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Thai gov. to tax (remitted) income from abroad for tax residents starting 2024 - Part I


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4 hours ago, Mike Lister said:

Jesus H....! You've never filed a tax return, never spent time with RD staff yet you've labelled them as worse than the Immi staff....are you even in Thailand?

 

It has always been the case in my experience, and in the experience of everyone else that I have spoken to about it, that RD is the easiest and best government department to work with. They volunteer information and fill out foreigners tax returns free of charge, and you get free coffee, a smile and never a queue! You should try visiting one of their offices, the next time you visit Thailand.

Thanks for the info on Thailand. Not the case in other countries but maybe Thailand is different. Do they have people who speak English? In Germany sometimes they even refuse to read an english account statement and the english level here is usually pretty high.

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4 hours ago, TroubleandGrumpy said:

There is another thread started today about changed procedures for the TM30s in the Pattaya Immigration Office.  May I suggest that some posters here need to go read that thread, and some of the others on the many difficulties Expats have regarding dealing with the Thai Imigration.  My point being - if anyone thinks dealing with the Thai Tax Office will be any better than the Thai Immigration, IMO you are very very mistaken. Knowing as much as possible how it works, and what is the correct way to do something (currently), and what documents are required, is extremely important when dealing with any Thai bureaucracy. Unlike Immigration, the Thai RD have zero obligation to 'teach or advise' Expats (or anyone) how to complete an annual tax return.

Grumpy is 100% correct. 

 

In general his above comments are correct and apply to many revenue departments including in America.

 

To trust Revenue Deparyment officials as being kind and on your side is not the best policy I say this from years of experience working in the tax world in America and many years of filing personal and corporate taxes in Thailand. There is always the exception if for example the local official is your brother-in-law?

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2 hours ago, tomacht8 said:

Everything is still unclear to me.
I have absolutely no desire to additionally torture myself with any Thai tax authorities.
The annual paperwar with the immigration is already enough for me. Since many years I have been able to transfer a total of 1-3 million Thai Baht to Thailand per year to my Thai bank account without any problems.

 

My money is already fully taxed in my home country from rental income, stock dividends and real estate sales. The money i transfered to Thailand was always used to support my Thai family and extended Thai relatives, some construction projects to give my relatives work, health insurance, car financing, school fees for my Thai nephews, etc.
This will no longer happen in 2024.

 

I will transfer a large sum to my Thailand bank account for the last time in 2023 and then it will be over. Planned investments (buying farmland for my Thai family, building a Thai stock portfolio for my thai children, buying another condominium in Thailand) are also being put on hold completely.

 

It would also annoy me if I had to hire any dubious Thai tax advisors.
The only alternative strategies for me so far are: to be in Thailand for less than 180 days per year, or to go on short trips to the Philippines, Singapore, Hong Kong and use Western Union there to transfer up to 20,000 US dollars per trip, which I can then legally take with me back to Thailand.
 

But one thing that will certainly not happen in my case is, that some Thai politicians will enrich themselves with my money through double taxation.

The western union way is no real solution as you are still technically "remitting" money to Thailand. I assume you will have to declare money before landing (in future) and if you dont and get cought you have a big problem.

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4 hours ago, Mike Lister said:

Jesus H....! You've never filed a tax return, never spent time with RD staff yet you've labelled them as worse than the Immi staff....are you even in Thailand?

 

It has always been the case in my experience, and in the experience of everyone else that I have spoken to about it, that RD is the easiest and best government department to work with. They volunteer information and fill out foreigners tax returns free of charge, and you get free coffee, a smile and never a queue! You should try visiting one of their offices, the next time you visit Thailand.

I have spent time with Rd staff and live and work here and have filed many years of Thai tax returns. My experience and that of all Thai business people that I know does not match yours - not sure why... Well I have never waited in a line but no free coffee!

 

You can't trust a RD official to fill out your tax return unless maybe it is the simplest possible one with no tax owed. a number of reasons - they are not on your team and normally they are not well trained.

 

In the tax world there are lots of gray areas - gues which path they will follow?

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9 hours ago, Lorry said:
9 hours ago, JimGant said:

Invoked where? If my US govt pension is "exclusively" taxed by the US, who cares what year I bring it over to Thailand..... per treaty, it never plays any part in the Thai tax scheme, meaning: no reference to it is required in the filing of Thai taxes.

I don't think any taxman in the world would accept your reasoning. 

