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Health insurance mandatory for long-stay foreigners in Thailand


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7 minutes ago, TheAppletons said:

One cannot "renew" an O-A visa....except by converting it to an extension of stay.  When an O-A visa expires, one obtains a new O-A visa.  

wrong - it can be extended for 1 year by crossing a border before it expires = 2 years

 

This article IMO does not refer to 12 month extensions of stay which have a totally different set of financial rules - IN COUNTRY

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2 minutes ago, sumrit said:

Last year a married woman went to S. Africa for six months because her husband went to work there. She came back (pregnant) for Christmas then had problems with the pregnancy and the baby was delivered early, by cesarian. She was presented with a bill for over £10,000 by the NHS because she was deemed no longer a UK resident'. 

Off topic, but the NHS have no way to enforce payment of any bill to any person.

It's just trash you throw in the bin, if you don't feel like paying.

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9 minutes ago, poobear said:

I was off to New York tomorrow morning with all my paper work filled out for my OA visa. Another waste of time and money getting my police and medical checks. At his point I wish I had never went to Thailand in the first place.

 

I am doing same next month...but now I think this will take some time to implement this so hopefully we will be ok for this year but the future is not looking very good.

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7 minutes ago, Longcut said:

You do understand that Tri-Care must be paid out of pocket first? Then the member must file a claim. After approval, if all is approved by Tri-Care 75% is paid to the member in reimbursement. That's after the deductibles are paid first. Tri-Care doesn't do any direct payments to Thai hospitals. 

 

 

Tricare does do the direct payment to Bumrungrad Hospital for inpatient care.  You pay 25% of the cost and they submit your claim.  Tricare will pay the remainder to the hospital and any amount they own you if over $3,000.

 

I had too many surgeries here over the past 13 years.

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51 minutes ago, Melbun said:

 So you can pay your rent, don't end up living like a bum on the street, can feed and clothe yourself and have money left over for girlies - what else.

A Thai school teacher earns 30k a month all have a home, car, family......but a old retired Westerner need 65k a month AND now med insurance.     because his 65k is not enough to live on   ha ha ha 

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7 minutes ago, justin case said:

and how many pay taxes here you think ?

 

most people pay nothing and cost a lot

Most of the Thai tax base is the VAT, every Thai pays that eventually.

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3 minutes ago, Dellboy218 said:

What's the point of the 800k that I have had in the bank for 20 years then?

That's for the extension of stay of which you could use up to 400k of it in a 7 month window to spend on health bills without going under limit for an extension renewal. Otherwise for the other 5 months you cannot go below 800k. 

 

However this thread is about visa applications and re doing visa applications. No mention of extensions in the news article that I can see.

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3 minutes ago, Benroon said:

How does it ? It clearly says ANYONE over 50 - retired,married,Martian etc, if you’re over 50 you will have to get it - any ambiguity is being created by TVF members who are complaining about potential forthcoming ambiguity !!

Read the OP, it doesnt say anyone over 50, it says

 

"the new rule applies to both new applicants for the non-immigrant visa (O-A), which offers a stay of up to one year, and those wishing to renew their visa. Each renewal is valid for one year."

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All the reasons for moving to and living in Thailand are slowly changing. Maybe it's time to find another place to live. I've heard Cambodia is what Thailand was 30 years ago but I'm told even their visa ease and requirements are changing.

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Insurance... Yes.

 

But then they also have to provide some Insurance with reasonable prices.

Think about it. A retired person over 70 years, an average retirement money of lets say 50-60.000 Baht and rent an average condo for 7-8.000 Baht.

The actual fees for an insurance are aroud 100.000 Baht per year.

 

I think, they just want to upset more foreigners.

 

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Just been on the phone with local immigration. They say this has not been implemented yet and they know nothing about it and not to worry for now.

Funny how insurance companies are already advertising though. Quote for me 16,500b per year. thats ok. can deal with that.... 

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Because of the financial requirement changes, I plan to let my Non-Imm OA expire and was slightly considering just apply for a new Visa every 2 years.
BUT,  If this new insurance policy requirements do not allow my existing farangland BCBS insurance when apply for a new OA visa, I am 100% out of thailand.   

