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


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This might sound like a stupid thought/question, but since this new tax rule comes into effect 1st January, 2024 (only three months from now) could it be possible that they will demand tax returns from all of us already in 2024 and consequently that we have to pay tax under the new rules for all income for the year we are in: 2023?

Edited by MartinBangkok
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You know another thing that i never understand, for years.

They have a HUGE untapped source of revenue here in the idiots that drive. Make the police actually do what police are paid for.

When they see someone driving like a <deleted>, stop them fine them.

No helmet good fine.

They already pay the police a salary if you can call it that, make them earn it.

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On 9/18/2023 at 9:58 AM, seajae said:

so does this mean all incoming money transfers from abroad, if so will they will be taxing pensions as well when they are transferred from other countries, sounds more like a huge money grab by the government if it does, they should only be able to tax money earnt from Thailand not savings etc that were/are earned in other countries. This will be challenged as it is outright theft if the money has nothing to do with Thailand earnings, only the country where it is earned or banked have the right to any taxes from it, the finer details are needed to make sure what they plan to do is legal and not jut a way to rip farangs off 

How can they tax savings because tax would have been previously paid when the savings were earned?

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12 hours ago, Dogmatix said:

Assuming that a a certified tax return or tax clearance certificate would be required, which is pure speculation at this stage, it would be very simple for Immigration. Tax returns have to be filed by 31 March. So from 1 April any visa renewal application of a one year visa would require the appropriate document from the RD.  What could be simpler?

If it did happen then I think the earliest they could do it would be from April 2025 (more like August/September by the time you get your processed return back) as any tax return done in 2024 would cover the 2023 Calendar/Tax year so the new "Rules" wouldn't apply.

 

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1 minute ago, Mike Teavee said:

But how long do you stay out of the country between visits? 

 

It's the total number of days in any 1 Calendar/Tax Year so if you did...

  • 90 days in Thailand,
  • 90 days out
  • 90 Days in Thailand
  • 90 days out
  • 5 days (remainder of the year) in Thailand 

 

... You're Tax Resident. 

 

 

You will have to show me the fine print on that...????

But in my case, I will not be looked at anyway....????

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Just now, Mike Teavee said:

It's not "Fine Print", it's been mentioned dozens of times on this thread already but if you Google "Tax Resident in Thailand" and you'll find 100s/100s of pages that all (well the correct ones anyway) state it is anybody who has spent 180+ days in Thailand in any one Tax/Calendar year... 

 

E.g. HSBC https://www.expat.hsbc.com/expat-explorer/expat-guides/thailand/tax-in-thailand/#:~:text=Residence status for tax purposes,more during a calendar year.

 

Residence status for tax purposes 

Individuals are considered resident if they reside in Thailand for a period or periods totaling 180 days or more during a calendar year. Income earned overseas by Thai residents is also subject to PIT if it is remitted to Thailand in the year it is earned.

 

 

 

Thank you, but as I said, it won't affect me.....????

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3 hours ago, MartinBangkok said:

This might sound like a stupid thought/question, but since this new tax rule comes into effect 1st January, 2024 (only three months from now) could it be possible that they will demand tax returns from all of us already in 2024 and consequently that we have to pay tax under the new rules for all income for the year we are in: 2023?

That would be ridiculous.

 

Personally, I am hesitant to do any type of tax return in a foreign country. It’s risky for my USA stuff and I don’t want to get audited in the USA. Would be a nightmare if I had to return to the states for an audit or had problems getting & sending  documentation back and forth. Staying under the radar is the way to go.

Edited by JimTripper
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1 minute ago, transam said:

Not telling, that is my personal stuff, how about you........????

Exemption, tourist visa, extension, fly out fly in, and now getting my third retirement. All depending on my work and travel.

 

I planned my renewal for future to be when Im for sure here, so from now retirement. 

 

 

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Just now, Hummin said:

Exemption, tourist visa, extension, fly out fly in, and now getting my third retirement. All depending on my work and travel.

 

I planned my renewal for future to be when Im for sure here, so from now retirement. 

 

 

Good for you...........????

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1 minute ago, JimTripper said:

That icon means stupid, not confused.

Thank you for mentioning that, and as said earlier, small men who bother to use confused icons as it is, and call it stupid, have nothing to contribute with. Lazy bastards I would say with no honor. 

 

Do I care? Should I care? 

 

If you could be so nice to explain what you think was stupid to ask what his solution was?

 

To many different people on this board to care at all about a few nut heads. 

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Taxing income from overseas, or capital transfers?  How is hat going to be sorted out?  

Say i put all my income into offshore bank account and transfer money from that once a year.  if income is taxed at source, do I pay tax again?

If money in overseas account is not income but capital, do I still pay tax?

Tax resident?  Say I spend 175 days a year in Thailand.  Not a tax resident?

175 days(nights) in UK; not a tax resident?

15 days holiday in Singapore/ Malaysia/ Vietnam?  Not a tax resident there?   

 

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19 minutes ago, Hummin said:

Thank you for mentioning that, and as said earlier, small men who bother to use confused icons as it is, and call it stupid, have nothing to contribute with. Lazy bastards I would say with no honor. 

 

Do I care? Should I care? 

 

If you could be so nice to explain what you think was stupid to ask what his solution was?

 

To many different people on this board to care at all about a few nut heads. 

Sorry, I dunno. Wasn’t me who did it. ????????‍♂️

Edited by JimTripper
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53 minutes ago, James105 said:

The problem is that many presume (as I do) that the onus of "proving" those savings have been taxed will be on the individual.   I just use a single personal UK bank account for example, and have funds in there that have and have not been taxed.   I have no idea how I could "prove" that one specific £ has been taxed versus one that has not been.   

