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Yet more confusion over the removal of Income Certification Letter for British expats


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1 minute ago, zydeco said:

If additional documentation is required, Thai Immigration will be completely befuddled.  I'm sure they can read my social security FFT easily enough.  But they will have no idea what to do with my annuity documents.  That is why the disruption of this process is so catastrophic.  If you think the waiting time at Chaeng Wattana is long now, wait until people start throwing up piles of documents that Thai Immigration doesn't understand.  Some people here have even said they are going in with ATM receipts.  This will be a nightmare.  Thai Immigration will not stand for it.

Precisely!  

 

Someone at Thai Immigration stirred the pot several months ago.  Seems that most embassies applied a steady hand on the helm and carried on smartly.

 

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Sadly, Tommy missed tackling the critical matter. Yes, the 800,000 Baht paid into a Thai bank account was always a possibility. However, there has been no stipulation that the 65,000 Baht a month be held in a Thai Bank. It has been a reference to global income received into whatever account. That is a big difference in that if it is true that 65,000Baht monthly must be held in a Thai Bank account for the Thai authorities to read the bank statements, that demands that Brits have a Thai bank account. That is a less than happy thought for many, given that the Baht is a soft currency in a politically unstable country (essentially the same arguments as against the 800,000 Baht lodged). Additionally, supposing that 65,000 a month simply doesn't correspond in any way with one's monthly expenditures?

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I like to share my direct experience that I was living with my partner (who RIP) in Thailand for 12 years (we did not marriage). He is senior American expat and I had been accompanied him to get a Guarantee letter for income from US embassy once a year for 12 years (2003-2015). At first time when we went to US embassy we were asking the embassy to CERTIFIED his Social Security Statement (Original Annual Statement Report). The embassy informed that they are not allow to certified it. But we said Thai immigration has expects the embassy to verify all sources of income. Anyway we had learned that US embassy issue A Grantee Letter to verify all sources of income for expat American in Thailand to submit to Thai Immigration. We did this procedure for only 30 minutes at the embassy and pay fee (I forgot how much). He passed in 2015 and I buried him in Protestant Cemetery in Bangkok. 

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2 minutes ago, smedly said:

I can all easily be falsified, give you a clue

 

You have 2 UK bank accounts, all you need to do is transfer money between them or have a mate do same, you could get away with not having any income at all - just moving the same money around for free.

 

I honestly believe to whole income verification/Affidavit process has been flawed for years and is abused by many.

 

Quite what Thailand is going to introduce going forward is anyones guess but it is long overdue,

 

There are many on here that are complaining because they have not abused the system and have always done what was legally required of them.

 

Income into a Thai bank can be abused, Lump sum can be abused, all of it can be abused it you have a will to do so, there are agents backhanders etc etc, one thing I do believe is that change is coming and the BE has just given a heads up, so be prepared.  

Well said 

 

I agree change is coming and those that sit and blame the Embassy are wasting time, the Thai Immigration are the folks that are demanding scrutiny.

 

I for one am pleased an Embassy is taking a firm approach on what could be potentially a fraudulent loophole & I hope others follow.

 

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1 hour ago, bkkcanuck8 said:

It depends on the legislation of the country.  Most western countries privacy and data laws do not allow sharing of information between departments with the exception of things like security.  I suspect you would have to go (as an individual) to the department / agency responsible for those pensions.  The Embassy itself would not be able to verify it, only certify that you as an individual have sworn in some sort of affidavit that it is true under penalty of falsifying documents.

 

You really DO NOT want those privacy laws removed or pretty well all your information is accessible to any government employee without a warrant.

Surely they should believe an original letter from their own pension people ? I remember once getting rejected at the German embassy because I had brought along a copy instead of the original even though I could show a bank statement with that amount going in, I had to take an 8 hour train journey back home to return with the original, then no problem.

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5 minutes ago, 55Jay said:

Precisely!  

 

Someone at Thai Immigration stirred the pot several months ago.  Seems that most embassies applied a steady hand on the helm and carried on smartly.

 

And imagine even further chaos than the additional documentation you carry.  If everyone is now required to bring a bank letter as part of the documentation, instead of just the embassy letter, that means you must get the bank letter ON THE SAME DAY you go to immigration for your extension.  Maybe there is a bank branch there, probably is.  But that means spending the morning waiting in line at the bank for the bank letter and then EVERYBODY goes into immigration (again with all the additional documentation) in the afternoon.  And also remember Thai immigration must stay until everyone with a number is served. They're going to be real happy staying at work every night until 10 pm.

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3 minutes ago, Runamile said:

Sadly, Tommy missed tackling the critical matter. Yes, the 800,000 Baht paid into a Thai bank account was always a possibility. However, there has been no stipulation that the 65,000 Baht a month be held in a Thai Bank. It has been a reference to global income received into whatever account. That is a big difference in that if it is true that 65,000Baht monthly must be held in a Thai Bank account for the Thai authorities to read the bank statements, that demands that Brits have a Thai bank account. That is a less than happy thought for many, given that the Baht is a soft currency in a politically unstable country (essentially the same arguments as against the 800,000 Baht lodged). Additionally, supposing that 65,000 a month simply doesn't correspond in any way with one's monthly expenditures?

