Jump to content

Thai woman with foreign husband furious at having to pay 54,000 baht on designer goods


webfact

Recommended Posts

5 hours ago, Denim said:

Time to ditch the fake Rolex and fake Gucci wallet for my next trip.

Probably charge you for duty for real thing.  In Canada I can remember having to register cameras and such before leaving so I didn't get dinged coming back from Germany.  

 

Pakistan was easier something about having a special passport kept the custom agent at bay

Link to comment
Share on other sites

41 minutes ago, BE88 said:

Why someone travels with the original Chanel box, that's why they are angry, they lost 54,000 of benefit

 

I see Thai TVs and appliances with original factory plastic and stickers on them, all the time. Right now, I'm looking at a ten-year-old+ Panasonic refrigerator with the original, yellow, "energy saver" sticker still on the door. The TV that sits atop it still has clear plastic all the way around the perimeter of the 55 inch screen!

 

Being in the original Chanel Box.......... means nothing! 

 

Not in Thailand......... not to Thais. 

 

????????????

 

Cheers! 

  • Confused 1
  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, pokerface1 said:

If customs wants to be fair then they could have recorded the items in question and once the travelers check in to leave Thailand and return home then  a check of those items could easily be made.

And if that Thai citizen didn't leave Thailand they're ok to be effectively exempted from import duty?   That doesn't make any sense.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Several years ago, somebody posted the Thai Customs duty schedule. What I remember reading back than was that Thai Customs can tax your used underwear if they assess it above a certain amount. And if you were bringing things back into Thailand that you had bought in Thailand earlier you were also required to provide receipts of your original purchase.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

9 minutes ago, Mr Meeseeks said:
1 hour ago, pokerface1 said:

IMO its a cash grab. If customs wants to be fair then they could have recorded the items in question and once the travelers check in to leave Thailand and return home then  a check of those items could easily be made. At that point anything item that wasn't present would be taxed. 

That's why I side with the travelers.

Expand  

Bingo. 

Nothing more needs be said. 

Bingo, my buttocks.   Before "nothing more needs to be said" the law would have to be changed.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

39 minutes ago, darrenr said:

So what happens when I bring my personal IPad Pro (worth 60,000 baht), my Bose headsets worth 12,000 baht and my iPhone 13 Pro max worth 60,000 baht , does this mean they could be seized ? And or I have to pay tax for my personal items of use ?

Yes. It's difficult to get in or out of Thailand without paying something extra.

  • Confused 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 minutes ago, Guderian said:

Nice to see that Thailand really is returning to the pre-pandemic normal.

Nice to see that some Thaivisa posters are returning to the pre-pandemic normal of making up their own interpretation of Thailand's Customs/importation rules.

  • Like 1
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

26 minutes ago, Mr Meeseeks said:

I often wear watches valued at well over a million Baht.... but if I have bought them outside Thailand I mail the boxes and papers back here and wear the watch through Customs with my G-Shock I wore going out in my bag.

 

You pay well over a million Baht for a watch?

All that tells me is that you have more cash than brains.

 

The clock on my I-phone is very accurate, and I can also make phone calls on the device, as well as performing many other valuable functions, what's more is that the clock was free.

Please enlighten us, what other function do your watches perform apart from costing as much as a 2 bedroom townhouse?

 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, KanchanaburiGuy said:
33 minutes ago, Liverpool Lou said:

"Have you any evidence to support that "they obviously did?"

Yes, obviously; I read the op, did you?   If they hadn't exceeded the personal allowance they wouldn't have been taxed.

 

"Can you prove that some of it........ or most of it........ was NOT things that shouldn't have been charged duty, as the travelers claim; personal possessions that will LEAVE Thailand when they go home (therefore not "imported?")"

I don't have to prove anything, the Customs officers who issued a receipt have to.  If she disputes the charges she can appeal.

 

Imported items that may be taken out of the country are not exempted from duty.  That she has the ability to take them out of Thailand does not mean that they were "not imported" into Thailand.    And, if she does take them back to Korea she may find that she's hit with Korean import duty if she doesn't have receipts for everything!

 

"If the item is just passing through Thailand, it is NOT an "import."

