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British Embassy statement on income letters: Officials knew about problems in May and say that US nationals will also be affected


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4 hours ago, poohy said:

Thanks oh Great British embassy for throwing us under the bus!

the fact you have known since May does in no way help you!

 

complete and utter wasters 

I think they could be throwing everyone under a bus. If the UK and US Embassies don't issue income letters, Thai immigration may change the rules for everyone. Maybe the US Embassy was getting close to doing this and the UK beat them to it.

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2 hours ago, sqwakvfr said:

As an American I am cofused?  So The British Embassy is now announcing the future actions of the American Embassy? I have an appointment next to get the Income Affidavit.  Should I cancel my appointment?  

please ask them about the future of these statements, I have to go in March and would like to prepare for the worsrt

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1 minute ago, theguyfromanotherforum said:

 

Did you bother to check the exchange rate you would get from your bank?

 

To be fair, the fees TW charge for USD transfers are quite a bit higher - 0.85% + $2, compared to 0.55% + £1.50 for GBP. However you are right about the rates, all the banks screw you on them, and I have also found that I do not get charged a fee at the Thai end with TW either. When you take those things into account TW is quite a bit cheaper, particularly for smaller amounts.

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It's high time that UK and US embassies plug up these loopholes.

 

I doubt the embassy clerks there bother to check any of the income sources and just approve the SD. I am sure there are genuine cases but they seem to be the minority.

 

They should also close the loopholes in other countries. It's just not fair to others.

 

 

 

Edited by EricTh
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3 hours ago, chudless said:

Why is a problem? Just show your cash in  a Thai bank, sorted. Furore over nothing.

So....how do I do that if I use a no fee credit card issued in the UK, take from ATM's and pay it off using my online banking, incurring no interest and an on the day Mastercard rate?

It works for me, and I therefore rely on the Embassy letter....

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2 hours ago, Jip99 said:

 

 

You really think Thai Immigration will accept an unfamiliar piece of paper purporting to be a bank statement ?

 

It is Thai Immigration who insisted on the embassy “verifying” income..... which they are not prepared to do.

     I think you understand the problem.  Thai immigration would have no way to verify or check foreign bank account statements so they are demanding the embassy do it.  The embassy realizes it would be a total nightmare to verify those papers so they just refused.  Retirement visa holders left stranded.  

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1 minute ago, theguyfromanotherforum said:

 

Did you bother to check the exchange rate you would get from your bank?

 

I send USD and Bangkok Bank does the exchange. It has always been a good rate. Someone just said that Transferwise is more expensive for Americans and the more you send the more it costs. not the case with my US banks. one flat fee. I transfer $5000-$10000 at a time.  Maybe Transfer wise is good for sending small amounts.      

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4 minutes ago, Rod the Sod said:

If you don't like it or cannot fit the criteria go somewhere else where you fit in and stop the good name of the people who do everything and pay everything to comply being rubbished.

 

The rules did not change... they are just enforcing them now to "catch" those who like to bent some simple rules.... If you faked your proof of income then the time has come to worry...
Lets wait what really going to be... what proof of income they accept besides the income letter of the embassy...

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9 minutes ago, zydeco said:

I doubt that the British embassy speaks for the US government or State Department.  Frankly, they're being presumptuous. 

Well.....from personal gathered info of the last couple of days - The American authorities in Thailand have no intentions or plans to follow suit per current British policy. 

 

Remaining the same, for now.

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3 hours ago, chudless said:

Clearly I have as it shows those who can barely afford to live here with no cash reserves are scared sh*tless. No sympathy at all. 

There are many ways to fund ones lifestyle......

many chose the monthly income route which was until now easily done.

At this late juncture the carpet has been pulled from under the feet of these people.

And the 800,000 baht in the bank route is not so quickly , or maybe impossible to achieve.

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10 minutes ago, dontoearth said:

     I think you understand the problem.  Thai immigration would have no way to verify or check foreign bank account statements so they are demanding the embassy do it.  The embassy realizes it would be a total nightmare to verify those papers so they just refused.  Retirement visa holders left stranded.  

 

Thai immigration assumed that the embassies would give a thorough check in the past until somebody woke Thai immigration up.

 

Yes, for majority of the cases, it's impossible to check unless you are getting government pension and even that takes a few days or weeks, I think.

 

But I don't think most government pension goes up to 65k per month. 

Edited by EricTh
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7 minutes ago, imaderbyfan said:

So....how do I do that if I use a no fee credit card issued in the UK, take from ATM's and pay it off using my online banking, incurring no interest and an on the day Mastercard rate?

It works for me, and I therefore rely on the Embassy letter....

How much have you lost or are going to lose Thai baht vs pound sterling? 

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3 minutes ago, NCC1701A said:

I send USD and Bangkok Bank does the exchange. It has always been a good rate. Someone just said that Transferwise is more expensive for Americans and the more you send the more it costs. not the case with my US banks. one flat fee. I transfer $5000-$10000 at a time.  Maybe Transfer wise is good for sending small amounts.      

