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Posted

Good afternoon everyone, 

 

I just arrived in Thailand (not my first visit) and I need to open a Thai bank account so that I can apply for my 1 year, non-o visa (Thai wife). 

 

1. What is the best bank account for a foreigner to open?  I need to deposit 400k prior to applying for my visa.  Most of my research points to Bangkok Bank and Kasikorn Bank being the best options, but I wanted to ask here for the most updated info. 

 

2. Do I need to visit the bank location that I opened my bank account at to get documents that are required for my visa application?  This would be a major pain if I opened in bank account in Bangkok and had to travel back here and visit my 'home branch' to get the documents. 

 

3. Do any Thai banks have partnerships/alliances with banks in North America (in particular BMO or TD) that give any benefits or preferential treatment to customers? 

 

If there is anything else you have experienced in this regard, please do share. For example, I had problems several years ago trying to transfer my money from my SCB Bank account (Pattaya Central Festival location) to my BMO account back home.  They had 5 or six bank employees trying everything they could to prevent this. It was an awful experience but they eventually did it. 

 

Thank you in advance for your help! 

Posted (edited)

For a start, I admire your optimistic expectation that the worldwide readers of your topic know the meaning of the acronyms BMO and TD you used.

 

Regarding your three points:

  1. Most Thai banks do not treat the nationals of all countries equally. You mention North America somewhere in your post, but that still leaves two countries. It is US nationals who find it often more difficult to open a bank account in Thailand, apparently because of more paperwork and reporting required for them. FACTA or some other fancy thing particular to the USA

    Having to choose between Bangkgok Bank (BKKB) and Kasikorn Bank (KASI), I would go for KASI. I find them much easier and less bureaucratic to deal with than BKKB. In fact, I gave up on BKKB when their e-banking got too complicated.

    The best bank for a foreigner to open an account with in Thailand? A bank in Thailand that is the correspondent bank of your bank in your home country for the currency you transfer. Ask your home-country bank about it.
     
  2. No, you don’t have to go to the branch of your Thai bank where you have your account to get the bank documents you need for your dealings with immigration if you live in another part of the country. However, some branches of some banks take longer to produce the documents than the branches of other banks. From reading this forum, it appears that BKKB branches take one week for some statements, whereas other banks can do it on the spot.
     
  3. I am not aware of any particular benefits of partnerships or alliances with the acronyms you mentioned.

 

For the rest of your post, outward foreign remittances are an entirely different kettle of fish compared to inward foreign remittances and should be made the subject of a separate topic if and when the need arises. In the meantime, make sure ALWAYS to state the reason or purpose for the inward remittances and get from your Thai bank a printout of the receipt advice that includes that stated reason or purpose. The computers of Thai banks do not seem to be programmed to issue this receipt advice automatically and with full information.

 

Edited by Puccini
corrected typos
Posted
14 hours ago, INANIMATECARBONROD said:

...I need to deposit 400k...

 

Another important point, but you probably already know this.

 

NEVER transfer Baht (THB). Always order your home-country bank to transfer an amount in your home country's currency and let the conversion to THB be made by your Thai bank. You get a much better exchange rate this way.

  • Agree 1
Posted

I am sure you are going to need a Proof of Residence from Immigration to open an account. I had to do this the other week to move an account from one branch of BKK to another when I moved. Basically closing one account and opening another to move the money to even though I have been banking with them for 9 years!

Posted
8 minutes ago, worrab said:

I am sure you are going to need a Proof of Residence from Immigration to open an account. I had to do this the other week to move an account from one branch of BKK to another when I moved. Basically closing one account and opening another to move the money to even though I have been banking with them for 9 years!

There's no such thing as moving a bank account from one branch to another in Thailand, even if you've been banking with them for 30 years. All you have to do is open a new account and transfer the money into it. The original account will get closed after a period of time with no money and no activity in it

Posted
16 hours ago, INANIMATECARBONROD said:

Do any Thai banks have partnerships/alliances with banks in North America (in particular BMO or TD) that give any benefits or preferential treatment to customers? 

 

Funny

Posted
9 minutes ago, LukKrueng said:

There's no such thing as moving a bank account from one branch to another in Thailand, even if you've been banking with them for 30 years. All you have to do is open a new account and transfer the money into it. The original account will get closed after a period of time with no money and no activity in it

Agree, but I may please add one proviso. Withdraw the funds from one account, and deposit in another, otherwise they will charge you a hefty sum sometimes for a transfer. I appreciate that it may be the same bank, but all banks here operate on a fiefdom system, much like immigration.

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