Jump to content

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


Recommended Posts

44 minutes ago, Misty said:

No, sorry but that is not correct.  Three of the LTR visas DO exempt foreign income transferred into Thailand from Thai tax.  Only one visa does not:  LTR HSP. 

 

 

 

 

Pls show me the exact wording where it is stipulated that income transferred is tax exempt. It is only stated that income generated from overseas is tax exempt, no mentioning of transfered income to Thailand IMHO. Thanks!

Edited by stat
  • Like 1
  • Confused 1
  • Thumbs Up 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, stat said:

I just checked about gift tax in TH. Up to 100 Million Baht in gifts that they our relatives send us we are on the safe side. That should be sufficient for most of us folks here ????

 

https://www.mazars.co.th/Home/Insights/Doing-Business-in-Thailand/Tax/Introduction-of-Inheritance-and-Gift-Tax

How should this “gift” be made by a foreigner in Thailand as a “tax resident” to his Thai spouse without the Revenue Department deeming this gift as tax avoidance. These monetary gifts can also be transferred from the donor's foreign account to the spouse's Thai bank account on a regular basis every 1-12 months? Are these types of donations subject to reporting and if so, by whom and in what form?

 

I'm a bit skeptical...

  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, jonny on the spot said:

So someone can gift me 99 million tax free?

Maybe, but I bet the sender must have already paid tax in Thailand on that money and it can't come from a foreign bank account.

 

Edited by ukrules
  • Like 1
  • Love It 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

37 minutes ago, sathornlover said:

How should this “gift” be made by a foreigner in Thailand as a “tax resident” to his Thai spouse without the Revenue Department deeming this gift as tax avoidance. These monetary gifts can also be transferred from the donor's foreign account to the spouse's Thai bank account on a regular basis every 1-12 months? Are these types of donations subject to reporting and if so, by whom and in what form?

 

I'm a bit skeptical...

I am not an expert on this subject matter, but in general the gift in itself is tax free. However if you then proceed to use the funds yourself then yes this could be tax avoidance...

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

11 minutes ago, Misty said:

I received written confirmation from the LTR unit by email today.   However, you can also check out this English translation of Royal Decree  No. 743) B.E. 2565 (2022). See Section 5. https://ltr.boi.go.th/documents/Royal-Decree-743.pdf

 

Section 5 Income tax under Part 2 of Chapter 3 in Title 2 of the Revenue Code shall be exempted for a foreigner categorised as Wealthy Global Citizen, Wealthy Pensioner, or Work-from-Thailand Professional who is granted a Long-Term Resident Visa under immigration law for assessable income under section 40 of the Revenue Code derived in the previous tax year from an employment, or from business carried on abroad, or from a property situated abroad, and brought into Thailand.

Thanks a lot of the link. Capital income falls under which chapter in the Thai law? I do not know It is mentioned previous tax year only. In addition as is mentioned in the new law all other laws are null and void if I remember correctly; IMHO this could imply that also a potential tax exemption in the LTR is void. However I hope you are in the right on this subject, but just can't read it out of the laws.

Edited by stat
  • Thumbs Up 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

14 minutes ago, stat said:

Thanks a lot of the link. Capital income falls under which chapter in the Thai law? I do not know It is mentioned previous tax year only. In addition as is mentioned in the new law all other laws are null and void if I remember correctly; IMHO this could imply that also a potential tax exemption in the LTR is void. However I hope you are in the right on this subject, but just can't read it out of the laws.

Confirmation today from LTR unit by email. 

 

I haven't seen a new tax law only a Thai internal RD directive.  Can you post a link to the new law?

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, sathornlover said:

How should this “gift” be made by a foreigner in Thailand as a “tax resident” to his Thai spouse without the Revenue Department deeming this gift as tax avoidance. These monetary gifts can also be transferred from the donor's foreign account to the spouse's Thai bank account on a regular basis every 1-12 months? Are these types of donations subject to reporting and if so, by whom and in what form?

 

I'm a bit skeptical...

So am I and best to get that gift away before New Year is my thinking.????

