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Non-B Visa to retirement - Leave Thailand?


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I hope someone will be able to clarify whether I have to leave Thailand when I retire from my company shortly and my non-immigration B visa and work permit, which are usually renewed at the One-Stop Service Center 18 Fl., Chamchuree Square, are cancelled. I have had conflicting feedback so far. My company lawyers say I have to leave on the day the documents are cancelled or face 500 Baht fees per day thereafter, and I have had someone in immigration say to my Thai step-daughter that I can stay in Thailand and just arrange the paperwork to obtain the retirement visa. Hence I am a bit confused as what is correct! Anyone been in a similar position and have personal experience please? Thank you.

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I would do what the Immigration official says. Just start the visa change process well before you finish your contract. I understand what the lawyers are saying, but they don't know everything. If you are polite and soft-spoken to Immigration officials, they'll help you.

Edited by renaissanc
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  • 2 weeks later...

Thank you for all your replies, especially Expat4life66 with his detailed one!

 

As it happens his experience differed from mine, but as we know TIT! After receiving the previous replies my Thai step-daughter decided to visit CW herself and ask one of the senior immigration officers exactly what should be done. She was clearly told that I needed to leave Thailand and return, so in the end that is what I did! Hence, I am now back in Thailand after a quick holiday to Laos with my wife and step-daughter and have a visa until 1st February. I need to go to Korat immigration within the next couple of weeks and then before my current "free visa" on arrival expires extend for 90 days. In the meantime I also need to open a new bank account in Korat (although this is more for personal convenience than a necessity as I will be staying there and not in BKK where I currently stay) and deposit either the 400,000 Baht (if I decide in a spouse visa now) or 800,000 Baht for a retirement visa. So in my case it looks like the company lawyers were correct, but for others it seems as though they can bypass leaving Thailand. I was told that as my original visa was issued just over 14.5 years ago I HAD to leave Thailand. Perhaps 10 years is the limit and that is why Expat4life66 managed to stay in the country? Such is life!

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