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Posted
On 2/16/2025 at 3:03 PM, Briggsy said:

It appears that you are applying for a 'workcation' category DTV from the London Thai embassy. This is what I have.

 

From memory, they are looking for either a "professional portfolio" or a "contract of employment clearly showing the opportunity to work remotely". I would suggest from the information that you have provided you are very much stretching the professional portfolio route. First of all, it is not professional. You are doing this in a personal capacity not a professional capacity. But you do not need to convince me. Having said that, I have always found the London Thai embassy will look at the big picture and has some latitude for their interpretation of the rules. So, give it a go. The worst case scenario is you lose the £300 application fee.

 

To be honest, if you are 50 or over, the non-imm O will be a very straightforward application for you. This can then be extended in-country. This sounds far more suitable to your situation.

 

Just asking a question. Have no idea of the rules involved here. Non-imm O allows acquiring active income when working remotely for a foreign company? Or is a DTV a better fit for e.g. a slownomadist working as a professional for a relative small foreign company?

Posted
14 hours ago, jacnl2000 said:

 

Just asking a question. Have no idea of the rules involved here. Non-imm O allows acquiring active income when working remotely for a foreign company? Or is a DTV a better fit for e.g. a slownomadist working as a professional for a relative small foreign company?

Non-O Retirement does not allow working in Thailand. If over 50, and work / income does not involve Thailand, and all earnings are deposited into a foreign account, I would stick with Non-O Retirement vs DTV. 

 

If under 50 and w/o Thai family, the DTV is a great option.

  • Agree 1
Posted

@jacnl2000 I completely agree with @Rob Browder's post above.

 

We don't know the DTV is going to pan out over the next few years particularly for those spending the majority of their time in Thailand.

 

Also, small issues like problems opening bank accounts, obtaining 5-year driving licences and obtaining pink cards are resolved by having a non-imm O extension.

Posted

Anyone knows what happens when your passport expires before your DTV eVisa does?  My DTV is valid for the next 4.5 years but I have to renew my passport this year.  There is a note on my DTV eVisa showing my passport expiry date and referencing the passport ID, so they definitely checked and are aware it's expiring before the eVisa. 

 

I am assuming that I just need to bring the old passport with me for the next 4 years.  Perhaps I can go into Thai immigration after entering the country with my new and old passport the first time, get them to update the passport ID on the eVisa, then print out a new copy so that I don't have to keep bringing the old pasport with me?

Posted
On 3/22/2025 at 5:38 PM, shdmn said:

I am assuming that I just need to bring the old passport with me for the next 4 years.  Perhaps I can go into Thai immigration after entering the country with my new and old passport the first time, get them to update the passport ID on the eVisa, then print out a new copy so that I don't have to keep bringing the old pasport with me?

If possible, it would be done via the MFA, who issues Visas.  They have been known to make corrections on visas - unknown if they would help with this case, however.

Posted
On 3/22/2025 at 11:38 AM, shdmn said:

Anyone knows what happens when your passport expires before your DTV eVisa does?...

 

You go to your local immigration office with this application form:

https://www.immigration.go.th/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/22.Transfer-Stamp-to-New-Passport-Form.pdf

 

Regarding the list or required documents, some immigration offices may also ask for the receipt for your latest TM.30.

 

The single biggest problem in communication is the illusion that it has taken place. — George Bernard Shaw

 

Posted
11 minutes ago, 2long said:

DTV SUCCESS!!

Excellent news. Thanks for detailed clear report.

In 6 months please do a thread with report of your first extension. 

  • Thumbs Up 1
Posted

Hypothetically - If someone has an existing company or is a non-majority share holder in a Thai company are they able to apply for a DTV?

Simarlarly if someone has a DTV already are they able to become a non-majority shareholder in a Thai company?

I'm guessing no but if some unemployed guy was still part of a now basically dormant company from years ago I wonder where in the DTV application or rules this comes up.

