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Thailand Unveils 10-Year Visa to Attract Top Global Talent


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1 hour ago, JackGats said:

This is positively false. Universal income tax is precisely what the Thais haven't instituted. They've made this perfectly clear.

 

Have they?  From what I've seen, nothing has been made clear.

It appears all income worldwide is subject to tax.

But nobody knows yet how this is to be implemented.

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1 hour ago, Srikcir said:

LTR Visa offered by BOI. 

Permission to work in Thailand 

17% personal income tax for the highly-skilled professionals

Tax exemption for overseas income

 

image.png.a479c9ceadbaf769798f0a0e6112f59c.png

Yes it is an LTR/HSP, and they will probably reuse that framework, backed by jobs in the EEC. Makes sense.

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3 hours ago, jimgilly said:

They should offer a 5 or 10 year visa to expats who are retired here and have the valid required funds for either a marriage or retirement visa but of course that will never happen.

They have, it is called LTR/WP you can apply if you wish. 

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1 hour ago, HappyExpat57 said:

They might try and polish this turd of a story up with AI, but it's still the same nonsense that's been floating around for how many years now?

Why not promote within. Instigate the ideals of nurturing and encouraging home grown talent. 

The only catch would be upgrading the educational systems and removing the general restraints that hamper any such progressive development.......and that's not gonna happen anytime soon.

 

Never mind.

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36 minutes ago, Ben Zioner said:

You got it all wrong, Thailand taxes only the portion of one's worldwide income that is remitted to Thailand.

 

Which opens the door for nice tax avoidance schemes. Imagine how nice this can be for someone who transfers only a tenth, or less, of his income to the only country where he is tax resident. You see, TIT, so we have these new rules that look like we are collecting money for the underprivileged Thais, while we give a rock solid tax alibi to the super rich who spend most of their time in London, Davos, Cannes, Bavarian Alps, etc..

 

That's what we HAD.  The purpose of the rule change (or reverting to actually following the law as originally written?) was to capture the earnings of Thais working overseas, but expats would be caught as well.

 

Unless you've got a link to an actual government tax office directive, the rule is than an expat in Thailand >185 days is a resident for tax purposes and all income worldwide is taxable.  How they deal with tax treaties and pensions is unknown. 

 

I'm waiting with all the others to see how this plays out.

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13 minutes ago, NoDisplayName said:

 

That's what we HAD.  The purpose of the rule change (or reverting to actually following the law as originally written?) was to capture the earnings of Thais working overseas, but expats would be caught as well.

 

Unless you've got a link to an actual government tax office directive, the rule is than an expat in Thailand >185 days is a resident for tax purposes and all income worldwide is taxable.  How they deal with tax treaties and pensions is unknown. 

 

I'm waiting with all the others to see how this plays out.



Only on remittance tho.. Anything left offshore remains there tax free. It is the imported portion which is taxable. 

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10 minutes ago, bob smith said:

Thailand - The hub of pointless visas.

 

bob.

 

Boy you got this right these top end visas are breeding like rabbits...There seems to be a new one every 18-24 months...

 

Lets see we have the Smart visas, This new visa, the LTR visa, the OX visa..........All of these were cooked up in the recent past.....

 

And not even a bone was thrown to the average retired expat..

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25 minutes ago, NoDisplayName said:

Unless you've got a link to an actual government tax office directive, the rule is than an expat in Thailand >185 days is a resident for tax purposes and all income worldwide is taxable. 

Why don't you show us the link that say's that since you are the only one claiming it......

And by the way it is 180 days or more, not 185

 

If you haven't already you may want to peruse this 

https://aseannow.com/topic/1324294-introduction-to-personal-income-tax-in-thailand/

 

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