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Thailand Considers Law Revisions to Attract Foreign Real Estate Investment


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Posted

The tax area is certainly a little blurred. When capital gains is discussed in DTAs there doesn't appear to be a differentiation between investment RE versus the sale of one's own home. My Thai wife are looking to move to Thailand and navigating the tax aspects is a challenge. I need to sell my house here to buy a house, and other things such as a vehicle, new furniture etc. I can not afford to do this if I'm to pay a large tax on the money I get for my house in Australia (Australian tax laws do not require home owners to pay capital gains on the sale of their own homes). I will become a resident of Thailand for tax purposes as I plan to reside permanently in Thailand on a Marriage Visa. Understand, I'm not the typically rich westerner that most Thais envisage.

Posted (edited)
12 minutes ago, J Branche said:

Who is the land owner?

For what the propose above, it says the state will own the land
and 20 years down the road........
the state could also decide it made a mistake 20 years ago allowing a 99 year lease

they would do much better allowing foreigners to buy houses like they do condo's
for newly developed gated communities
or allow long stay foreigners up to 1 rai (or less even) for residence only, not a rental

Edited by patman30
Posted (edited)
9 minutes ago, patman30 said:

For what the propose above, it says the state will own the land
and 20 years down the road........
the state could also decide it made a mistake 20 years ago allowing a 99 year lease

 

You mean like the same way they could cancel the Thailand Elite program?

Edited by NanLaew
Posted
9 minutes ago, NanLaew said:

 

You mean like the same way they could cancel the Thailand Elite program?

 

Well for a starter, in the original Thailand elite program foreign land ownership was included...........until it wasn't

  • Agree 1
Posted
36 minutes ago, doily19 said:

The tax area is certainly a little blurred.

At the moment I think with your circumstances it is fairly clear. 

Safest way is to both sell your Aus residence and remit the proceeds to Thailand in a year when you are not tax resident in Thailand - ie spend less than 180 days in a calendar year here. Job done :thumbsup:

Posted (edited)

"land sold to foreigners should first transfer to state management under the Treasury Department.


This proposal would let foreigners lease the land for up to 99 years, keeping land ownership with the state after lease expiry."

 

🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

 

 

So I'm buying the land from a Thai and I'm giving it to the state.

 

Before, at least it returned to the Thai owner after the rental period.

Now, not only will foreigners not want to buy, but Thais will not want to sell either.

 

 

 

 

Edited by Espanol
Posted
4 hours ago, webfact said:

Thailand is actively considering changes to its real estate laws to encourage foreign investment, as outlined by Finance Minister Pichai Chunhavajira.

Minus nominees of course.

Posted
1 hour ago, doily19 said:

The tax area is certainly a little blurred. When capital gains is discussed in DTAs there doesn't appear to be a differentiation between investment RE versus the sale of one's own home. My Thai wife are looking to move to Thailand and navigating the tax aspects is a challenge. I need to sell my house here to buy a house, and other things such as a vehicle, new furniture etc. I can not afford to do this if I'm to pay a large tax on the money I get for my house in Australia (Australian tax laws do not require home owners to pay capital gains on the sale of their own homes). I will become a resident of Thailand for tax purposes as I plan to reside permanently in Thailand on a Marriage Visa. Understand, I'm not the typically rich westerner that most Thais envisage.


Just be prepared to walk away from Thailand with nothing as so many have done before you.

  • Like 1
  • Agree 1
Posted
1 hour ago, Nid_Noi said:

It’s like a scratch on an old vinyl record which keeps playing the same groove over and over…and over…

Yes, it's called insanity.  Doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.

  • Agree 1
Posted
1 hour ago, Hardcastle P said:

how will that help you average Thai ?

Thai owner might make a significant capital gain on sale? Us the to help pay off Thai's household debt.

Posted

Overlooked and I believe must be addressed for foreign acquisition of Thai real estate.

That is the inheritance of foreign owned Thai real estate.

While the 30-99 year foreign purchase has not expired, my vague understanding is that a foreign inheritor (family relative, etc. foreign friend) has time restrictions and potential financial obligations (pay value of the real estate) to take possession of the real estate or lose the real estate in a mandatory public auction that may favor Thais.

 

 

Posted
24 minutes ago, kwaussie said:


Just be prepared to walk away from Thailand with nothing as so many have done before you.

Rigth.And get taxed in ur county of origin before Thailand take it.

Posted

All this negativity!!

 

But, let us consider a few "facts".

 

The current Thai government needs more cash to fulfill its election promises.  Foreign cash?

 

The politicians and bureaucrats need more cash to fund their retirements.  Foreign cash?

 

Many foreigners overseas want to buy land in Thailand; and recent articles on AN have highlighted that Burmese, Chinese, Indian and Russian buyers have recently been very active in the market.  Foreign cash!

 

All positives, right?

 

However, as we have seen with the recent small maritime "dispute" with Cambodia, Thai ultra-nationalists are against any "Thai" lands going into foreign "hands".

 

Thus, no sale, as Thailand is not for sale.

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