"Show me all you've got!"

And then it's THEIR decision what is taxable and what not.

Well, maybe in your country. In the US, income tax is confined to cash flows that are defined as "taxable income." Just like Thailand's "assessable income." Thus, a gift from my aunt Martha, a loan from aunt Agnes, and an inheritance from dear old Mom -- would not have to be declared on my US income tax return. And, also, Thai social security is only taxable by Thailand, per DTA -- thus, again a cash flow omitted from my US tax return. Common sense, actually.

Edited by JimGant
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1 hour ago, stat said:

The western union way is no real solution as you are still technically "remitting" money to Thailand. I assume you will have to declare money before landing (in future) and if you dont and get cought you have a big problem.

Everyone has to declare their money at thai customs if they are carrying more than the equivalent of 20,000 US dollars. Those who carry less are currently not required to register. The idea, that customs at the airport asks everyone how much cash they are carrying is absolute improbable

, given the hughes numbers of visitors arriving every day. 

It will hopefully will takes many decades before the dream of every government in the world: - a completely cashless society, and before a complete control over people's cash transactions - becomes a reality.

Edited by tomacht8
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An interesting article in the UK Telegraph this morning is directly related. It says that HMRC is cracking down on overseas secondary income using web sie data from a number of different sources. This is an extension to a program that was purely UK based initially, now it's being expanded to include global sources. Apparently, the likes of Airbnb already reports detailed information about overseas  lets, by British citizens. The significance here i that it's not just Thailand who is seeking to tax undeclared overseas income, many countries are actively doing the same thing.

 

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/tax/income/holiday-home-owners-banking-hmrc-global-tax-crackdown/

Edited by Mike Lister
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7 hours ago, stat said:

They dont need to, they could just tax all your remittances. But "up to you" Somchai will say if you can come up with all the paperwork that Somchai needs

For me, ALL my income qualifies under Article 20 US-Thailand DTA.

 

But even if none of that is exempted (and Thai RD in their FAQ says that at lest some income is to be exempted) as an age 70+ 180+ days/year tax pigeon, I figure with all the available deductions and 150k 0% bracket, my annual taxes would be in the +/- 4000 baht per month range.

 

I wouldn't like it but doable. Thus the morning contribution from the I'm-alright-Jack brigade.

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7 hours ago, TravelerEastWest said:

I have spent time with Rd staff and live and work here and have filed many years of Thai tax returns. My experience and that of all Thai business people that I know does not match yours - not sure why... Well I have never waited in a line but no free coffee!

 

You can't trust a RD official to fill out your tax return unless maybe it is the simplest possible one with no tax owed. a number of reasons - they are not on your team and normally they are not well trained.

 

In the tax world there are lots of gray areas - gues which path they will follow?

There is almost certainly going to be a more intense and in depth scrutiny of business owners tax affairs than there is of foreign retirees, most of whom are on limited, fixed, recurring  income. But this will be true of any country because the potential to manipulate numbers and massage the detail is far greater for a business owner than it is for the pensioner who makes a single transfer each month. And yes, a pensioners tax return is in the simple variety camp, what else would anyone expect.

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2 minutes ago, Klonko said:

Tax rates after THB 310k deductibles:

THB 1m 3.9%
THB 2m 8.8%

THB 3m 12.5%

THB 4m 15.6%

 

 

Taxable Income per year (Baht) Tax rate

0 – 150,000 Exempt

150,000 – 300,000 5%

300,000 – 500,000 10%

500,000 – 750,000 15%

750,000 – 1,000,000 20%

1,000,000 – 2,000,000 25%

2,000,000 – 4,000,000 30%

Over 4,000,000 35% 

 

https://www.rd.go.th/fileadmin/user_upload/AEC/AseanTax-Thailand.pdf

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15 hours ago, Mike Lister said:

t has always been the case in my experience, and in the experience of everyone else that I have spoken to about it, that RD is the easiest and best government department to work with. They volunteer information and fill out foreigners tax returns free of charge, and you get free coffee, a smile and never a queue! You should try visiting one of their offices, the next time you visit Thailand.

You have never been to the Jomtien tax office then.......

Admittedly I stopped a couple of years ago but before that was the opposite of your experience all be it I was only claiming refunds on withheld bank interest.

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Just now, topt said:

You have never been to the Jomtien tax office then.......

Admittedly I stopped a couple of years ago but before that was the opposite of your experience all be it I was only claiming refunds on withheld bank interest.