Felt 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, Felt 35 said:

Seems thankfully its only money from whatever brought into Thailand so then assets /interest abroad should stay clear from being taxable in Thailand.

 

Thailand Foreign Source Income Personal Tax - SHERRINGS

This is a big big plus, however you have to transfer money inside Thailand to pay your expenses. Now how to determine if 100% of you remittance is taxable or "only" the 5% profit you made.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, Felt 35 said:

So am I and best to get that gift away before New Year is my thinking.????

Felt 

Nope, you are best off transferring a lot of your money into Thailand this year if you intent to stay here and are confident that you can withdraw your money later. The "gifts" should be send in later ????

  • Like 1
  • Thumbs Up 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Misty said:

Confirmation today from LTR unit by email. 

 

I haven't seen a new tax law only a Thai internal RD directive.  Can you post a link to the new law?

 

You are correct that it is not a law but a directive, my apologies!

 

But as mentioned in the directive, all older directives are void as is also stated by a very reputable law firm.

 

According to the New Order, if Thai tax resident individuals derive offshore-sourced income and bring offshore-sourced income into Thailand, they will have to pay Thai personal income tax, regardless of whether such income is brought into Thailand in the calendar year of receipt or in subsequent calendar years. The New Order will apply to any taxable income that is brought into Thailand from 1 January 2024 onward. Any regulation, instruction, revenue ruling or practice which is contrary to or inconsistent with this New Order shall be repealed.

It is noteworthy that if the offshore-sourced income is not a taxable income (e.g., proceeds from the sale of offshore securities or assets with no gain) or income that is exempted from Thai personal income tax under the Revenue Code, such as income from insurance, Thai tax residents will not have to pay Thai personal income tax when they bring that income into Thailand.

 

Source: https://insightplus.bakermckenzie.com/bm/tax/thailand-offshore-sourced-income-brought-into-thailand-from-1-january-2024-onward-will-be-subject-to-thai-personal-income-tax/

 

 

Also here:

 

Article 2: In line with the issuance of this order, all existing rules, regulations, orders, responses to inquiries, or any practices that contradict or oppose the provisions laid out in Order No. 16/2023 shall be void.

 

 

https://franklegaltax.com/thailands-new-tax-rules-reporting-foreign-income-for-residents/?lang=de

Edited by stat
Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, stat said:

I just checked about gift tax in TH. Up to 100 Million Baht in gifts that they our relatives send us we are on the safe side. That should be sufficient for most of us folks here ????

 

https://www.mazars.co.th/Home/Insights/Doing-Business-in-Thailand/Tax/Introduction-of-Inheritance-and-Gift-Tax

Gift tax is not an income tax.

From Mazars tax rate in 2023 for yearly employment income and hire of work range from exempt for less than 150,000 THB to 35% for 5 million and over. 

https://www.mazars.co.th/Home/Insights/Doing-Business-in-Thailand/Payroll/Personal-Income-Tax

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

16 minutes ago, Srikcir said:

Gift tax is not an income tax.

From Mazars tax rate in 2023 for yearly employment income and hire of work range from exempt for less than 150,000 THB to 35% for 5 million and over. 

https://www.mazars.co.th/Home/Insights/Doing-Business-in-Thailand/Payroll/Personal-Income-Tax

 

Missunderstanding: Where was it stated that Gift tax is an income tax? I brought gift tax up for a workaround. It might be a work around to reveice gifts from abroad in order to not pay income tax and gifts are not taxable (up to 100M).

Edited by stat
  • Like 1
  • Thumbs Up 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, stat said:

 

You are correct that it is not a law but a directive, my apologies!

 

But as mentioned in the directive, all older directives are void as is also stated by a very reputable law firm.

 

According to the New Order, if Thai tax resident individuals derive offshore-sourced income and bring offshore-sourced income into Thailand, they will have to pay Thai personal income tax, regardless of whether such income is brought into Thailand in the calendar year of receipt or in subsequent calendar years. The New Order will apply to any taxable income that is brought into Thailand from 1 January 2024 onward. Any regulation, instruction, revenue ruling or practice which is contrary to or inconsistent with this New Order shall be repealed.

