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Posted
23 minutes ago, webfact said:

However, plans from the Finance Ministry intend to enforce VAT collection on all imported goods, regardless of their value, but continue to exempt import duties.

A rose by any other name is still a stinkin tax 😉

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Posted
1 hour ago, redwood1 said:

So on a package thats worth 100 baht....They will have to process the package how many times to make sure they get their 7 baht tax?

 

Then you must go down to the post office and stand in line to pay your 7 baht tax to get your package...lol

 

I would imagine that f.i. Lazada sellers, and for some reason a lot of their goods come from China, will just add the vat to the price?

 

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Posted
1 hour ago, mania said:

A rose by any other name is still a stinkin tax 😉

Ought to add no end of time for deliveries, have they enough personnel for this?

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Posted
3 minutes ago, Jeffrey346 said:

Just received an item declared at $185. no VAT was charged

 

Yea....no one at the post office got time for that 

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Posted
1 hour ago, NotEinstein said:

This is obviously aimed at the huge amount of Lazada and Shopee parcels direct from China via the delivery services, not via the post office. I guess it will be up to the delivery guy to collect the tax payment upon delivery, or else how is it supposed to work?

It won't work. Another bright idea that will quietly get shelved.

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Posted
2 hours ago, webfact said:

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File photo for reference only

 

Thailand's Customs Department will start charging Value-Added Tax (VAT) on all imported postal goods next month. The move comes in response to the influx of cheap imports from China, which have an unfair advantage over domestically taxed goods.

 

At present, imports sent via post aren't subject to VAT or import duties if each item's cost, insurance, and freight (CIF) value is less than 1,500 baht. However, plans from the Finance Ministry intend to enforce VAT collection on all imported goods, regardless of their value, but continue to exempt import duties.

 

According to Lavaron Sangsnit, the finance permanent secretary, this new tax policy will be established quickly by the Customs Department, which is a swifter approach than revising the Revenue Code. Nevertheless, the VAT-exempt rule will not apply to prohibited items, Sangsnit added.

 

The source from the Finance Ministry revealed that each country sets its VAT threshold based on its economy. In Thailand, the limit was raised from 1,000 to 1,500 baht per item in 2018.

 

Figures indicate that Thailand records more than 30 million parcel imports every year, with over half of these parcels claiming CIF values of less than 1,500 baht. Significant amounts of cheap goods are driven by online platforms retailing Chinese goods.

 

However, assessing the tax on each individually boxed item is a daunting task for customs officers, opening the need to devise effective methods of tax collection on low-cost goods.

 

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-- 2024-04-29

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If they flatrate parcels independant of what is inside, VAT will in future also have to be paid for books? Books are duty- and VAT free internationally.

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Posted
1 hour ago, jimgilly said:

So does that mean you will have to go to the post office for every package coming in from another country to pay this BS tax?   On top of this,  they are working overtime trying to find how they can extract more money from expats living here.  There are better places in this world to be and I for one will be moving on.  Get out while you can because things are just going to get worse in the future.

 

Where will you go where things are not getting worse? I guess many of us would like to know so we can follow you.

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Posted
14 minutes ago, Jeffrey346 said:

Just received an item declared at $185. no VAT was charged

By post?

Posted
5 minutes ago, Marco51 said:

If they flatrate parcels independant of what is inside, VAT will in future also have to be paid for books? Books are duty- and VAT free internationally.

 

Please do not confuse Thailand with the real world.

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