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OJAS

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Everything posted by OJAS

  1. I strongly suspect that this may actually well depend on whether or not you're seeking the 190k discount for being aged 65+. I filed my return which consisted solely of assessable pension income (including the aged 65+ 190k discount) on a PND91 at my local tax office last Tuesday. However, after entering the info into their system they then presented me with a PND90 (+ Allowance(s) and Exemption(s) after Deduction of Expense(s) Attachment) version of my return as processed. Accordingly, I believe the short answer to be that you need to file using the PND90 (+ Allowance(s) and Exemption(s) after Deduction of Expense(s) Attachment) if you're seeking the aged 65+ 190k discount, or the PND91 if you're not.
  2. Yep, funny how they always seem to have a major change of heart following their first meeting with DWP's Sir Humphrey, isn't it?
  3. The $64,000 question, of course, is whether it will only be those entering Thailand on the basis of tourist visas or visa exemptions who will be required to file an online TM6. Or will this requirement apply equally to longstayers entering/returning to Thailand on the basis of non-immigrant visas/re-entry permits?
  4. Yes, it's the 6th one down on the following page: https://aseannow.com/topic/1324294-introduction-to-personal-income-tax-in-thailand/page/26/#comment-19454008 in which @chiang mai stated 'I have a feeling that because the income is remitted from overseas, that may push it into the "other" income category and dictate that PND90 is used.' So, if and when the TRD were eventually to switch to taxing us on the basis of when our pension income was actually earned (rather than remitted to Thailand, as at present), we would presumably then be able to use the PND91 form for reporting it if that was our sole source of assessable income!
  5. My pleasure! As regards the form to be used, I distinctly recall @chiang mai stating on here a while back that, even where foreigners' assessable income solely consisted of pensions, the TRD would probably, in his view, require returns to be filed with the PND90 - rather than PND91 - form, for reasons which now escape me. Looks like he was right!
  6. My filing was accepted without question, and I was not required to provide any supporting docs. I submitted a PND91 on the grounds that my sole source of assessable income in 2024 was the UK State Pension. But, interestingly, the revised version I was presented with after the Revenue Office staff member I dealt with had recorded my data in their system before my eyes was based on the PND90 form! I did remit in 2024 income which is covered by the UK/Thailand DTA in the form of my UK government occupational pension, but I did not report it. I also remitted in 2024 income which had already been taxed in the UK in the form of the UK State Pension and proceeds from the sale of my UK house in 2021, but I only reported the element relating to the UK State Pension, based pro rata on remittance totals in THB terms.
  7. True, but with the Chrome browser (which I use) you can select the "Translate to English" option upon clicking on the home page, and you should then be presented with reasonable English translations without any further prompting from then on. My tax office registered me for this system when I visited them yesterday with a paper return based on the 2024 Thai forms (after getting fed up with waiting for the English versions to materialise). During a test log-in I was able to drill down, all in English, as far as the PND90/91 section, but could not get any further as I had already submitted my return for the 2024 tax year! So the proof of the pudding will likely only come in my case when I file my 2025 return this time next year.
  8. "In a change from Tory plans, the government has said the new powers will not be used to target payments of the state pension." That will no doubt come as a huge relief to some on here!
  9. Hmm, I suggest that you keep a weather eye on the GBP:THB exchange rate. A single Wise transfer of £18,000 will only yield 747,850.64 THB at this precise moment in time, for instance.
  10. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usufruct
  11. Basically down to Korat and their pals in Nakorn Ratchasima (as in the OP's case) being rogue offices, pure and simple, when it comes to enforcing TM30 requirements, I think. I have (or, more to the point, my wife has) never been asked for a fresh TM30 upon my return from each foreign trip by my office (Rayong).
  12. "Wise is now a direct member in the Australian payment systems" Begs the question as to how they managed to cope as an indirect member of said payment systems, I think!
  13. May be possible by 31 March 2568 (AD, not BE, that is!).
  14. https://www.rd.go.th/fileadmin/download/nation/australia_e.pdf
  15. She's clearly not up to speed on what one of her big bosses in Bangkok has been saying recently, then, is she? https://aseannow.com/topic/1347864-revenue-department-boss-calls-on-tax-residents-in-thailand-to-file-2024-returns-by-march-31 There are state pensions and state pensions. Depends on what the relevant DTA with Thailand has to say in particular circumstances.
  16. I have better things to do with my time other than having to twiddle my thumbs and unable to do SFA else for a good hour or so while being "serenaded" with irritating muzak to boot until a real live IPC human being can be bothered to answer my call, thank you very much!
  17. To Mr/Ms Confused: I can only surmise that you find the concept of straight answers to direct questions a tad too difficult to grasp!😲
  18. Based on my experience of obtaining a TIN a few months ago, you need to apply at your local Area Revenue Office. The following link lists those in and around Chiang Mai: https://www.rd.go.th/13839.html Best to take a Thai speaker with you as TRD staff members' comprehension of the English language tends to be non-existent, even in those areas with large expat populations. Take your passport with you since the IMM stamps contained in it will form the basis on which they determine whether you're a tax resident of Thailand (based on staying in the country for more than 180 days per annum). Your Thai speaker may well have to complete the following form in the Thai language on your behalf: https://www.rd.go.th/fileadmin/tax_pdf/request/lp10.1_110355.pdf
  19. Depends on whether or not it is sourced from income derived in your home country, which is covered by its Double Taxation Agreement with Thailand (i.e. solely taxable by your home country), I would have thought.
  20. In common with @Andycoops, I'm not holding my breath for any meaningful progress on this front any time soon. That said, it should not, I would have thought, be too much beyond DWP's capabilities (in theory at least) to devise an online facility through the Government Gateway for periodically verifying that we remain in the land of the living for State Pension purposes. Quite a few of us are, I believe, already subscribed to the Government Gateway for checking personal State Pension entitlements/payments.
  21. And they're far from alone in His Majesty's Government in that regard! Even the snail mail service is deemed far too hi-tec by their pals in HMPO for submitting our passport renewal applications to VFS in Bangkok or Chiang Mai, or for VFS to send on our replacement passports to us in due course - meaning that we're forced to make a couple of physical trips in person for these purposes (which are all the more awkward the further away from Bangkok or Chiang Mai we live), unless, of course, we're prepared to fork out an extra 5,000 THB for the "pleasure" of having an agent undertake these trips on our behalf. That said, in fairness to DWP in this particular instance, it is, in fact, possible to initiate contact with them online via their enquiry form, as I have done on a number of occasions: https://secure.dwp.gov.uk/contact-the-international-pension-centre/contact-form
  22. Alternatively you can now download them via the following link: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/67160776e94bb9726918ee90/Life_Certificate.pdf
  23. "The premium for age over 65 years old is use for guidance only. The actual premium is subject to PCHI's underwriting results will be considerably higher."
  24. Certainly possible at Krungsri in my experience!
  25. @Tbone999 - do you apply for your annual retirement extensions on the basis of an original non-OA visa which expired prior to October 2019? If you do, are Phuket still relaxing the requirement for approved health insurance in these circumstances?
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