
DD25
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Everything posted by DD25
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It looks from the evisa site as though they've simplified the requirements for METVs since I last got one a few years ago. At that time you could only apply in your home country and you had to get quite a bit of financial documentation together including tax records. Now it looks like you can apply in any country as long as you can prove you're actually there and the financial evidence is just a bank statement. I'm not sure though because the evisa portal tells you to check with the embassy but the embassy sites tend to just refer you back to the evisa portal, if they say anything at all. So can anyone who's recently applied for an SETV in SEA let me know what docs are required and how complicated it all is? If it's basically the same as an SETV then it's a much better option for me, but I have been getting SETVs or entering visa exempt because I thought that was simpler.
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I have a plan to pester my previous employer for some consultancy work that I can do remotely and then get a DTV. This would make me tax resident in Thailand from next year. In the meantime I am sitting on money from a house sale, so if I can open a bank account this year (when I am not tax resident) I can shift enough into Thailand to last me the 5 years, and won't need to remit anything while tax resident. I can't get the DTV until I've agreed something with my old boss though, and I don't think I can open a bank account until I have the DTV. If I can complete those steps by say 1 December, is it realistic to open a bank account by say 15 December? It's clear that DTV holders are supposed to be able to open bank accounts, but with it being a new visa type (and basically a tourist visa) I am not sure how practical it is going to be. Does anyone have any experience they can share?
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I once got a return ticket from Singapore to Dublin, and when boarding for the return flight (in Dublin, obviously) I was asked if I had residency in Singapore and had to wait while they discussed the situation. They let me on in the end but since then I have been wary about booking a return flight to a country where you are not resident.
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An online article says: The first sentence seems to be saying that income from remote work counts as foreign income so is only taxable if you are tax resident. That seems to be the received wisdom but the principle in other jurisdictions is that the income is considered to arise wherever the work is actually done, which would make it domestic income that is taxable regardless of residency. So is there anything in the Thai legislation, or maybe an official announcement about the DTV, to confirm this either way? Does anyone know what they mean by "without added tax burdens on international earnings"?
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I am in Thailand currently but something has come up and I'm going to have to go to the states for about a month. I would ideally like to come straight back but I'm worried about problems at the airport. My visa history is that I have been spending about 5 months a year in Thailand for the last 5 years or so, always on tourist visas or visa exempt. This year I was in the country Jan to Feb visa exempt then arrived back in Jul on a tourist visa which I haven't extended. If I leave just before the initial 60 days of the tourist visa are up, then return visa exempt a month later: - on departure from the US, am I likely to have a problem with the airline, and does it make a difference whether it's the return leg of a round trip ticket or a single ticket? - on arrival in Thailand, am I likely to have a problem with immigration? I could go somewhere else instead, but I feel like my Thailand trip is only half finished so I don't want to do that unless there's a serious risk of being denied boarding / entry. Usually I leave it a lot longer before returning.
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It's now 100 but apparently the UK doesn't hit 100 per year so that's not really a concern. I'm not going to fail on any of the other categories so in my case it's just a question of whether you have to be working if you are over 50, or maybe whether you are still eligible but it counts against you at the discretionary stage.
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@Mike Teavee I don't seem to be able to edit my earlier post but that info (you can apply if you have been married for at least 2 years) is only valid for over-50s. If you are younger than that it's 5 years unless you have a child or have a certificate to say you can't have kids, in which case it's 2, and you also have to be working. I don't think you have to be working if you are over 50. Otherwise there would be no point in the separate category in 3.3.1(2) of the eligibility document. Could be wrong though.
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Could be, and makes sense of the earlier comments about wives being in a better position than husbands. Saying that I was just looking again at the eligibility requirements which I just skimmed the first time. If you are applying on the basis that you want to support your spouse there are two basic categories 1) working in Thailand 2) over 50. The list of documents has covers both of those situations, so I think the employment docs are probably only relevant if you are under 50 (which I am, but it was a long term plan anyway).
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Yeah but the clause before that is talking about a certificate that you are still in education. Hard to see how you would be still in education but working at the same time. Not impossible I guess. Not clear how to interpret those requirements or how they relate to the eligibility requirements in the first document.
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That takes us back to square one really because the eligibility criteria don't include any requirement to be employed in Thailand but the list of supporting documents does include an employment certification letter. Does this mean *if* you are employed (you have to give details of your income) you need to provide an employment certification letter, maybe, or does it mean that there is actually a requirement to be employed and it's just that the income threshold is lower if you are applying based on being married to / the parent of a Thai citizen?
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It says on the immigration website that you are eligible to apply if you have to have been married for 2 years (no such time limit if you pop out a kid, just saying...) and you meet the minimum income requirement. There does seem to be a discretionary stage after that though. That's what I'm not 100% clear on. There's a list of things they look at on the site (assets, income, relationship with Thai citizen, Thai language ability, I think a couple of others) but no thresholds e.g. must have THB x in assets.
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I'm not seeing anything about points on the docs linked to above. It does say that if you meet the critieria you are eligible "to be considered for PR", as though there's a second stage where they decide if they are actually going to grant it, but I haven't seen anything so far on how they would make that decision. Is that where the points system comes in maybe?
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Is there a (reliable) self-storage place in the Chiang Mai area? I would like to leave some stuff there between visits.
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TV application in Vientiane - bank statements
DD25 replied to DD25's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
Thanks a lot that's probably saved me a rejection. -
I recently had to deal with the estate of a family member who died in the UK. There was a large inheritance tax bill to pay and it got me thinking about my own estate, although I am still young. At the same time I'm thinking of having kids in Thailand. It turns out that even if I never set foot in the UK again and the kids grew up entirely in Thailand, the chances are they would be liable to pay UK inheritance tax on my estate, including any Thai assets (well technically it's the estate that pays the tax, but it works out the same). I asked the lawyer if/how this could be avoided and he said that HMRC (the UK tax authority) would need to be convinced that you had decided to base yourself somewhere else permanently, and that that might be difficult to do if you didn't have the right to stay there permanently. Just being non-resident at the time of death is not enough. If you are on yearly extensions, his view is that's a grey area and you could easily end up in a dispute. On the one hand you can realistically expect to be able to go on extending indefinitely, but on the other you don't have a right to extend, it's politically turbulent, etc. If you have PR there shouldn't be a problem and the estate will be subject to Thai inheritance tax, which is a lot less and seems more appropriate if I have lived most of my life in Thailand and the kids / beneficiaries are Thai. Another way to say it would be that you need to convince the UK authorities that you have emigrated and it's hard to do that if you are on a non-immigrant visa.
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Thanks - others in the thread are saying you have to be a female married to a male Thai citizen, but that doc just says spouse, so I'm not sure why I couldn't do it as a male married to a female Thai citizen (I mean I'm not married yet...). Also not sure if those are minimum criteria and it's then down to their discretion, or if it's a case of meet the criteria and you get PR.
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At Vientiane they ask for bank statements for the last 3 months (I think it's the same in lots of places) My actual statements run up to the 2nd of each month, so I give them the last three there will be a gap of about 21 days between the end of the last statement and the date of the visa application. Should I just print the last 3 months of transactions from online banking? That seems better but I'm thinking they might say it doesn't count as a "statement".