
BrandonJT
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Everything posted by BrandonJT
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1) They don't put a stamp in your passport. Your visa is a pdf document e-mailed to you. 2) You must be physically in the country. You must prove you are physically in the country, by showing the stamp in your passport from when you entered the country as well as the reservation for where you are staying in the country. There have also been multiple reports of "spot-checks" a few days after you submit your application for proof that you are STILL in the country.
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1) Read different people's reports. Some locations are better for different circumstances. 2) Laos does not support e-visa. You apply in person. Anywhere that supports e-visa you are not even allowed on the property of the embassy. All visa matters are handled through the e-visa system. 3) Each embassy sets their own requirements. Check the embassy website for what they require.
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DTV or retirement visa ?
BrandonJT replied to tgw's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
No re-entry permit. It's a multiple entry visa already. You get a brand new stamp each time you enter. -
1) Yes, it is a multiple entry visa so you'll get a new 180 day stamp every time you enter Thailand. 2) No you cannot apply in Thailand. You must travel to a country and apply through the Thai embassy where you physically are at the time. Proof of your current location is generally your entry stamp to that country in your passport and possibly a hotel reservation that shows you are staying in that country if you are applying online through e-visa. If you don't show this then your application will be rejected and your fee for the visa will be forfeit. 3) That is why many people think the requirements will become more strict than they already have over time, and possibly new restrictions when entering with a DTV or applying for extension. But as things stand right now, yes it is that simple.
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Thai Bank Account - 800k deposit
BrandonJT replied to qwab32's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
The purpose is to indicate that you overstayed. The fact that they accepted your extension application is not related in any way. If you overstay, you pay a fine and get a stamp. Completely separately they also accepted your extension application. -
DTV or retirement visa ?
BrandonJT replied to tgw's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
The Royal Gazette publication for the law that created the DTV very specifically calls it a tourist visa, special classification. -
It was part of the new package of measures that created the DTV. There's just not much clarity on it, but I do know that some people have already received it. I haven't heard anyone comment about the re-entry part though. https://image.mfa.go.th/mfa/0/91fPdh6NtO/VISA_Information/Non-ED_Revised_16_July_2024.pdf
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Question about TH on-arrival tourist visa
BrandonJT replied to tijanova's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
Read reports from 2 people on Facebook just this week that were shocked they were asked for this by immigration at the airport. -
This information is over a year old, so it may have changed. But if you arrived before the office opened you would get queue ticket, but not a queue ticket for your actual counter, it is just a ticket for entering the immigration office. Then when the office opened they would let people in based on the queues they held, and then you can go to get your actual queue for your counter. When I arrived about 30 minutes early I was already well past #100 to enter the office when it opened. Obviously not all of these people are going to the same counter as you though.
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Taiwan DTV can still apply in person?
BrandonJT replied to lapamita's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
Apply in the morning and get the visa later that day. (based on previous reports) -
Many immigration offices will require you to get the 30 day tourist extension before they will let you apply for the Thai family extension. You'd be better off just getting the tourist extension then immediately applying for the marriage visa if you are married and have the paperwork. You must have 14-21 days left on your stay to be able to apply for the marriage non-O visa, as this will be your "under consideration" period so you can't just wait until the last minute to apply.
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Thailand enforces stricter regulations on illegal factories
BrandonJT replied to snoop1130's topic in Thailand News
This headline is hilarious. Why are you trying to regulate illegal factories? They're illegal! They don't care about regulations! -
Thailand Extends Visa-Free Entry for Indian Tourists Indefinitely
BrandonJT replied to snoop1130's topic in Thailand News
Did you really just try to compare per-person average in a country of 1.4 billion people to the per-person average of Indians in Thailand? How is that relevant AT ALL? Of course when you average it across that size of a generally poor country, you are going to get a low number. You are simply massaging the statistics to prove your false narrative. The upper echelons of a country are the ones that can afford to travel, not the lower 80% The GDP per person in India is 3 times lower than Thailand? They have 20 times the population of Thailand! There is a hell of a lot more wealth there than there is in Thailand and in most countries. Who cares what the GDP per person is? The country's wealth isn't distributed across the entire population. India has 167 billionaires, which puts it 3rd in the world for number of billionaires. Even an average distribution of wealth means that India has way more wealthy citizens than almost any country in the world. -
Pheu Thai seeks easier referendum rules amid legislative clash
BrandonJT replied to snoop1130's topic in Thailand News
They are not talking about the former PM. They are talking about the person referenced in this article. "Prayut Siripanich, a member of the ruling party and deputy chairman of the joint House-Senate committee on the referendum bill" -
Ho Chi Minh Multiple Entry Marriage Visa
BrandonJT replied to leeedwards's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
That post is from July 2023, long before e-visa. I don't know what the e-visa processing time is for that embassy though. -
The system hasn't even been online for a month, and it's looking like you're not going to get what you are asking for. So use how it works at every other embassy in the world that has already been on e-visa for 2 years now. You meet the requirements that the embassy has on their website, since that's the embassy processing the e-visa application.
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The Thai embassy in Paris is the worst example you could use. They are known to be the worst embassy (tied with Ottawa) for processing e-visa. Multiple weeks if not multiple months to process applications. And then if they take so long that the date on the ticket you uploaded passes, they will cancel the application. Most other embassies will still issue the visa even if the date on the ticket passed, and then you can just border bounce to use your visa.
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Change of passport nationality
BrandonJT replied to Stanvac's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
Should be fine doing it that way. Just make sure you don't get confused and give them the wrong passport at some point and screw up your visa/extension. But the fact that you will be going to Australia more than the UK doesn't really have any factor at all in this equation. You choose to enter Thailand with one passport and must exit Thailand with that passport, what you do other than that is irrelevant about entering or leaving other countries with whichever passport. -
New visa exempt arrivals
BrandonJT replied to Lancelot01's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
All that means is you get 60 days IF you are let into the country. It doesn't mean you are entitled entry to Thailand. The same as any every country in the world, the immigration officers at entry have full discretion to let you in or not. In Thailand they have determined you are abusing the system and trying to live in Thailand without a proper long-term visa. If they did let you in, then take this as your warning that you can no longer do this. If you were denied entry and sent away, then you now know that you cannot return without a long-term visa for someone who wants to live in Thailand.