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Foreigners and their overseas income: what next?


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3 hours ago, Lorry said:

I was almost going to click onto the video,  thinking, oh, another video,  this time with the Swedish ambassador...

 

Never mind, you are from Australia,  you are excused. 

(Most Europeans I know think that New Zealand is near Australia, whereas the distance between Australia and New Zealand is much bigger than the distance between Switzerland and Sweden)

You couldn't make it up if you tried. 🙂

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On 5/18/2024 at 12:56 AM, Lorry said:

I was almost going to click onto the video,  thinking, oh, another video,  this time with the Swedish ambassador...

 

Never mind, you are from Australia,  you are excused. 

(Most Europeans I know think that New Zealand is near Australia, whereas the distance between Australia and New Zealand is much bigger than the distance between Switzerland and Sweden)

Click it and listen - you might learn something - for a change.  

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On 4/4/2024 at 12:14 PM, AhFarangJa said:

Something I do not see written about, yet to my mind is a serious issue, and that is the retired people on annual extensions to stay using the monthly income method. Surely, with a sum of about 65,000 per month coming in regularly to meet visa requirements, the taxman will want to get his grubby paws on some of it.   

well onthis note, the immigration officers want to see the bankbook that shows 65000 remitted but is the taxable percentage taken off before the immigration sees the 65000 or what...Not sure how all that will work out.  How about the cost of visas - is the tax added on as the money comes in for that purpose or are the visas all going up in price (i.e. 800K - tax so have to add the taxed amount too for the cost of the visa?  Just wondering as that is what I used to do for my yearly extension.  If I had to bring in 50K for an LTR would I first have to pay tax on it and then 50K for the visa?  just wondering and hope that the RD folks would put out some official word so we know how to start complaining officially and to where.

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On 5/9/2024 at 11:40 AM, nitayagirl said:

 

The proverb is โลภมาก ลาภหาย.

Funny, that is an Aesop's children's fable (133) saying the exact same thing and based on translations of Latin similar story with many other civilizations having basically the same moral meaning of an animal having some type of food in its mouth, sees a reflection water or in some stories a fish in the water, drops his food to grab the fish, loses it as meanwhile a buzzard flew down and stole the food he was carrying.  Lots of different stories...  take your pick.

 

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On 5/10/2024 at 7:49 AM, Mike Lister said:

A fella's got to be fair and reasonable about this. It's not a half baked mess and it's not a so called tax! It's a single adjustment to one of the tax rules, that's all. The half baked mess part is the panic and scurrying that many foreigners have created that results from their very recent awareness that they too have to pay tax in Thailand and have been required to do so all along. That coin is now dropping!

just remember, one of the reasons they are changing how they interpret their law is to weed out those that have not been paying taxes elsewhere nor here - this is part of the international OECD CRS, etc from some governments feeling they have been shortchanged especially pushed by the US which taxes their citizens no matter where they are.  Ben Franklin made the comment after they did the declaration of Independence ---only constant forever - death and taxes

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11 hours ago, MartinBangkok said:

Another thing, this new global tax idea, isn't it a breach of basic human rights? I mean, Thailand, and the global system with OECD at the forefront, wants western expats to pay tax in return for nothing, absolutely nothing. It's even worse, paying tax to a totally corrupt country where the only thing you get is government mandated discrimination (property market, double, triple or 10 times prices in hospitals, tourist attractions, traffic fines, hotels, taxis, not to mention a reporting system like you are a criminal and the exorbitant expat rates in the justice system). I could go on!

 

I could try telling the clowns running Thailand what paying tax gets me in return in Norway, but they probably wouldn't believe me.

 

It's not right, the new global tax regime.

I agree...national tax US no matter where we earn it or where we are residents, in addition, if in the US, most likely a state tax too, some district taxes, some city taxes, and property taxes where they continue to raise the value of the property...in many states now the average national wage earner can not even think about buying a house!  In San Francisco,  Calf.  there are no houses for sale under 1 million dollars according to the media.  Hospitalization is now zooming and health insurance cost is getting prohibitive too.  Big pharma prices also continue rising to enable them get record profits each year.  Just look at the people, ask them - very few are happy with the current situations throughout the country.  Now one would think that with a national election, select a "new" president, that things might look better after

November....dream on as the two leading candidates are WWII baby boomers and mentally both seem to have lost it yet their party has no one else waiting...so the losers are the citizens AGAIN, with on candidate promising lower taxes for the rich!  Go figure.  Best of luck to all especially those of us lucky enough to live here in Thailand.

