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lost retirement visa, now on overstay


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Hi there

hoping someone can help an old friend of mine with some advice

friend is 77 yeas old, been on retirement visa  for many years, using agent

he went to the uk for holiday, but didn't get a re entry permit before leaving , so when he arrived back, he was given a 30 day tourist visa

he didn't look to check any stamp till a friend saw his passport. It seems his visa ran out on the 14th September , which puts hi on maximum overstay, at 20,000 baht ?

he now has to pay the fine , maybe get another 30 days visa and then apply for another retirement visa?

he was going to go to the ;local immigration offices and see what they say, but not sure if they will just let him pay and extend visa, or if they will lock him up

he has very little money available , living on his state uk pension, the oid lower rate

any advice would be welcome , for the easiest and cheapest way to remain here 

his other option is to do border runs, but at his age its not easy, and hes starting to lose some of his marbles too 

thanks 

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12 minutes ago, Joinaman said:

he went to the uk for holiday, but didn't get a re entry permit before leaving , so when he arrived back, he was given a 30 day tourist visa

he didn't look to check any stamp till a friend saw his passport. It seems his visa ran out on the 14th September , which puts hi on maximum overstay, at 20,000 baht ?

he now has to pay the fine , maybe get another 30 days visa and then apply for another retirement visa?

"his visa ran out on the 14th September"

His visa ran out?  Which visa, the old retirement extension or the 30-day visa exempt stamp when he last entered?

 

If he came in without a re-entry permit then he does not have a retirement (visa) extension, he just has the latest visa exempt stamp.  He'll have to apply from scratch for a retirement extension and most visa agents will be able to assist with that and with the overstay.

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Just now, Liverpool Lou said:

"his visa ran out on the 14th September"

His visa ran out?  Which visa, the old retirement extension or the 30-day visa exempt stamp when he last entered?

 

If he came in without a re-entry permit then he does not have a retirement (visa) extension, he just has the latest visa exempt stamp.  He'll have to apply from scratch for a retirement extension and most visa agents will be able to assist with that and with the overstay.

his visa exempt stamp ran out on the 14th. so on overstay

any recommendations for a visa agent that might be cheaper?

hes living in Isaan, but used an agent in Pattaya for many years 

does 27,000 baht sound about right to get this retirement visa back, or could it be done cheaper , because living on the old uk pension means money is tight for him

Thanks

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7 minutes ago, Joinaman said:

i have to agree with you, i think he has at least half the money, but he hates paying for anything and keeps going on about how he only paid 10.000 before

hes even talking about not paying and living on overstay, saying what can they do to an old man 

if you come in visa exempt or on tourist visa you first have to convert to a non-O visa (90 days) and THEN apply for a one year extension of stay. 

 

the agents do this in one go so you get 15 months the first time you deal with them. B27K sounds about right for that service. 

 

subsequent extensions should be cheaper, I've been quoted 12.5K in Pattaya.

Edited by Lemsta69
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4 minutes ago, Lemsta69 said:

if you come in visa exempt or on tourist visa you first have to convert to a non-O visa (90 days) and THEN apply for a one year extension of stay. 

 

the agents do this in one go so you get 15 months the first time you deal with them. B27K sounds about right for that service. 

 

subsequent extensions should be cheaper, I've been quoted 12.5K in Pattaya.

thanks

its not the annual cost that hurts him its  the big cost to get back to a retirement visa 

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2 minutes ago, Joinaman said:

thanks

its not the annual cost that hurts him its  the big cost to get back to a retirement visa 

yeah it's roughly double, I guess because they're providing two services at the same time. 

 

I assume there's a reason for doing the initial conversion & extension at the same time but it might be worth asking an agent if they can split it into two parts to give him more time to acquire the funds.

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29 minutes ago, ubonjoe said:

He needs to leave the country and pay the fine at on departure from the country.

Rather than trying to enter the country visa exempt again he should apply for a non-o visa at a nearby embassy and then apply for a new extension.

Or use an agent here to avoid having to leave the country.

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21 minutes ago, Lemsta69 said:

if you come in visa exempt or on tourist visa you first have to convert to a non-O visa (90 days) and THEN apply for a one year extension of stay. 

 

the agents do this in one go so you get 15 months the first time you deal with them. B27K sounds about right for that service. 

"B27K sounds about right for that service".

But not including the overstay charge that the agent will have to sort out first.

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Just now, ubonjoe said:

That would be a very expensive way to do it.

The agent mentioned wants 27k baht to sort things out plus 20k baht for the overstay fine.

the 27K presumably covers the financial aspect of the chap's situation.

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30 minutes ago, Joinaman said:

any recommendations for a visa agent that might be cheaper?

hes living in Isaan, but used an agent in Pattaya for many years 

does 27,000 baht sound about right to get this retirement visa back, or could it be done cheape

Afraid not, the figure that he's been quoted is about right for starting from scratch.

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Is he able to vacate to a nearby country on his own and arrange a visa with all the procedures involved? It's not the easiest thing to do flying into Cambodia or Vietnam, getting a hotel, and finding the embassy, especially if your not young and agile.

 

It sounds like he's a little jittery.

Edited by JimTripper
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6 minutes ago, JimTripper said:

This is a dangerous situation if he cannot afford to live back in the UK, and also the airfare involved. What's he going to do if he gets banned for a year, goto Cambodia? It sounds like he is a little jittery and not able to hop countries like a young guy would.

That's the nub of it. He's used to an agent doing things for him. He's not confident exiting the Country. 

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3 minutes ago, NancyL said:

The old guy won't want to hear this, but it may be time for him to return to his home country for good.  This isn't a good country for elderly foreigners with limited resources, no local family support, who are starting to "lose their marbles".  The fact that he left the country without a re-entry permit, didn't realize he was going on overstay and now doesn't have the financial resources to correct the situation is evidence that he can't handle his own affairs.  

 

It seems that he has family/friends in his home country because he visited them recently.  There are social and medical services available to people of his age there.  

 

He's not going to want to hear this.  There are no young beautiful women to tell him he's handsome and willing to spend the night with him for a modest gift.  Cheap beer and barstool buddies aren't steps away.  But he's in danger of being arrested for overstay (yes, they do arrest men of his age) or having an accident and receiving only minimal care because he can't pay the bill.  Something where he can't travel back to his home country, like a fall resulting in a broken hip.  

Very sensible advice. As we know, there are many others in the same boat living day by day, existing in 5,000 baht per month apartments receiving State Pension only with no provision for illness, old age or accidents.  

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