Posted
On 3/23/2025 at 7:14 PM, Maestro said:

 

You go to your local immigration office with this application form:

https://www.immigration.go.th/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/22.Transfer-Stamp-to-New-Passport-Form.pdf

 

Regarding the list or required documents, some immigration offices may also ask for the receipt for your latest TM.30.

 

 

Looks like that's only for physical visas in your passport, not evisas.

My guess is you just keep your old passport and show both at immigration.

  • Agree 1
Posted
1 hour ago, alw22 said:

 

Looks like that's only for physical visas in your passport, not evisas.

My guess is you just keep your old passport and show both at immigration.

Incorrect.

They transfer the visa details and any current permission of stay stamps to your new passport.

Posted
11 minutes ago, Liquorice said:

Incorrect.

They transfer the visa details and any current permission of stay stamps to your new passport.

I am not sure what you mean.

 

How do you "transfer visa details" when they are not in the old passport, but they are on an evisa?

 

In addition, the question really refers to entering Thailand with an evisa showing the old passport number and a new passport with a new passport number. This may happen multiple times over the 5-year life of the DTV as holders may go in and out of Thailand several times a year. You answer has not addressed this.

 

As you appear familiar with this issue, could you address these two points?

  • Confused 1
Posted
1 minute ago, Briggsy said:

I am not sure what you mean.

 

How do you "transfer visa details" when they are not in the old passport, but they are on an evisa?

When you enter Thailand, the entry permit stamp notes the type of entry and the permitted duration of stay.

You may extend that permission of stay.

Those details are transferred to a new passport, so you don't have to use old and new passports together.

  • Thanks 1
Posted
3 hours ago, Liquorice said:

When you enter Thailand, the entry permit stamp notes the type of entry and the permitted duration of stay.

You may extend that permission of stay.

Those details are transferred to a new passport, so you don't have to use old and new passports together.

You have not answered @shdmn's question nor my questions. Your answers seem relevant to those on extensions due to retirement which I assume you are on. They are not relevant to this DTV thread. DTV holders can extend but rarely do as the evisa is multiple entry.

 

Upon entry with a new passport, the passport number on the evisa would not match the passport number on the new passport. That is the question, what to do in that situation.

 

It is okay to say that you do not have a DTV and you don't know the answer. Not knowing is okay.

Posted
21 minutes ago, Briggsy said:

Upon entry with a new passport, the passport number on the evisa would not match the passport number on the new passport. That is the question, what to do in that situation.

 

The aforementioned "transfer stamps" that they put in your new passport include one stamp that references your old passport number. Transferring stamps also means that old and new passport will be linked in immigration's system.

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Posted
34 minutes ago, Briggsy said:

You have not answered @shdmn's question nor my questions. Your answers seem relevant to those on extensions due to retirement which I assume you are on. They are not relevant to this DTV thread. DTV holders can extend but rarely do as the evisa is multiple entry.

 

Upon entry with a new passport, the passport number on the evisa would not match the passport number on the new passport. That is the question, what to do in that situation.

Read @Caldera reply above.

It's immaterial what type of visa you entered on as the type of visa, old passport number, and any current validity of stay is transferred to the new passport.

In the event I replaced the passport, I'd staple the original e-visa in the new passport as well.

 

  • Thanks 1
Posted
On 3/24/2025 at 2:14 AM, Maestro said:

 

You go to your local immigration office with this application form:

https://www.immigration.go.th/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/22.Transfer-Stamp-to-New-Passport-Form.pdf

 

Regarding the list or required documents, some immigration offices may also ask for the receipt for your latest TM.30.

 

First of all it's not a stamp/sticker in my passport.  It's a PDF eVisa that I just print out.  Second of all, I do not want to have to deal with TM.30, which I don't have, or showing a bank statement again, or any of that BS.  I got the DTV specifically to avoid having to deal with any of that.

  • Like 1
Posted
On 3/27/2025 at 3:21 PM, Liquorice said:

Incorrect.

