guys that borrow on their wife's name. However what i mean to say is that this is certainly not the majority of the expats in Thailand. Quite a lot of them don't have the 800k THB in the bank for the retirement visa and live on a basic EU pension which can be anywhere from 900 to about 1200 Euro if you are single. Like everywhere there are rich(er) and poor(er) people around, and in my years in Pattaya i certainly didn't get the impression that the majority had a lot of cash lying around. Most retirees live in places like the Markland, rooms in soi bukhao and condo's in Jomtien like the VT series. Rents are 12-20k and the rest is spend on drinking, girls and hanging out with the boys. -
How many millions of baht does one need to retire in Pattaya?
WhatsNext replied to advancebooking's topic in Pattaya
I think all of your friends are lucky to be American then maybe. Most retirees in Thailand are from Europe/UK and we have substantially less to spend. Salaries are a lot lower and most countries do not have massive over appreciation of house values. Again, happy for you but it's sadly not the rule if you aren't American, which is 95% of the world -
How many millions of baht does one need to retire in Pattaya?
WhatsNext replied to advancebooking's topic in Pattaya
This is one of the very few legitimate and safe, if done in a very short time frame like you did, use cases. -
How many millions of baht does one need to retire in Pattaya?
WhatsNext replied to advancebooking's topic in Pattaya
Just as about 32% of the men in Pattaya are ex marines, ex sas or ex secret service, i think that the number of cash millionaires retirees are grossly exaggerated. Most people i know, among which are a dentist, a lawyer, and several people that worked in ICT are certainly not rich and live in pensions/social security or eating their principal. Fantasy, boasting and general BS are quite big on this forum, so i would take all the 100 million baht plus for what it is, nonsense. -
How many millions of baht does one need to retire in Pattaya?
WhatsNext replied to advancebooking's topic in Pattaya
When do people realize that you can eat the principal.... 1 million on 20 years basis with say 4% return will give you a monthly of : 6039 UKP That's 268.433 baht ! To get 120.000 baht per month you only need a capital of : 446.050.. Please guys, learn how to use an annuity calculator and you can retire 10 years earlier than you think. *edit* For those crypto screamers : Yes there are people that got rich from it, there are however more people that lost money, Bitcoin is just a database, you are buying baked air, as long as everyone is fine with that, the value will increase. If someday people wake up to the nothingness of it all, it will poof in an instant. Keep Hodling ! Daimond hands, listen to airhead influencers, buy your coin, hype, hype, hype. -
How many millions of baht does one need to retire in Pattaya?
WhatsNext replied to advancebooking's topic in Pattaya
No not off, is it's inclusive eating the principal, many people forget that. Your last suit doesn't have any pockets to take the money with you. -
How many millions of baht does one need to retire in Pattaya?
WhatsNext replied to advancebooking's topic in Pattaya
Calculations are quite simple, and many people here overestimate the amount needed : 1 Million US for 30 years against 5% will give you 5345 USD per month or 187,075 Baht. That's way too much so you can make savings on that amount for later inflation easy peasy. So even without a pension, 35 Million Baht would be more, more than enough. I am 59 myself, have a new pool villa, a new SUV, a live in GF and spend less about 1 million baht per year. That is with the house and car paid for of course. -
If this is implemented, with the emphasis on "If" then the following will apply : * All income before 2024 isn't taxed when you bring it in, meaning if you have savings and you bring them here, all is fine. By the way, this is how it should be as no country should tax imported savings So end effect : Keep your pension in your country of origin, or outside of Thailand anyway and live of your savings. BUT and it's a big but : This is Thailand, everything will change before the new year and then it will be forgotten to safe face, i am not that worried.
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More details on Thai taxation of overseas income
WhatsNext replied to webfact's topic in Thailand News
I read many remarks that you pay tax in country A and then have to pay the difference if country B, which is Thailand in this case, has a higher tax rate than A. This is not the case, the income is either taxed in A or B, depending on the source and there is no paying of any difference. Long story short, if you pension is already taxed in A, then no tax in B and the other way round. -
New "Income" tax law 2024
WhatsNext replied to Tom Vanderlay's topic in Jobs, Economy, Banking, Business, Investments
Oh now that is a good one ! I was planning to get an international account, get my pension there and get money that i need here out with a debit/credit card from the ATM. Which could work except when you want to get a new Audi for 4 million baht. -
Well you also get 2,2x more risks of serious illness than the not vaccinated ones, while the all cause admissions and death were only 37% lower, So 220% increase of infections against an only 37% increase in risk... see where this is going. It's a biased article from a journalist that can't use a calculator.
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As usual, don't just read the headline : "While the incidence of COVID infection was higher in vaccine recipients (6.7 percent) than in individuals previously infected (2.9 percent)," , so the vaccinated had a 2,2x higher risk of getting covid including all the risks that go with it.... But hey that would be reading and understanding and that takes time.
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Great idea, as the protection provided by the vaccines wanes over time and many have had the shots now more than 2 years ago. Also many have had covid without the shots which provides much better protection than the shots, but of course politicians are not that smart and don't include those. So if this materializes, here we go again not able to leave Thailand for a family visit because of a flu that is less dangerous than the flu, for which the vaccines are expired and don't work. The world is crazy and Thailand is in the top 5. The smart thing would be to just not accept any flights from China for the next 3 months and don't bother the other 90% of people.
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Enforcement checking for Foreigners on overstay !
WhatsNext replied to Social Media's topic in Pattaya
Great pr as usual from Thailand, first it's "please please come to thailand, we are friendly come come" and then they want to check your papers as you are boinking the bargirl. -
Thailand 300 baht entry fee for tourists set to start in early 2023
WhatsNext replied to webfact's topic in Thailand News
You just have to have another go right, if it makes you happy it's fine. Fun to see that this forum really is full of tw*ts. I don't exclude myself however -
Thailand 300 baht entry fee for tourists set to start in early 2023
WhatsNext replied to webfact's topic in Thailand News
Last try from my side : it's not a service you used and have to pay for. It's a mandatory forced insurance many people don't need, yet you MUST pay it and you will never use it. Understand ? If not, sorry you are beyond help. -
Thailand 300 baht entry fee for tourists set to start in early 2023
WhatsNext replied to webfact's topic in Thailand News
Apparently everything is say is moot, or i don't understand it. That's just fine for you. Sadly reality doesn't work like that : Mandatory payments for stuff you don't need, is a tax. Or if you really want to nickpick : a social security payment for an insurance you are not interested in. But i can clearly see that any argumentation with you is impossible as you label any other opinion than that of yourself as moot. Enjoy your little bubble. -
Thailand 300 baht entry fee for tourists set to start in early 2023
WhatsNext replied to webfact's topic in Thailand News
Anything mandatory is a tax or a social security payment. You reason too much from your own picture of the world, what if you are already insured like many from Europe. -
Thailand 300 baht entry fee for tourists set to start in early 2023
WhatsNext replied to webfact's topic in Thailand News
Payments for "services" that are mandatory are taxes. If that's not clear enough for you : What if i bring you a chicken daily and you MUST pay even if you don't want chicken. -
Thailand 300 baht entry fee for tourists set to start in early 2023
WhatsNext replied to webfact's topic in Thailand News
Many more touristy countries have such a tax, when i travelled to the dominican republic i remember an exit tax. It's nothing special but yet another tiny detail that shows that thailand sees everyone as a moneycow ready to be milked.