No I haven't and I can imagine that districts where there are lots of foreigners and tourist businesses, may well be the exception.

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While I had heard of such reciprocal international tax agreements, I was never involved either in work or personally.

 

At least for me it was not a waste-of-time to better understand how that might impact any changes, if any, in the Thai resident tax structure that might occur.

Edited by jerrymahoney
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21 hours ago, redwood1 said:

Even if every expat in Thailand paid 1,000 dollars a year in taxes...It would only be a drop in the bucket as far as paying off 560 billion baht.....I am talking like 150-200 years....

 

Do the math and see for yourself....

Every little helps - apogies to Tesco

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30 minutes ago, shackleton said:

This Subject is going to go forever as no one is sure who is going to pay tax or not 

Just wait until its clear in law  when it's out in black and white who

it affects ????

Agree but my strategy is to move a couple of million (baht) here before 2024 that would keep me going for a couple of years while I wait and see/

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Your going to be fine; and even if your not going to be fine, isn’t it better to just exist thinking that you’re going to be fine. And when it’s not fine, then you can just <deleted> handle it. There no sense to ruin right now, right?

Edited by metisdead
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2 hours ago, Klonko said:

Tax rates after THB 310k deductibles:

THB 1m 3.9%
THB 2m 8.8%

THB 3m 12.5%

THB 4m 15.6%

Thank you, Klonko, for listing the effective tax rates on ordinary income after modest deductions.   

 

I'll assume your calculation is correct.   For reference the 15.6% Thai effective rate on THB 4m (about $110,000 today) is:

-- almost identical to the US self-employment tax of 15.3% (first $147K in 2022, $160K in 2023), 

-- exactly the same as the effective US income tax rate of 15.6%* on $110,000 with standard single deduction (slightly less if self-employed).  

 

Note that if you're a US taxpayer you can:

 -- avoid the US earned income tax (to $120K income) with the FEIE exclusion if you meet the US non-resident test,

 -- get credit against your identical Thai tax obligation (or vice versa, since you can easily pay Thailand first) if you do not meet the US test and are tax-resident here.

 

*Tax $17,134 / $110,000 income = 15.6%.  The % rate Turbo gives is misleading.

https://turbotax.intuit.com/tax-tools/calculators/taxcaster/  

 

Not an accountant -- just an ordinary taxpayer who is able to RTFM.

 

Edited by retiree
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12 hours ago, stat said:

Making a lot of friends here in 14 posts huh?

Another wild @$$ assumption you got wrong.

 

Who tries to make friends with anonymous internet pixels ?
 

I'm still waiting on your expert* opinion on how I have misunderstood the UK / Thai DTA with regards to my 2 pensions.

 

As you appear to be avoiding the issue like the plague, I will deduce that you are not an expert and have nothing better to do than post hundreds of posts that appear to come straight out your hoop.

 

* The so called experts that I met in my early days of coming to Thailand, were so good that the were living in bedsits and riding Honda Waves and the only thing they seemed to be experts in was ducking and diving and trying to cadge free beer.

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13 hours ago, stat said:

They dont need to as you have to present your passport when you exhange money in a bank or with superrich etc. You could exchange at home and lose like 3% on the exchange rate though. I would not carry more then 10K euro/USD any way.

Just to point out that one might ask one's everloving-wife, for one example, to pop into the exchange-shop with some Sterling/Dollar-cash, to be exchanged into Baht on your behalf. ????

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21 hours ago, samtam said:

I don't know why, but I misread one of your earlier posts that seemed to suggest that over 65s had a threshold of THB150k PLUS THB190k PLUS THB60k.

This one?:

Just got back, with a Tax ID, same number as on my Pink Card. with assurance that, in my case, transferring 40k per month = 480k per annum, after 190k + 60k + 150k all at 0%, I shall have to pay Bht4000 for the year. There was some mention of 100k being deductible for expenses. As we are not married, I cannot claim 60k for my Mrs, but possibly some for the school fees I pay for my Mrs's son, he will let me know.

Where the money comes from, pension, interest, sister's immoral earnings, is of no matter. It is simply how much is/will be transferred from UK to Thailand in the specific tax year. 

As I am only getting UK State Pension @ £170 per week = £8840 and a small one from Norway, my total UK income is £10400, below the Tax Free Allowance, so no tax due in UK either. I am happy with this.

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