The requirement is for people to have a pension income of 65,000 a month or have a lump sum available of 800,000.  If you have income of 65,000 a month and your expenditures are only 30,000 a month... then in a few years - you would have enough in the bank to go the lump sum approach and not worry about showing monthly income.  The purpose would be served either way.  If you only have 30,000 in income a month and somehow have been pretending it is more - you just were not properly meeting requirements in the first place (you as in general terms not individual terms).

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2 minutes ago, White Tiger said:

I reckon you're right. The British Embassy missed a trick here. Had they continued to issue the letters on exactly the same basis as before the onus would have been on Thai immigration offices to start declining them. If immigration offices started rejecting them then we expats would be venting our anger at Thai immigration, not at the British Embassy. And it would be a clear and transparent Thai policy change that we were angry about.

 

As things stand how likely is it that individual immigration offices, or officers working there, would suddenly change their working practices and reject a time honoured British Embassy letter? Highly unlikely I'd say. It would need a high level policy decision from someone senior in Bangkok that was sent out to all offices. Immigration officers who have been in the job "man & boy" and accepting these letters all the time, are not going to stop accepting them overnight unless a very very big cheese in Thai immigration tells them to. 

 

There has been no public statement of a change in policy on these letters from Thai immigration. As far as they are concerned it is business as usual. It seems someone from Thai immigration may have made an off the cuff remark, about verifying income, over an after dinner brandy with someone from the British Embassy back in May. That was hardly a Thai policy change.

 

But, instead of being common sense about it, I suspect the person involved from the British Embassy went into "pedant mode" and this British Embassy policy change is the unfortunate and ill thought out result. This doesn't have to have been at a senior level, mid or junior level management at the Embassy could easily have been enjoying that after dinner brandy with someone from immigration and caused a knee jerk over reaction from the Embassy.  Just can't get the staff these days.

 

If he has anything about him the British Ambassador will now step in and clean up the mess. 

 

That's my take on this.

So it sounds like you're predicting the British embassy will backtrack on their ill founded decision to end the embassy letters. That's an optimistic thought. I wouldn't predict that either way at this point but I guess I think it's much more likely they are going to follow through with this FOLLY. 

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54 minutes ago, Jingthing said:

However, disturbingly, what the British kerfuffle is potentially stimulating (and yes I fully blame the British embassy for opening this CAN OF WORMS probably caused by their utter lack of understanding of these matters) is for Thailand to change to be one of the nations where that full IMPORTATION of claimed monthly INCOME is required.


That would be a HORRIBLE development and potentially bleed to more or all nationalities. 


Of course the fully funded and seasoned BANK ACCOUNT option remains as in the status quo. With that option there is no requirement to import at all in any given year, and certainly not the full amount annually.

 

Some very silly people have imagined a Thai immigration requirement to actually SPEND the full amounts annually (income or banked).

 

That is ridiculous and there is nod nation in the world with a retirement program that requires that. But some do require full claimed income IMPORT. 

 

This could be the beginning of the process where Thailand becomes one of those. You do not want that! (Thanks a bunch, British embassy.)

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This is what I am worried most about. You put your 800/400K in the bank but it has to be shown to be used for the period of the year. For us Australians having such a weak FX position now, this would cost me a lot more money every year. I don't want to lose say 6% of my yearly gains because the British Embassy threw a can worms out and now Thai Immigration runs with it.

 

Like Jingthing said - You do not want that!  Where full IMPORTATION of claimed monthly INCOME is required.

Edited by totally thaied up
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I have just renewed my Non Imm 'O' (Marriage Visa) and only showed +400,000 THB in my account + a letter from my Bank confirming that I had this amount in my account 5 days prior to submission + I provided copies of the relevant pages in my Bank Book.

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Just now, rtco said:

I have just renewed my Non Imm 'O' (Marriage Visa) and only showed +400,000 THB in my account + a letter from my Bank confirming that I had this amount in my account 5 days prior to submission + I provided copies of the relevant pages in my Bank Book.

100 percent irrelevant to the issue at hand. NOT HELPFUL. The issues are about income based applications that require embassy letters. Your type of bank account based application does not.

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10 minutes ago, smedly said:

come into a Thai bank can be abused, Lump sum can be abused, all of it can be abused it you have a will to do so, there are agents backhanders etc etc, one thing I do believe is that change is coming and the BE has just given a heads up, so be prepared.  

Anything can and will be abused. That is why most entities  request back up proof in multiples to limit their exposure

-Rental agreement from your rented home

-Proof of Home ownership

-Direct Deposit statement from your bank

-Debit cards 

 

Thai Imm has depended on the Embassy Letter as it is an easy document- If they really want proof of overseas income- you need  2-3 documents that will show  intertwining - ie-  Bank  Summary - showing direct deposit of your pension along with a letter from the  pension provider verifying amounts- along with a Debit Card  that gets the money out of your home country account.  Pretty hard to  create bank debit cards and then create bank statement and then create ATM slips and then create Pension letters.  It is called preponderance of evidence and while not fool proof- eliminates most fraud.  

 

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