They transfer the visa details and any current permission of stay stamps to your new passport.

Like the person you responded to says, there is no stamp/sticker involved so there is nothing to transfer.   Not sure why so many people are confused by that.  It's an eVisa in PDF format that you can just print out.  It's NOT a stamp/sticker in your passport! 

 

I know some people are getting stickers when they do it in person in a consulate in Phnom Penh or wherever, but when I applied online through the official visa website I got a PDF file.

  • Like 2
Posted
On 3/27/2025 at 3:38 PM, Liquorice said:

When you enter Thailand, the entry permit stamp notes the type of entry and the permitted duration of stay.

You may extend that permission of stay.

Those details are transferred to a new passport, so you don't have to use old and new passports together.

I think you are confused.  I am not talking about entry stamps or renewing the passport while in Thailand.

  • Like 1
Posted
On 3/27/2025 at 7:43 AM, alw22 said:

 

Looks like that's only for physical visas in your passport, not evisas.

My guess is you just keep your old passport and show both at immigration.

 

The procedure with the Transfer Stamp to New Passport Form

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1CEJpSs5wEwrKM-kEOIkNV6kfKiuWu3nO/view?usp=drive_link

which I suggested to the OP, shdmn, ins not about transferring a visa from the old to the new passport. It is about linking the new passport with the old passport, and for this purpose immigration puts a stamp into the new passport. Depending on the situation, some stamps relating to the current permission to stay are copied to the new passport.

The single biggest problem in communication is the illusion that it has taken place. — George Bernard Shaw

 

Posted
12 hours ago, shdmn said:

I think you are confused.  I am not talking about entry stamps or renewing the passport while in Thailand.

 

Thank you for having added the additional information that you are not renewing the passport in Thailand.

The single biggest problem in communication is the illusion that it has taken place. — George Bernard Shaw

 

Posted
13 hours ago, shdmn said:

First of all it's not a stamp/sticker in my passport.  It's a PDF eVisa that I just print out.  Second of all, I do not want to have to deal with TM.30, which I don't have, or showing a bank statement again, or any of that BS.  I got the DTV specifically to avoid having to deal with any of that.

 

Yes, I know your question is about how to continue using your DTV visa after getting a new passport. 

 

In your situation, you will enter Thailand with your old passport which has the passport number that is shown on your visa, the printout of the eVisa, and your new passport. You will get the arrival stamp, which shows the duration of your permission to stay, in your new passport.

 

Thereafter, as you are averse to using the procedure with the "Transfer Stamp to New Passport Form", which would link your new passport to the old one, your only option is to continue entering Thailand with both passports and the eVisa printout.

 

 

 

 

The single biggest problem in communication is the illusion that it has taken place. — George Bernard Shaw

 

Posted

It would be interesting to receive some first hand experiences. The DTV is still quite new though.

 

It is possible even after having the old passport details and DTV details entered in the new passport, Immigration at the border ask to see the old passport. I could see that happening.

 

Also I could see border officials instructing you to go to an Immigration Office. And if you didn't go and had repeated further entries with an old and a new passport, what would they do?

 

It is also possible that the Immigration at the border might enter the old passport details into the new passport thus saving a trip to an Immigration Office.

 

With multiple entry evisas, the system of linking the new passport details to the evisa is not clear.

Posted
10 hours ago, Briggsy said:

It is also possible that the Immigration at the border might enter the old passport details into the new passport thus saving a trip to an Immigration Office.

It would seem necessary for them to do this, to explain the 6-Mo permitted-stay they were stamping in the new passport, referring to a visa, which referenced the old passport.  As well, I would be surprised if they did not link the old/new passports in their system when presented both of them upon entry. 

 

it will be interesting to get a 1st hand report.  Please let us know what happens when you enter, @shdmn - though I would carry that old passport for every subsequent entry with that eVisa, regardless of what they stamp/write in the new passport.
 

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