Yes, it is.  The items were being imported into Thailand, by definition...they were being brought into the country.   A Thai citizen would have a hard job justifying your "passing through" theory.

 

"The couple admitted that at least one item was a gift for someone in Thailand---the shoes---and would rightly be called an "import." 

Every item they brought into the country from another country was an import.

Expand  

See, this is where my comparison to a "transit visa" comes in.

This Thai woman was not transitting.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I remember years ago during a visit to Toronto where one of the other guests that was staying with us was busy removing the designer labels and sewing Marks and Spencer labels in their place, labels she had brought over to Canada with her.

She was a high profile actress (appearing on BBC at least once, maybe twice a week) When I asked her why change labels, she explained that she almost always got stopped by UK Customs on her return to the UK and the M&S labels saved her a fortune.  

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

29 minutes ago, Bert got kinky said:

You pay well over a million Baht for a watch?

All that tells me is that you have more cash than brains.

 

The clock on my I-phone is very accurate,

You pay well over 35 - 45,000 baht for a smartphone ( i-phone) and that tells us you too have more cash then brains ????

  • Haha 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, Bert got kinky said:

Not on used goods you are physically wearing

They were not used goods and she was not wearing them.

 

The watch they tried it on in my case was used, had purchased it several years before. It happened to be in its original case. I was carrying it in hand luggage as I always travel with at least two watches.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, jonclark said:

sorry didnt realise you were an admin on here - Neeranam and I were just having a pleasent side discussion. Sorry to have upset you. 

It'd take a lot more than you to upset me!

 

"sorry didnt realise you were an admin on here - Neeranam and I were just having a pleasent side discussion".

You had been responding to my comments so it wasn't just "you and him"...and, this is a forum.   

If you want to get cosy with him, to the exclusion of other members of this forum, perhaps you should PM him!

  • Like 1
  • Confused 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

31 minutes ago, Liverpool Lou said:

This Thai woman was not transitting.

no and she was not she was resident either - so despte being a Thai national she was here as a tourist visiting - OP states she lives in Korea with her husband. I think the detail here is why did they only target the things of value - if by your own definitions that anything brought into Thailand is an import (or cannot be proved to have been purchased in Thailnd for Thai nationals) as the 20'000 baht duty ceiling for all personal possession is very low  - surely a very, very significant number of arrivals exceed this declaration value - why are they not paying duty on their imports of personal belongings?  This is either massive negligence (using your strict application of the rules) or customs genuinly thinks that all the hundreds of thousands of people that go through the green channel have less than 20'000 bahts worth of personal belongings on them. 

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

2 minutes ago, Liverpool Lou said:

It'd take a lot more than you to upset me!

 

"sorry didnt realise you were an admin on here - Neeranam and I were just having a pleasent side discussion".

You had been responding to my comments so it wasn't just "you and him"...and, this is a forum.   

If you want to get cosy with him, to the exclusion of other members of this forum, perhaps you should PM him!

no mate you butted into a discussion we were already having!

 

  • Sad 1
  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 hours ago, webfact said:

evidence of purchase from the start of journeys was needed

So what does that mean, evidence it was bought in ones home country..???

Don't see what difference that would make.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, KanchanaburiGuy said:

Yes, probably.

 

So, the next question would be........... Did the things that fell into THAT category exceed the 20,000 baht allowable? The shoes alone almost certainly wouldn't. (Could, but probably not! 555)

 

 

Good quality shoes can be very expensive and several pairs would certainly add up.

 

For example I bought a pair of non leather doc martins at Christmas in UK. Set me back 200 quid or about 8,500 baht . They are hardly luxury items.

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

5 minutes ago, vandeventer said:

Why didn't she just buy the fakes like we do?

Because I suspect she bought them at non -Thai retail prices VAT free or reclaimed and by bringing them back to Thailand could sell at a substantial profit given the much higher mark-up on most designer goods in Thailand. Lucky she was not charged with smuggling them in and have them confiscated. Its good to hear that there are honest customs officials who simply charged her import duty rather than anything worse.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

So if I bring my iPhone in, I am over...??

 

Is there some way to show these items are coming in and would leave with you and hense avoid any misunderstanding?

 

 

Edited by bluejets
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...