Jump to content

O/A visa and insurance experience today


Recommended Posts

Just now, Martyp said:

Yes. But that is exactly what we want to hear in this thread. Experiences in different offices. He never said that what he experienced applies everywhere. And CW isn’t just some office in the remote countryside. It’s a big important office serving a great many expats. Maybe it was not the best thing to tell everyone to relax but he has provided a datapoint for us to add to the mix. 

I like to see a few more from there, it would make me feel better about his post.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

27 minutes ago, saiber said:

So if I want to stay in Thailand longer I will be forced to buy an Thai insurance which by far wouldn't meet the benefits I enjoy now with my foreign insurer.....not acceptable. Plan B resettling to an country who welcome retirees. In my case - Spain. 

or you know.. just getting a non imm O.. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, FPizzle said:

I'm totally confused. I renew again in June, 2020 (13th year). I have my monthly deposit in line and now I see this. Do I need health insurance or not?  Just for fun I checked all of the companies listed and none, that I can see, will offer insurance to a person over 70 unless it is a renewal. These are the guidelines I found for the O-A (Retirement) renewal and there doesn't seem to be anything indicating a way to get around it.  It also states that if you have insurance from overseas you will have to show proof of Thai issued insurance at renewal. As usual none of this makes any sense!

Applicant must be aged 50 years old and over (on the day of visa submission application)
This visa is allowed to stay in Thailand for 1 year each time.
Health insurance policy must have coverage not less than 400,000 Thai Baht per policy year for Inpatient, and not less than 40,000 Thai Baht per policy year for outpatient.
In the case where the accompanying spouse is not eligible to apply for the O-A visa, he or she will be considered for temporary stay under Category “O” visa. A marriage certificate must be provided as evidence.
First year, all applicants can buy health insurance from insurance companies in their owned countries or authorized insurance company in Thailand. When the applicants want to renew the visa, the applicants must buy insurance from authorized insurance companies in Thailand only. Any inquiries on completing Insurance application can be addressed at each insurance company.

Pacific Cross does.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Can I presume the only time you would be asked to prove you have obtained insurance is at an international in coming flight or land crossing, it's not linked to your passport, TM 30, 90 day reporting, internal flights or departing from Thailand ? And the insurance certificate is the only evidence

Edited by brianj1964
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 hours ago, Peter Denis said:

Embassy/consulate will issue you an OA Visa valid for 1 year from date of issue (or to the end date of the foreign insurance policy if that happens to expire more early).

Although we haven't had report of it yet, the implementation order mentions the consulate writing down the date to which the health insurance is valid, on the visa.  That date wouldn't change on subsequent entries.

If the health insurance date they write is Oct 1, 2020 - I think you will only be admitted until that date - no matter when you enter. Unless you show you have purchased one of the listed policies, or convince immigration with a new signed and certified letter of qualifying outside insurance coverage.

 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

21 minutes ago, La Migra said:

Although we haven't had report of it yet, the implementation order mentions the consulate writing down the date to which the health insurance is valid, on the visa.  That date wouldn't change on subsequent entries.

If the health insurance date they write is Oct 1, 2020 - I think you will only be admitted until that date - no matter when you enter. Unless you show you have purchased one of the listed policies, or convince immigration with a new signed and certified letter of qualifying outside insurance coverage.

 

Yes I am also waiting to hear from someone where the embassy has marked on a visa that the person has insurance, no one so far

Link to comment
Share on other sites

38 minutes ago, Lovethailandelite said:

They have no need to look at any notation on the visa. The Insurance and certificate is entered in to the TGIA's database as in steps 1 to 4 below.

FB_IMG_1572621806787.jpg

And the immigration link this to the passport? Is this database at the airport ?

when I arrived he never scanned my passport and said you don't have insurance, he looked at the visa and asked me

Edited by brianj1964
  • Like 1
  • Confused 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

22 hours ago, Sheryl said:

The police order explicitly states that permissions to stay issued prior to the effective date can remain until the end of the existing permission to stay period without insurance.

This is positive. But how about Non-Imm-O-A's issued prior to Oct 31st? Initially, when this requirement came out, we expected it only applied to O-A issued after. It now appears arrivals after Oct 31st and extensions too are being affected?

 

22 hours ago, Sheryl said:

However when your current permission to stay is up and assuming you originally entered on an OA looks like you would need one of the "approved" insurance policies to get an extension.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

18 minutes ago, brianj1964 said:

And the immigration link this to the passport? Is this database at the airport ?

when I arrived he never scanned my passport and said you don't have insurance, he looked at the visa and asked me

It's an online system that can be accessed anywhere by the Dept of consular affairs and immigration. It's simply a database that tells them if you have the required insurance or not. I would imagine it is there in order to stop the use of fake documents etc

  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 minutes ago, jacko45k said:

This is positive. But how about Non-Imm-O-A's issued prior to Oct 31st? Initially, when this requirement came out, we expected it only applied to O-A issued after. It now appears arrivals after Oct 31st and extensions too are being affected?