It is noteworthy that if the offshore-sourced income is not a taxable income (e.g., proceeds from the sale of offshore securities or assets with no gain) or income that is exempted from Thai personal income tax under the Revenue Code, such as income from insurance, Thai tax residents will not have to pay Thai personal income tax when they bring that income into Thailand.

 

Source: https://insightplus.bakermckenzie.com/bm/tax/thailand-offshore-sourced-income-brought-into-thailand-from-1-january-2024-onward-will-be-subject-to-thai-personal-income-tax/

 

 

Also here:

 

Article 2: In line with the issuance of this order, all existing rules, regulations, orders, responses to inquiries, or any practices that contradict or oppose the provisions laid out in Order No. 16/2023 shall be void.

 

 

https://franklegaltax.com/thailands-new-tax-rules-reporting-foreign-income-for-residents/?lang=de

The LTR exemption is not based upon a directive, order, rule, regulation, response to inquiries or other practices, it is a Royal Decree.  You seem to have a fixation with this.  If you do not have an LTR, why do you care? Better to spend your time looking for other workarounds, like gifts.

  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, stat said:

I just checked about gift tax in TH. Up to 100 Million Baht in gifts that they our relatives send us we are on the safe side. That should be sufficient for most of us folks here ????

 

https://www.mazars.co.th/Home/Insights/Doing-Business-in-Thailand/Tax/Introduction-of-Inheritance-and-Gift-Tax

That is inheritance tax.  The gift tax kicks in at 20 million for gifts from direct family and 10 million from others.  I am not sure how frequently you can receive gifts from the same donor.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

12 hours ago, Hummin said:

For most my best guess, it will continue as it have done, but for those who already have tax number, it will be easier to squise a few more baht from. 

 

The very same who claimed a tax number on long stay visa, have done it to save paying tax to their orign country. 

 

It is a very good reminder, that what we have today, might not continue the same way in future. 

Currently having or not having a Thai tax number should not make any difference whatsoever.  If you are legally staying in Thailand which I assume applies to most on this forum, then the Thai authorities know about you regardless of if you have or do not have a Thai tax number.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, K2938 said:

According to the BOI managing the LTR program this is incorrect.  According to them LTR visa holders are exempt from tax on income remitted to Thailand as you can also read in the LTR thread on this forum.

Not stated in the conditions or royal degree as far as I know.

Edited by stat
  • Confused 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, stat said:

Nope, you are best off transferring a lot of your money into Thailand this year if you intent to stay here and are confident that you can withdraw your money later. The "gifts" should be send in later ????

Get used to receiving 0.5% interest in TH, vs 5.5% in USD offshore.

  • Sad 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, stat said:

"income under section 40 of the Revenue Code derived in the previous tax year..."

 

 

and again the new directive could impact even a royal degree. That is what I am saying along with EVERY tax advisor. The situation is unclear. Let's hope you are in the right and LTR visa holders are exempt.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

16 minutes ago, stat said:

"income under section 40 of the Revenue Code derived in the previous tax year..."

 

 

The wording of the Royal Decree does indeed give exemption from tax for foreign sourced income derived in the previous year.  It was presumably worded like that because the Revenue Code only makes foreign sourced income only from the previous year assessable when remitted to Thailand.  But now the director general has said that clause no longer means what it says and any prior year income remitted to Thailand is taxable.  So foreign sourced income earned by LTR visa holders in years prior to the previous tax year are technically assessable when remitted to Thailand.

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

28 minutes ago, stat said:

and again the new directive could impact even a royal degree. That is what I am saying along with EVERY tax advisor. The situation is unclear. Let's hope you are in the right and LTR visa holders are exempt.

I don't think it could impact a Royal Decree signed by the PM.  It is an RD order signed by the DG of the RD. So it can only cancel other orders and regulations that are RD orders or equivalent under the DG. You can't have a director general ordering decrees that have the force of law But the wording of the Royal Decree is now defective because it doesn't exempt from tax foreign sourced earnings prior to the previous tax year.  So their situation would be the reverse of the current situation, if enforced literally,

Edited by Dogmatix
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.







×
×
  • Create New...