
Badger18
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Everything posted by Badger18
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Well the app says it's quicker but I am imagining getting stuck behind a slow moving ve-hicle or something. I just have no sense of how major/minor these roads are and the shorter route looks very minor on the map. I don't know either route. I haven't really driven much in Thailand. In fact I haven't driven much at all since about 2010 when I sold my last car. That's probably why I don't trust the app... I was just thinking of stopping for lunch but I could make it a few hours or overnight if there's somewhere worth seeing. Somewhere around Loei would make sense but I've seen Loei itself before.
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I'm planning to drive from Uttaradit to Nong Khai. The route planner is sending me down Highway 11 but only for about 20 miles, at which point it turns off and takes 4-digit highways through Loei and Nong Bua Lam Phu to Udon Thani. The alternative would be to stay on Highway 11 as far as Phitsanulok and then pick up H12 to Khon Kaen, from where H2 takes you through Udon and almost to Nong Khai. This route is shown as being about an hour longer but the roads look much bigger. It looks like the 4-digit highways have only one lane, so am I better off taking the longer route so I can stay on better roads?
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Yeah it's not great news but if he has been in the country more or less continously since March 2023 it's not that worrying either. It just shows there's a limit even at CNX. OP, I think another TV would just be a temporary reprieve, so if you're wanting to stay more than another 90 days you're much better off with a DTV.
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Yes. As I say I have no idea how it works in Indonesia. For Thailand you would probably get away with that visa exempt year in year out. You might want to consider staying out for a bit longer and/or getting a visa for the second entry, but the risk is small. Two months in two months out two months in then the same the following year is totally doable. But different country, different attitude. Do you have any advice on how long I would need to stay out before returning?
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I have a feel for where the line is on Thai tourist visas but no idea about Indonesia. If I were to enter via CGK in February, extend the VOA, leave just before the 60 days was up then re-enter a month later, would I be asking for trouble? Is it realistic to do that year in year out? (The second trip would also be for about 60 days, assuming they let me extend.)
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Where can I get an English translation of a Thai will form?
Badger18 replied to MrMuddle's topic in Chiang Mai
Does your English will say it only covers your UK assets? If not you are potentially creating a headache for your English executor. They would at least need a copy and translation of the Thai will. -
Where can I get an English translation of a Thai will form?
Badger18 replied to MrMuddle's topic in Chiang Mai
Yes, the question of who administers the estate, and according to what law, is separate from the question of what taxes are due - but you raised the issue of administration in response to another post saying that it was a good idea to have a separate Thai will in order to avoid paying UK inheritance tax, and it reads to me as if it's saying that's partly true. Maybe I should have responded to the previous poster and not you, but in that case I'm not sure what you are saying - that it's a good idea to have a Thai will because it's much more practical to have a Thai executor? -
Where can I get an English translation of a Thai will form?
Badger18 replied to MrMuddle's topic in Chiang Mai
That may be true for some countries but not for the UK. If you're UK domiciled (that's domiciled, not resident) UK IHT is payable on all assets regardless of where they are. It's possible to become domiciled outside the UK but it takes far far more than just primarily staying in another country (or making a Thai will). In fact Brits living in Thailand at the time of death could easily end up paying *more* inheritance tax because they won't get the family home tax break. I don't think you get the spousal exemption either, if your spouse is not UK domiciled. This is subject to the double tax treaty between the UK and Thailand, but the original 1981 convention did not cover IHT so unless it's been amended it makes no difference. -
Sorry to badger (ahem) but I'm never really sure what counts as strict in these discussions. Is the "no more than 90 days in the last 6 months" rule about as strict as it gets? I would never fall foul of that one but I don't know if that means I can safely apply anywhere. Also, is this info basically for people who have only been in the country where they are making the application for a few days and intending to go to Thailand right away? Does it make a difference if you've been there for a couple of weeks or a month?
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If I understood OP correctly he got 45 days because he came in before the cut-off (end March?). He seems to think his extension will only be 2 weeks. I think his reasoning is that since the current process only gives 30+30 = 60 and he has already had 45, they may only allow him to extend by 15 days. I don't think that's correct but it explains where he was coming from. If he actually has 2 weeks more than he thinks it means he only needs the one bounce to get to mid Sep.
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I think your logic was that visa exempt entries are now 30 days, extendable to 60, so they may not give you another 30 taking you to 75. I think they will but somebody must have done this recently. This means that you can get to mid-September by leaving once and coming back on an SETV which you then extend - no need for the second bounce.
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Flying out, getting an SETV and then flying back seems like a lot more hassle and nearly as much cost as sacking off your return flight to the UK and booking a new one from Hanoi or maybe Kuala Lumpur or Singapore. I think you still get 15 days visa exempt in Vietnam, so in your shoes I think I'd just have a 10 day holiday there. You're also adding to your visa history if you do the bounce and increasing the risk of problems down the line.
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UK tax status if permanent move to Thailand
Badger18 replied to keithkarmann's topic in UK & Europe Topics and Events
Payments on account are not required where the amount collected through the previous return is below a certain level, so you will stay on one payment a year unless your tax bill goes up. -
UK tax status if permanent move to Thailand
Badger18 replied to keithkarmann's topic in UK & Europe Topics and Events
Don't know if your property is mortgaged but be aware that some banks will ask you to close your account if you move abroad permanently and some mortgage Ts&Cs allow the lender to call in the loan. From what I've read on here, keeping a UK address seems to stave off any problems even if you are telling HMRC that you're non-resident. You would definitely want to check your banking facilities / mortgage weren't suddenly going to be withdrawn before notifying them. -
Tax on Thai investment income / gains
Badger18 replied to Badger18's topic in Jobs, Economy, Banking, Business, Investments
Thanks. So if I am understanding correctly it would just be a case of finding a platform that lets me open an account on the basis that I'm resident in Thailand but is not itself based in Thailand. Then income can be tax free provided it is not brought in in the same year. It seems a bit strange that the income would be treated as arising wherever the broker / platform is located is even if the stocks themselves are listed in a different jurisdiction, but I guess it's simpler that way. -
Tax on Thai investment income / gains
Badger18 replied to Badger18's topic in Jobs, Economy, Banking, Business, Investments
Thanks. So for a UK national capital gains are exempt subject to conditions, but the site doesn't say what thise conditions are. I'll have to see what I can find out about the double tax treaty. -
UK tax status if permanent move to Thailand
Badger18 replied to keithkarmann's topic in UK & Europe Topics and Events
Can I just double check that this applies where you are already receiving the state pension at the point when you cease to be UK resident and does not mean that you get it at the rate for the year you ceased to be resident even if that is many years before you turn 65 or 67 or whatever it is? -
UK tax status if permanent move to Thailand
Badger18 replied to keithkarmann's topic in UK & Europe Topics and Events
Can you trade assets other than property though? In practice I guess that means shares, but I don't think brokers will deal with you if you are not resident. You must be able to sell what you are holding if you have become non-resident, I guess.