 

 

This information was mentioned on here as far as I remember, people were saying visas granted before 31st wouldn't require insurance but the immigration told my wife regardless of the issue date, ANYONE entering after 31st was subject to insurance rules

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

So, I got my OA visa in NYC before October 31 and will be arriving in November.  Even though the law says I did not need insurance since I got the visa prior to the deadline, I purchased a policy outside of Thailand designed to meet the requirements from Regency.  I had the fill out the form for policies outside of Thailand from the website.   Should I anticipate any issues? 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, bangkokbanjo said:

So, I got my OA visa in NYC before October 31 and will be arriving in November.  Even though the law says I did not need insurance since I got the visa prior to the deadline, I purchased a policy outside of Thailand designed to meet the requirements from Regency.  I had the fill out the form for policies outside of Thailand from the website.   Should I anticipate any issues? 

 

did regency sign the form as required?

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, bangkokbanjo said:

So, I got my OA visa in NYC before October 31 and will be arriving in November.  Even though the law says I did not need insurance since I got the visa prior to the deadline, I purchased a policy outside of Thailand designed to meet the requirements from Regency.  I had the fill out the form for policies outside of Thailand from the website.   Should I anticipate any issues? 

Yes I looked at Regency some time back, policies looked attractive. You may well want to ask whoever marketed this policy to you, but, they do not appear to be on this website.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, bangkokbanjo said:

Even though the law says I did not need insurance since I got the visa prior to the deadline

 

which law is that? can you quote it please as others believe you require insurance on all oa's regardless of issue date and that the 'deadline' is in fact just an 'effective from' date

 

 

  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, brianj1964 said:

And the immigration link this to the passport? Is this database at the airport ?

when I arrived he never scanned my passport and said you don't have insurance, he looked at the visa and asked me

My guess is that when the various IT departments involved are done there will be new fields that the IO sees on screen when your passport is scanned. The new fields would pull info from the TGIA database. These new fields would show if you have insurance and the policy effective dates. Your 'Admitted Until' date stamp would reflect that information.

 

So either you have info noted on your visa by an overseas Thai consulate for your initial entry to the Kingdom or you're in the TGIA database or you have a certificate of insurance or you get 30 days to sort it out.

 

I could see this being applied to all Non O-A visas and extensions of permission to stay based on original O-A by 31 October 2020 after everyone has had a chance to do their extension.

 

Just speculation on my part.

 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Strictly by chance, I already have an insurance policy through Navakij (one of the "approved" Thai companies). It is through Luma, but the policy is from Navakij. The policy is a 40 page document, all in english, and not easy to understand what the coverage is exactly. Will be interesting when I hand that to the IO office when the time comes. Will they just see the dates and the insurance company name and leave it at that. Or will they delve into the "guts" of the document (again, in english) to verify the coverage.....

  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, lampangguy said:

Strictly by chance, I already have an insurance policy through Navakij (one of the "approved" Thai companies). It is through Luma, but the policy is from Navakij. The policy is a 40 page document, all in english, and not easy to understand what the coverage is exactly

Did they not supply a card to keep in your wallet, usually that summarizes the cover quite well?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Lovethailandelite said:

It's an online system that can be accessed anywhere by the Dept of consular affairs and immigration. It's simply a database that tells them if you have the required insurance or not. I would imagine it is there in order to stop the use of fake documents etc

I am not sure that fake will be the biggest issue.  If one looks at the certificate, it seems to only require the insurance company to sign it.  I suspect few foreign insurance companies will sign it, since they won't be familiar with all the ins and outs.  Other posts said only some sort of Thai official directors can sign the certificate

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, Lovethailandelite said:

It's an online system that can be accessed anywhere by the Dept of consular affairs and immigration. It's simply a database that tells them if you have the required insurance or not. I would imagine it is there in order to stop the use of fake documents etc

I would not count on Imm offices and entry point IOs using this even if they are linked (which I also would not assume). They are going to want the certificate.

 

For that matter given the state of the tgia website and its links (several of which do not link to approved policies) I would not count on that database being functional.

 

Every year when I do my extension IO requires hard copues of multiple things that are right there in their own database. Partly because they aren't willing to take a few minutes to look something up and partly in order to have that stack of supporting documents so beloved by beaurocrats. This has been true at 4 different offices over the past 15 years.

 

Bring the certificate. 

 

Now if your visa was issued after Oct 31 there is suppised to be a notation in it by tbe Embassy/Consulate which supposedly will suffice until the indicared  end date of the policy i.e the first year. No reports yet that I have seen of someone entering with this.

 

 

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Can I ask what may seem a silly question but here goes, when the insurance company ask the date of visa renewal, are they referring to the O-A visa or the actual stamp, obviously there's 2 different dates, clearly the dates would never be the same unless you got the visa and entered the same day

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.







×
×
  • Create New...