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On 4/4/2024 at 12:00 PM, Bangkok Barry said:

If we pay Thai tax like Thais can we also benefit from the 30 baht health scheme? No, I thought not. It only works one-way.

"pay Thai tax like Thais" ??  Out of all of my Thai friends and associates, I only know a couple who actually pay taxes. The others certainly make enough to owe taxes, but have zero interest in doing so and also have zero fear of any consequences. This is Thailand. This is how stuff works. This new tax scheme is, in reality, designed to milk money from foreigners under the guise that there is inequality in Thailand. Those who came up with this scheme are from the elite families that cause the inequality.  The hypocrisy meter is spinning and starting to smoke.  

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13 hours ago, jesimps said:

This morning (12 June), with my Thai wife in tow who speaks fluent English, I visited the tax office in Jomtien to obtain a TIN. When I presented the lady with my passport, she told me that because I paid tax in my home country (UK) she could not issue me with a TIN. My wife outlined all that had been written in the news the last few months about long-stay expats bringing money into the country needing to be assessed, but she was adamant. No TIN! Up to them. I'll just keep an eye on Asean Now to see if anything comes of this. One thing seems certain, if we do all need to be assessed for tax here, then it hasn't come to the notice of the Jomtien Tax Office yet.

I got mine a couple of years ago from the Office in Naklua (tried 1st at Jomtien & was told I had to go there as I live in Wongamat), they did look at me confused at 1st but I told them that I needed one for my UK Bank, to re-claim withheld interest & was planning on buying a condo so would need one to pay property tax and they relented. 

 

Wish I hadn't have bothered as I never did give it to my UK Bank, despite giving them every thing they asked for still not received the refund & have put of buying a Condo until the Tax position is clearer.   

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4 hours ago, Galong said:

"pay Thai tax like Thais" ??  Out of all of my Thai friends and associates, I only know a couple who actually pay taxes. The others certainly make enough to owe taxes, but have zero interest in doing so and also have zero fear of any consequences. This is Thailand. This is how stuff works. This new tax scheme is, in reality, designed to milk money from foreigners under the guise that there is inequality in Thailand. Those who came up with this scheme are from the elite families that cause the inequality.  The hypocrisy meter is spinning and starting to smoke.  

 

Sorry but this is almost all complete nonsense.Thais do pay income tax and those employed at a corporate level have it automatically deducted on the PAYE method. There are consequences to evading tax - without denying there is a corrupt element.There is no new tax scheme, rather a tweaking of what is already in place - bringing Thailand (eventually) in line with most other countries.The taxation on assessable overseas income is not aimed at foreigners, and elite families have nothing to do with it.The revised approach seems to come from the bureaucratic level and if anything it will be unwelcome to "elite families."

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10 minutes ago, jayboy said:

 

Sorry but this is almost all complete nonsense.Thais do pay income tax and those employed at a corporate level have it automatically deducted on the PAYE method. There are consequences to evading tax - without denying there is a corrupt element.There is no new tax scheme, rather a tweaking of what is already in place - bringing Thailand (eventually) in line with most other countries.The taxation on assessable overseas income is not aimed at foreigners, and elite families have nothing to do with it.The revised approach seems to come from the bureaucratic level and if anything it will be unwelcome to "elite families."

 

Only 3.3 Million people pay income tax in Thailand out of 70 million people. So almost all Thai's don't pay income tax.

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11 minutes ago, lordgrinz said:

 

Only 3.3 Million people pay income tax in Thailand out of 70 million people. So almost all Thai's don't pay income tax.

Only the workforce is measured for tax purposes, that's 38 million people, it's the same in most countries.

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2 minutes ago, Mike Lister said:

Only the workforce is measured for tax purposes, that's 38 million people, it's the same in most countries.

 

Ok, so it's still less then 10%, happy now?

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