 

Nope, it's better all around.

 

I do a lot of transfers and I have saved literally thousands of dollars last year over using a bank.

 

Get verified and try it once. Do the same amount of transfer with your bank and transferwise and you will see. Transferwise is a peer to peer exchange, so this is why they don't make money on exchange rates. They only charge a transfer fee.

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1 hour ago, Bangkok Barry said:

 

And The British Embassy clearly has no interest in spending its time satisfying Thai bureaucracy. Why should they? If the Thais want the info let them find it.  As they say, Thai Immigration is able to verify the income in a Thai bank account. What the Thai government demands really has nothing to do with the British Embassy.

Bang on ???? Pity the majority can't grasp it.

Edited by evadgib
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An inflammatory post and a reply has been removed:

 

7) You will respect fellow members and post in a civil manner. No personal attacks, hateful or insulting towards other members, (flaming) Stalking of members on either the forum or via PM will not be allowed.

 

A Trump troll post has been removed. 

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Just now, sqwakvfr said:

As an American I am cofused?  So The British Embassy is now announcing the future actions of the American Embassy? I have an appointment next to get the Income Affidavit.  Should I cancel my appointment?  

I just renewed my retirement Visa.  Chiang Mai Consulate issued the income affidavit and I brought 6 months of bank statements showing incoming transfers and had no problems..

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3 minutes ago, EricTh said:

 

Thai immigration assumed that the embassies would give a thorough check in the past until somebody woke Thai immigration up.

 

Yes, for majority of the cases, it's impossible to check unless you are getting government pension. But I dont think government pension goes up to 65k per month. 

  In the US the embassy would not be allowed to check government pensions either.  All of the various income statements would have to be supplied by the individual applying or a sign-off letter giving the embassy power of attorney to exam govt. pensions, bank accounts, etc.   It is just way to complicated.  Our major pension Social Security top range is close to 2K or 65K baht but very few qualify for that much monthly payment, perhaps 5% of the pensioners would get that much.  Then the embassy or thai govt. is left trying to verify private pension letters.  Something even banks are not too skilled at doing from the amount of worldwide fraud that takes place.

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3 minutes ago, Shouldhaveknownbetter said:

I just renewed my retirement Visa.  Chiang Mai Consulate issued the income affidavit and I brought 6 months of bank statements showing incoming transfers and had no problems..

To a Thai bank or U.S. bank?

Did they require the statements or did you present them without being asked?

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22 minutes ago, zydeco said:

I doubt that the British embassy speaks for the US government or State Department.  Frankly, they're being presumptuous. 

This is not the concern. If one or two embassies stop issuing income letters, it's how Thai immigration decides to proceed in a situation where a large number of expats will need to use other methods. I don't think Thai immigration will be interested in serving certain nationalities differently than others. It just makes it too complicated for them.

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7 minutes ago, EricTh said:

 I am sure there are genuine cases but they seem to be the minority.

 

You're making the presumption that many, or the majority, of people seeking income affidavits are lying or don't have the income they're claiming. You have absolutely no basis for making that presumption.

 

Also, as has already been made clear here before, the U.S. Embassy staff are NOT verifying anything about income. They're verifying that their citizens have made a legal declaration to the Embassy of a receiving a certain amount of monthly income from outside Thailand. And all along, if Immigration had any doubts about the truthfulness of those declarations, they were and are perfectly able to demand backup documentation. Can't provide it upon request? No extension of stay.

 

All of this strikes me as just another example of the anti-foreigner ethos that's been coming out of the current government for quite some time now, including having a Tourist Police chief (and now Immigration chief) who was more interested in arresting and threatening foreigners than he ever was in helping foreigners who found themselves victims of crimes or other troubles in Thailand, which supposedly was one of the primary missions of the Tourist Police, at least in the past.

 

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2 minutes ago, dontoearth said:

    It is just way to complicated.  Our major pension Social Security top range is close to 2K or 65K baht but very few qualify for that much monthly payment, 

 

Sorry. The difference between 2K and 65K is huge, so which is it?

 

If they are in the top range, most probably they don't need to live in a foreign country where everything is different.

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1 hour ago, TallGuyJohninBKK said:

 

I can't speak for the UK, but for the U.S., there are VERY few and limited options for Americans to make international fund transfers to Thailand without paying not insignificant bank international transfer fees -- both on the sending end in the U.S., and then on the receiving end by the Thai banks when they handle currency conversion.

 

And this just so happens to be coming at the same time that one of the most popular and economical international transfer methods used by Americans -- the Bangkok Bank NY branch ACH method -- is shutting down that service next April because of banking regulations.

 

 

I've already described the method I use in another thread but here goes:

 

I have a Halifax Clarity CC (Mastercard). It incurs no extra overseas charges.

 

I go to the local branch of my Thai Bank, withdraw the required amount on my CC and deposit it in my Thai bank account. I then go home and pay my CC off online. 5 minutes to transfer money from my UK account to my Thai account and zero bank charges.

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