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Why am I paying Tax?


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The wife works for an international school and I have a spouse visa off her work permit. Her school is taxing me on her salary. We have questioned it many times but they say that's how the tax system works. So she is getting taxed twice. This has added up over the last 3 years to a lot of money. 

 

Can anyone confirm this to be correct? Why on earth would I pay tax when I cannot legally work here?

 

I just recently purchased health insurance and its tax deductible, Not for me though because I don't have a tax number in my name.

 

Any knowledge would be much appreciated. 

Edited by Tubby
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24 minutes ago, JimGant said:

Makes no sense. You, with no Thai taxable income, are much better off being included on your wife's tax return, as filing jointly gives an extra 60000 exemption. Do a return for her filing singly. Then, one filing jointly. If the latter has more taxation than the former, yeah, someone's plugging in erroneous income figures.

Interesting. How would I go about this? Do I need an accountant?

thanks

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2 hours ago, Tubby said:

This has added up over the last 3 years to a lot of money.  

 

1 hour ago, Tubby said:

Been here 17 years. Never paid tax on wife salary before. 

So have you been paying taxes last 3 years, or never for 17 years?

 

Anyways, if you don't have any income and didn't even file tax returns, don't understand how you can be taxed.  Unless it's being taken out of her paycheck somehow....perhaps for something else.  There must be some extenuating circumstances we don't know about, i.e., not normal.

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1 minute ago, Berkshire said:

 

So have you been paying taxes last 3 years, or never for 17 years?

 

Anyways, if you don't have any income and didn't even file tax returns, don't understand how you can be taxed.  Unless it's being taken out of her paycheck somehow....perhaps for something else.  There must be some extenuating circumstances we don't know about, i.e., not normal.

 

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5 minutes ago, Tubby said:

hey guys, unless you know what you are talking about then please dont post. You have no idea what you say. I dont earn a wage, therefore I dont pay tax. 

I don't earn a wage here. I don't pay income taxes here but I still pay sales tax/VAT, anual vehicle registration (which is a form of tax) etc, as I suspect you do.

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Reading the replies, I think there needs to be some clarification from the OP.

 

1. They are deducting twice tax as much as they should from your wife's monthly income.

or

2. In addition to above, they are also doing your wire's annual tax returns and showing that she owes double what she/you really should (assuming they are filing you jointly).

 

If they are deducting twice as much as they should, you would easily get it back doing your own tax returns correctly (P.N.D.91 form). if they are doing the returns, then better you get down to the revenue department with copies to get this sorted out.

 

No way would they be filing an individual return for you since you don't have a tax ID number.

 

Edited by scoutman360
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Definitely need to get someone independent from the school to assess the PND1 withholding forms, and the subsequent PND91 personal income tax filing form. It sounds like someone other than yourself or wife filed the PND91 -- and this is where you'll see any errors (as well as in the PND1 forms, which the school filed). It's possible you're being taxed for income in-kind, if, say, you're living in school-provided housing. Anyway, need to talk to a Thai tax expert. Oh, I don't know if your health premiums could be deductible on your wife's joint Thai tax filing -- but if so, and you need a Thai tax ID, this should be easy to obtain -- at least it is for those of us with fixed deposit accounts, and want to reclaim our annual 15% at source tax withholdings.

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1 hour ago, Tubby said:

how about you read the original post before making yourself look an ass with stupid comments.

You then went on to say you don't earn a wage so you don't pay tax - which made you look pretty assinine yourself. Put your own house (comments) in order before you start with your childish insults.

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18 hours ago, JimGant said:

Makes no sense. You, with no Thai taxable income, are much better off being included on your wife's tax return, as filing jointly gives an extra 60000 exemption. Do a return for her filing singly. Then, one filing jointly. If the latter has more taxation than the former, yeah, someone's plugging in erroneous income figures.

please,could you explain a bit more?

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Just got back from being audited yesterday. Even though I pay a huge chunk of tax every year, they said my company did my taxes wrong and I owe another ~300k THB. For this I get police protection...err no I don't, I have to pay for that extra. I get water service... err no I don't, only about 10 liters a day trickles up so I pay for a water truck. I get roads... err no, if I didn't have a 4x4 I would sink into the endless potholes to my house. I get butkis for million baht a year in tax.

 

The folks at the tax place were pretty nice and compassionate, but the laws are just draconian. They did try and find any deductions they could for me, but the options were limited. If I were you I would head to the local revenue office and ask them, they went out of their way to try and help me.

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welcome to LOS they allow you to buy (any kind of) property, pay for visa (temporary permission to stay) and all of a sudden they kick you out, sometimes,  for no apparent reason and  now paying taxes?

Edited by batata
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3 hours ago, Time Traveller said:

If you do this, and only one spouse has all the income, then combined the taxes are slightly higher than if you filed seperately with income split between the 2 spouses. 

Yeah, but you can't file separately using half the wife's income as your own. If you could, then tubby's problem would be paying much less tax than if all the income was attributed to the wife (which is legally and practically -- for the tax collectors -- the way it should be).

 

 

4 hours ago, Time Traveller said:

Or, they could be trying to tell you in bad English, that because you elect to be treated as combined spouses for tax that you will need to pay extra tax.

https://www.tiscoasset.com/en/asset/html/tax-calculator.jsp

 

Using the above calculator, say the wife earns 220,000 baht/year. If she were single, her taxable income would be 60,000 -- same as if she filed married filing singly. Now, if she files with a spouse like tubby, with no income, she gets an extra 60,000 spousal allowance -- and her taxable income becomes zero.

So, sounds like the company is using "single" as tax filing option, for withholding and subsequent taxation. As shown, this would add 60,000 to taxable income.

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