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Thailand to tax residents’ foreign income irrespective of remittance


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1 hour ago, hitext said:

Most countries tax your worldwide income. What makes the US different is that citizens have to pay taxes to Uncle Sam, regardless of where they live (I can't comment on Eritrea).

But don't forget, while the US may tax one on foreign-earned income, the US govt also gives an foreign earned exclusion of up to $I23,000 US if you qualify.

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Just now, Sheryl said:

Note that pensions and inerest are considered income. 

as previously mentioned many times on this forum - read the DTA between your country and Thailand ... also, maybe kevin612 has no income.

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16 hours ago, AreYouGerman said:

Hahahahaha. The Phillippines look better every day.

 

And the best part is, even if you are covered by a Double Taxation Agreement (meaning you got fleeced already in your passport country or wherever your money is taxed already) you have to file for taxes every year which will cost 10,000 - 20,000 THB done by an accountant.

 

i have been told same thing happening over there and many other countries so no where to run

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1 hour ago, Thingamabob said:

Thank you. IMHO far too much noise on this subject, and way too many questions being asked. Just asking for trouble. 

same noise as on the tax interpretation from last year that we STILL have not seen the final govt interpretation...is this maybe a way to continue stalling on that one?

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6 minutes ago, lordgrinz said:

 

Exactly, offer us no TM30's, no TM6's, no 90 days, no yearly extensions, no reentry permits, and give us permanent residency after 3 years of taxes.....then maybe we can accept taxes.

All this is currently under review. There will be a 'September Surprise - one way or another.

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41 minutes ago, TheAppletons said:

 

  I was going to say "corporate tax" but the corporate tax rate in Thailand is 20%.

 

  So perhaps that poster is referring to the capital gains tax, which is 15%.

Or council taxes known as "rates" in some parts. Which would raise another interesting point as my wife pays a ridiculous yearly amount like 25 Baht tax and 500 for garbage collection. Used to pay 4000 Euros a year in my previous life.

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Posted (edited)
3 minutes ago, CharlesHolzhauer said:

All this is currently under review. There will be a 'September Surprise - one way or another.

Yeah sure, the visa is clearly going to be a non-issue very soon. This is the best news we have gotten in a decade plus. However, I already saw this catch coming with the first new tax law they started for income into Thailand, and now it reveals itself. And in that case, what needs to be paid, does not compensate the easy visa part.

Great to be here hassle free for 180 days a year, but that would be about it. I'd rather have the visa difficulties and no taxes. Basically comes down to having to leave Thailand for another country, and then if desired visit it for max 180 days a year as holidays or a second home.

Edited by ChaiyaTH
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1 minute ago, CygnusX1 said:

Presumably, even if you were normally in Thailand the whole year, if you made sure to be there less than 180 days in the particular year in which you purchased the condo, you’d pay no tax? Anyway, in the light of the tax changes, it would be a very bad idea to buy a condo, I’d certainly not have purchased mine in the current environment of uncertainty.

You can be pretty sure that some new laws for that follow after this one, if being approved too. To basically tax you on rental earnings or business earnings regardless of being a individual tax resident. The sky is the limit.

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32 minutes ago, Presnock said:

as previously mentioned many times on this forum - read the DTA between your country and Thailand ... also, maybe kevin612 has no income.

That's what all French expats did, just to find out that the Thai version and an unofficial English translation differe from the French version on some key points. 

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2 minutes ago, CygnusX1 said:

Anyway, in the light of the tax changes, it would be a very bad idea to buy a condo

 

I reached that conclusion quite early on in my stay here.  It's a bit too politically volatile and full of uncertainty as a foreigner here to properly commit to Thailand so I often feel I have one foot in and one foot on the way out despite living here for 4 years now.  

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2 hours ago, kuzmabruk said:

The information you will give will be to the Thai tax department.  Not your bank.

 

you will submit a tax return with your signature at the bottom.   If you lie you will have committed perjury.   If they audit you.  Good luck.  Perjury is punishable by prison time.  

 

My wife does the taxes, and includes me on hers, I have never signed anything. So no perjury, at least not on my behalf. With her income at about B1.5 million, anything from my side (worldwide income) would put us in a bad place. Not rich by any means, but for those of us in the B1-5 million range, things look ugly.

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3 minutes ago, CharlesHolzhauer said:

The TRD have the means to find out the status of your financial affairs via the Common Reporting Standard (CRS).

"Under the CSR, if you’ve got a bank account or investments back in your home country, your bank and financial institutions share with the Thai Revenue Department, all details about your bank accounts and other accounts including all of your account details (name, address, account numbers etc), all balances, details of all income deposited including, salaries/wages, pensions, interest, dividends, and proceeds from the sale of assets, categorized and classified in to different categories of income that your bank recognizes. All of this will be handed to the Thai Revenue Department on a silver-platter!"
Great, isn't it.

 

How exactly? Without a USA social security number how would they know anything? My accounts are listed to my home address in the USA, not to Thailand.

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