 

My experience of dealing with Thai bureaucracy so far has been quite confounding and that is for simple tasks like buying a motor vehicle, extending my visa, changing address etc, so adding something as complex as tax into this mixture is quite a chilling prospect.

Well said.

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18 minutes ago, Robin said:

Taxing income from overseas, or capital transfers?  How is hat going to be sorted out?  

Say i put all my income into offshore bank account and transfer money from that once a year.  if income is taxed at source, do I pay tax again?

If money in overseas account is not income but capital, do I still pay tax?

Tax resident?  Say I spend 175 days a year in Thailand.  Not a tax resident?

175 days(nights) in UK; not a tax resident?

15 days holiday in Singapore/ Malaysia/ Vietnam?  Not a tax resident there?   

 

As a UK Citizen, if you are not Tax Resident elsewhere, I believe the UK will treat you as Tax Resident in the UK for the purpose of any Tax Returns... 

 

 

That aside, UK Tax residency is not that as clear cut as number of days in-country, as a UK Citizen you can spend as little as 15 days in country & be Tax Resident... 

 

The automatic non-resident test

An individual will be non-resident for a tax year if they are present in the UK at midnight at the end of the day for less than a specified number of days in the tax year in question, as follows:

  1. For an individual who was resident in the UK for one or more of the preceding three tax years the limit is 15 days or
  2. For an individual who was resident in the UK for none of the preceding three tax years the limit is 45 days or
  3. For an individual who works abroad ‘full-time’ throughout the tax year (broadly, 35 hours per week on average), without a significant break (more than 30 days, with exceptions for annual, sick or parenting leave), the limit 90 days. Such an individual must also have less than 31 days in the tax year on which he does more than three hours’ work in the UK.

Days of presence will be disregarded where an individual spends a day in the UK due to circumstances beyond their control or where it is a day spent in transit.

If none of the three tests above are met, the automatic resident tests must be considered.

 

The automatic resident test

An individual will be conclusively regarded as resident in the UK in a tax year if:

  1. They are present in the UK for 183 days or more in that years or
  2. They have a home in the UK for 91 consecutive days or more (where at least 30 days of that period fall within the tax year in question), are present there for some time on at least 30 days in the tax year, and during that 91 day period either have no home overseas, or have one or more such homes but are present for fewer than 30 days at each of those homes in the tax year or
  3. They work full-time in the UK for a period of at least 365 days, all or part of which falls within the year, without a significant break. More than three quarters of the days in the 365 day period when they work for more than three hours must be days where they work in the UK.

Provided none of the automatic resident tests are satisfied, the sufficient ties test must then be considered.

 

The sufficient ties test

For individuals who want to spend more than 15 or 45 days a year in the UK and do not want to work full-time abroad, it is still possible to become non-resident. However, it will be necessary for them to substantially reduce both the amount of time they spend in the UK and the number of ‘ties’ they have with the UK.

The sufficient ties test combines the concept of UK ties with the number of days that the individual is present in the UK. There are many situational complexities to each of the five UK ties but, in outline, the ties are:

  1. Family tie – the individual has a spouse, civil partner, unmarried partner or minor child resident in the UK. Children will not be taken into account if the individual sees the child in the UK on fewer than 61 days in the year or the child is only resident because they are in full-time education in the UK and they spend less than 21 days in the UK outside term time.
  2. Accommodation tie – the individual has accommodation in the UK that is available to be used by them for a continuous period of at least 91 days in a tax year and they spend at least one night there in the year. If the accommodation is the home of a close relative the ‘one night’ test is extended to 16 nights. This tie does not require the individual to own the accommodation so holiday homes and even hotels may trigger this tie.
  3. Work tie – the individual works in the UK for 40 or more days in a tax year, for at least three hours per day.
  4. 90 day tie – the individual has been present in the UK for more than 90 days in either of the previous two tax years.
  5. Country tie – the individual is present in the UK at midnight in the tax year as much as (or more than) they are present in any other single country. This tie applies to ‘leavers’ only (see below).

The more ties an individual has the less time they may spend in the UK if they wish to be regarded as non-resident. Please note that the table below only applies when the individual is a ‘leaver’ (an individual who was UK resident in one or more of the three previous tax years).

 

Leaving the UK | UK Residence Rules - BDO

 

https://www.bdo.co.uk/en-gb/insights/tax/private-client/leaving-the-uk

 

Edited by Mike Teavee
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On 9/18/2023 at 11:09 AM, NoDisplayName said:

Expats living on their savings and interest, not earning enough to pay tax in their home countries, may not find the relevant tax treaties to be relevant.

 

This is what I was wondering (about dual-tax treaties). For example, if you have savings income or an occupational pension income that is not sourced in either Thailand or your home country, but from a third-country, and you aren't paying any tax in your home country, can you just "refer" to the dual-taxation treaty with your home country? Or will they (Thai Revenue Dept) demand to see a tax return from your home country before letting you off the hook for Thai income tax? Aside from the US, most Western countries base their tax demands only on their nationals if they are 'residents' there. So many unknowns. But pity the farang pensioner here that is about to lose 15-25% of his small pension income. If he's living too close to the bone, he may need to leave. And if his only home was here (maybe bought a condo) then he's truly f'd? 

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17 hours ago, GeorgeCross said:

well those who said it will curb investments in this country.. i can confirm, at least in my case, even the uncertainty will. 

 

after a long talk with my wife we've just shelved 2 property projects worth 15M baht until things are (much) clearer. i know its small beans to some but if we're doing this others are certainly considering it.

 

now looking at european property instead.

 

 

Agree, now we have no other choice.

 

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