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I already have a medical insurance unlike many in this topic obviously. Much higher amounts and all, so I don't really worry. I find it logical that they make such requirements you read often about foreigners skipping out on their bills in hospitals, those topics often full with expats condoning it as hospitals are out there to rip you off.  

 

So not so strange they want to do something about this. I am ok with this if they come up with a good not too expensive plan. Can't be more then what I am paying now 

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    I just dropped my outpatient coverage last year because the outpatient charges were so cheap I hardly ever bothered to go through the tedious paperwork to submit the claims.  Now, I will have to see about reinstating it.  For those wanting to self-insure, Thailand should come up with  a plan for them--something that requires them to keep a certain amount of money in the bank year-round for inpatient and outpatient care and presenting the bank book at their annual renewal as part of that process.

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2 minutes ago, unamazedloso said:

Just been on the phone with local immigration. They say this has not been implemented yet and they know nothing about it and not to worry for now.

Funny how insurance companies are already advertising though. Quote for me 16,500b per year. thats ok. can deal with that.... 

Yes and it would be perfectly reasonable to expect people to have insurance if its only 16K per year i pay 4 times that amount per year. Seems fair to have a basic insurance for foreigners. 

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14 minutes ago, BritManToo said:

Off topic, but the NHS have no way to enforce payment of any bill to any person.

It's just trash you throw in the bin, if you don't feel like paying.

Off topic, I agree, but I was just trying to show what happens in practice to counter inaccurate posts.

 

You can do what you like with the bill, throw it wherever you want, BUT, the UK authorities are no longer ignoring unpaid bills so, if ever you do return to the UK (as this couple will do when his contract finishes) you will be pursued for the money. 

 

A lot of UK citizens have, in the past, assumed they can return to the UK  to receive NHS treatment. So, from the point of having access to medical care, it is relevant to this topic.

Edited by sumrit
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35 minutes ago, sumrit said:

And I was told that would be after you had returned to the UK for more than six months.

No.  If you can show that you have taken up permanent residence in the UK you won't be charged.  Either way, you'll be treated first and can argue later!

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17 minutes ago, Mango Bob said:

Tricare does do the direct payment to Bumrungrad Hospital for inpatient care.  You pay 25% of the cost and they submit your claim.  Tricare will pay the remainder to the hospital and any amount they own you if over $3,000.

 

I had too many surgeries here over the past 13 years.

It's not hospitals like Bumrungrad that the Thai government is worried about not being paid. Private hospitals have their own way of collecting money. 

  Tricare will not send payments to Thai government hospitals. 

 

The insurance policy must offer up to Bt40,000 coverage for outpatient treatment and up to Bt400,000 for inpatient treatment. 

 

This is one of the measures the government has introduced to ease the financial burden placed on state hospitals by foreigners, many of whom have not paid for treatment. 

Edited by Longcut
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4 minutes ago, firemans35 said:

All the reasons for moving to and living in Thailand are slowly changing. Maybe it's time to find another place to live. I've heard Cambodia is what Thailand was 30 years ago but I'm told even their visa ease and requirements are changing.

They got considerably easier in 2017, just under $300/year for anyone over 55 with no financials at all.

Don't even need to visit immigration.

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10 minutes ago, ginjag said:

A Thai school teacher earns 30k a month all have a home, car, family......but a old retired Westerner need 65k a month AND now med insurance.     because his 65k is not enough to live on   ha ha ha 

Life is unfair - But you chose to live in THEIR country.

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12 minutes ago, smedly said:

wrong - it can be extended for 1 year by crossing a border before it expires = 2 years

 

This article IMO does not refer to 12 month extensions of stay which have a totally different set of financial rules - IN COUNTRY

Absolutely. Been doing that for 5-6 years now. Leaving just before the visa expires is not renewing the visa. It simply grants one another year of permission to stay based upon the time of entry according to the rules of the existing multiple entry visa. Does not renew the visa itself. 

 

 

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6 minutes ago, firemans35 said:

All the reasons for moving to and living in Thailand are slowly changing. Maybe it's time to find another place to live. I've heard Cambodia is what Thailand was 30 years ago but I'm told even their visa ease and requirements are changing.

Why would requiring health insurance be such a big deal?  It should be compulsory for all expats.

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