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NoDisplayName

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Everything posted by NoDisplayName

  1. I understand the email indicates if no tax is due, meaning not enough ASSESSABLE income remitted to owe tax, then no filing is necessary. With the current forms, there is no blank space to enter "remittances." Assessable amounts would be included in salary or foreign capital gains or foreign dividends. Non-assessable amounts essentially don't exist.
  2. Can't say anything about newly implemented fees, nothing I've ordered from Lazada imported from China has been taxed yet. Relocated from China to Thailand twice. First time mailed four 12-kg boxes of misc. personal items via China Post, second time 14 boxes. Nothing opened, nothing delayed, nothing taxed. From what I've read on this here forum, you're more likely to be hit with customs fees if sending through DHL or Fedex instead of regular post.
  3. Ask a random group of tourists to name their 3 or 4 favorite destinations in Thailand. All of them list Bangkok, a fifth of them pick Chiang Mai, and they also choose 1 or 2 other cities. Bangkok appears on all the lists, so 100% for Bangkok. 20% for Chiang Mai, smaller percentages for others. This isn't difficult. Hard part will be explaining how the wily Chinese manage to make 2.83 trips to Thailand!
  4. Question 4: List your three favorite destination cities in Thailand.
  5. Do banks withhold 15% interest tax on accounts held by Thais? Wife has four savings accounts and one fixed at three banks, no tax withheld.
  6. They have a couple warehouses full of vintage rice..........
  7. I'm surprised they'd want a blood red theme on a Red Bull car.
  8. Visit your local tax office to get your TIN/PIN registered in the e-file system first. You can then set up your online account. When you file a PD90 (all sorts of income) or PD91 (salary only), you enter amounts for your personal exemptions. 60K for you, 60K for your spouse, etc., in the spaces provided. Make liberal use of CNTL-C/CNTL-V https://www.bing.com/Translator To enter bank interest and SET dividends, look for the dropdown menu that includes NVDA as the first item. You'll enter amount received, tax paid, and payer tax ID.
  9. So basically you still have a new truck. 12-year-old Hilux, 400,000 km.
  10. Where do your neighbors buy their tires? There are plenty of independent tire shops out there........nothing special about B-Quik or Cockpit other than the premium prices. Search out some local shops, check the DOT label to confirm freshness. Mounting and balancing should be included in the price.
  11. There was a response in one of these threads where the speaker was asked about that and admitted to being misteaken. see page 63, "tomkenet"
  12. ***UPDATE v2*** Just for fun, we logged into the system today and filed three years of tax returns. Quick and easy, took less than 15 minutes each. No current year income was remitted, so no remittance amounts claimed as income. Interest and dividend received and tax withheld was entered into the form, with no uploaded documentation required. I have the dividend receipts, but wanted to avoid the 2-3 hour wait at our Bangkok Bank branch for the interest statement, and confirmed not necessary unless filing in person. Note that the payer tax ID numbers were required, from Bangkok Bank and my Thai broker, that I found on documents in my files. Filed for 2021, even though was not tax resident. (177 days) Dividends and interest would result in 500 baht refund if filed that year. Filed late, so apparently no refund. No late filing fee. Got an immediate receipt for tax filed and downloaded final version of PD90. Filed for 2022, tax resident with similar dividend and interest amounts. Filed late, no refund, no late filing fee. Received receipt for filing tax and downloaded PD90. 2023 filing was also late, with a total refund amount of 850 baht. There was a 200 baht late filing fee, which I paid by bank transfer. Downloaded provisional PD90. The tax receipt and final download version of PD90 will be available in a couple days. Should receive a refund check in a couple weeks. Yes, I know. I didn't need to file, shouldn't poke the jingjok. But now I'm registered in the system, know how to do the filings, and have three years of approved tax returns if ever invited to an interview. For the next couple years, will keep remittances below the taxable threshold and spend down in-country savings. Not necessary, as I suspect we'll continue to self-assess remittances, but..........
  13. Composition of the product Caesalpineae 60 gr; Amarukkudaceae 120 gr; Umbelliferae 120 gr; Leonurus sibiricusl 120 gr; Compostae 120 gr. https://thai-voyage.com/en/celebnye-tovary/kapsuly-i-lechebnye-sredstva/flora-capsules-dysmenorrhea-tv001593.html
  14. Register your TIN/PIN for online filing. https://efiling.rd.go.th/rd-cms/ Sign in to e-file. https://efiling.rd.go.th/rd-efiling-web/login
  15. If anyone is interested in online filing........ You can file online late for the past three years. Simple returns can be completed in 10-15 minutes. There is no late fee charged for online filing if no tax/refund due. There is a 200 baht late filing fee if tax/refund due. No documents required for upload when claiming dividends or interest from Thai sources. You will need the payer tax ID number which should be available on documentation you have at home.
  16. Hey hubby, I fix, headlight no cloudy now!😁
  17. My guess is........same as before. You decide if you want/need to file tax. When you file, you self-assess remitted funds. If not assessable, you don't enter the amounts on the tax form. If assessable, you enter them in the spaces for dividends, interest, salary, etc. For many retirees, they only list bank interest and possibly SET dividends received, totaling 5-10K, only to claim a refund of taxes paid. There is (currently) no space on the tax form to list total remittances or non-assessable amounts. Not showing remittances necessary to support themselves shouldn't set off red flags at TRD resulting in a release of BMW smart cars.
  18. Cut a lemon in half, add a heavy coat of baking soda to one half, scrub one of the lights for ~5 minutes. Rinse. Tough remaining spots can be tackled with a dish scrubber with toothpaste and baking soda. 12-year-old Hilux, 400,000 km...........
  19. Cool beans! Thanks, I didn't know that was available.
  20. Thank you for the informative response detailing the difference between salaries and benefits at Japanese vs. Chinese vehicle factories in Thailand. China bad!
  21. If you have the information, details on salary paid by Japanese factories vs. salary paid by BYD, please do post. Otherwise, your comment can be summed up as "China bad."
  22. The ampur in our small city refused to touch a will with a foreigner involved. Same with the main office in Korat. They won't sign it, they won't stamp it, they won't register it, they won't store it, they won't even look at it. YKMV
  23. An audit by the TRD should be quite the experience. There is very little "official" an expat could provide to show home country tax returns........at least for the US. I've filed online via an independent IRS recognized free filing service for the past decade with nothing official to show for it. No physical paper filing, unless I print off a provisional copy myself, nothing from the IRS, only a message from the online service that my return was accepted. As to financial documentation, all the banks and brokerages and credit unions have gone paperless. The audit victim could go online.....if they still maintain accounts with the same financial entities....and download past statements....if they are maintained online........and print them off themselves. Almost nothing will be official, nothing will be sealed or stamped, and many will be in languages other than English. Good lucky.
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