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Posted
56 minutes ago, BritManToo said:

Wrong as usual,

60k me, 60k wife, 190k over 60, 150k pension, 150k at 0% and a child in school.

 

I make that 610k (without the kid) and no need to file on earned income alone.

 

Really ?
 

You are the one that is confusing tax filing levels of

 

1.  60k / 120k / 220k. I'll repeat tax filing levels.

 

2. With Deductions and allowances.

 

No wonder that you are bouncing around rather confused

 

 

 

 

  • Confused 1
Posted
9 minutes ago, JimGant said:

What tax liability?

The one that I said that obtaining a TIN, wouldn't be altered when I wrote, "it won't alter your tax liability" 

 

"If the bank will accept that TIN to stop withholding -- not a given". The common established practise reports to date are that they will, including me.

 

"But for Yanks... blah blah", but not the remaining 98.44% of the foreign expat population. 

 

There are around 40,230 American expats living in Thailand, which is about 1.56% of the country's foreign population.

 

Please stop telling us about the tax issues of your household help, we know already nd are unlikely to ever forget, even if we try!

 

"you really think all those rice farmers, maids, gardeners, street vendors, etc -- are going to file if they pass a threshold"?  Maids gardeners and rice farmers typically don't receive overseas pension income every month in Thailand equivalent to three and four times the average national wage.

 

 

 

 

Posted
12 minutes ago, JimGant said:

I just wonder where KBank got their instructions, on their page one of request for info, that "No Thai TIN needed if no taxable income."

 

Been through this before.

 

KBank and every other bank require this information to comply with CRS. This is not banks being a PITA, It is not Thailand being a PITA, it is required to comply with the reporting procedures dictated by an International agreement that Thailand has signed up to.

 

Again, you are confusing reporting limits with taxation limits once allownces and deductions are applied.

 

If your interpretation is correct X - Y = Z, therfore no need to file, why does the RD have this

 

Quote

2. Appeal in dispute of tax assessment

In the case where a taxpayer disagrees with the assessment made by the assessment officer, he has the right to appeal to the Commission of Appeals (in the form P.S.6) within 30 days starting from the day which an assessment notice has been received.

 

https://www.rd.go.th/english/23517.html

 

Do you see who makes an assessment of assessable income ? An assessment Officer, not an individual.

 

If it was up to individuals, there would be no need for a dispute resolution mechanism, every filing would be spot on.

  • Confused 2
Posted
57 minutes ago, JimGant said:

And ignore do-gooders on this forum, whose reason for pushing getting a TIN -- is beyond me. These are the same folks who claim, "I'm not giving advice." But I certainly am -- when I suggest tidbits to help the reader decide for himself.

I concur. Actually these like-minded folks are very few, but as usual minority needs to be loud to preach their truth.

  • Thumbs Up 1
Posted
5 minutes ago, Yumthai said:

I concur. Actually these like-minded folks are very few, but as usual minority needs to be loud to preach their truth.

You and Gant don't seem to have enough drama in your lives and seem to always want to stir things up and create friction by making accusations and being abusive. Neither one of you seems even a little bit willing to accept that others don't share your opinions and have different views and as a penalty, such people must be degraded when ever possible. We don't call you criminals for ignoring the TFRD Code yet you seem willing enough to call us do -gooders for following the law. I think the problem must be that you're bored and lonely and want to keep having these circular discussions that have no end, just to let everyone know you;re still out there, fighting the good fight but not mature enough to accept that different views exist and to move on to other new things.  Sad really.

  • Like 1
Posted
27 minutes ago, chiang mai said:

I think the problem must be that you're bored and lonely and want to keep having these circular discussions that have no end,

This circular discussion was once again brought up by you, a few posts ago, the one I responded to -- you know, the "Hand on heart I don't understand why folks are so averse to obtaining a Thai TIN." We've been over and over the pros and cons of this, to the point that it's getting ridiculous. The reader can digest your views and my views -- and then decide for himself. Give it a rest, and allow the clear thinkers to drive over the speed limit, if they assess the advantage far exceeds any potential penalty.

 

So, shut up about getting a TIN if assessable income exceeds 60k baht -- and I'll shut up about my workers rightfully ignoring their requirement to file a tax return.

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  • Agree 1
Posted
35 minutes ago, chiang mai said:

You and Gant don't seem to have enough drama in your lives and seem to always want to stir things up and create friction by making accusations and being abusive. Neither one of you seems even a little bit willing to accept that others don't share your opinions and have different views and as a penalty, such people must be degraded when ever possible. We don't call you criminals for ignoring the TFRD Code yet you seem willing enough to call us do -gooders for following the law. I think the problem must be that you're bored and lonely and want to keep having these circular discussions that have no end, just to let everyone know you;re still out there, fighting the good fight but not mature enough to accept that different views exist and to move on to other new things.  Sad really.

The art of inverting the roles. You're the one who can't accept contrarian opinions, not the other way around. Your constant proselytistic posting is readily available to readers.

  • Like 2
Posted
2 minutes ago, JimGant said:

This circular discussion was once again brought up by you, a few posts ago, the one I responded to -- you know, the "Hand on heart I don't understand why folks are so averse to obtaining a Thai TIN." We've been over and over the pros and cons of this, to the point that it's getting ridiculous. The reader can digest your views and my views -- and then decide for himself. Give it a rest, and allow the clear thinkers to drive over the speed limit, if they assess the advantage far exceeds any potential penalty.

 

So, shut up about getting a TIN if assessable income exceeds 60k baht -- and I'll shut up about my workers rightfully ignoring their requirement to file a tax return.

I didn't post about the 60k assessable income threshold, I posted a general observation as follows:

 

"Hand on heart I don't understand why folks are so averse to obtaining a Thai TIN, it's not like they're being told to contract HIV or develop cancer, it's just a tax ID and having one or not, wont alter your tax liability in the event TRD wants to examine your books. And it does mean that having one will increase your rate of interest on bank savings interest by 15%. But I suppose if not getting one means you think that nobody will know you exist, jeeze, what can be said about that!"

 

 

  • Like 1
Posted
3 minutes ago, Yumthai said:

The art of inverting the roles. You're the one who can't accept contrarian opinions, not the other way around. Your constant proselytistic posting is readily available to readers.

I've asked many times that people post evidence to support their views but nobody has. I have posted a number of pieces of supportive evidence, including extracts from the TRD, Bangkok news paper articles and quotes from legal firms. Thus far, my evidence far outweighs your rhetoric and emotion. If you want me to accept your contrarian view, you'll need to support it with something more than just hot air and abusive language.

  • Haha 1
Posted

I have a fun question.

I intend to file Kbank form even though they didn't email me and I also don't intend to get a TIN as I won't have any Thai accessible income this year.

But Iikely will have such income at a later year.

So then I will probably get a TIN and file (assuming it's clear by now that Thai Revenue is actually enforcing anything on retired expats with no in Thailand income (it should be clear by then).

So then I should go in an update or not bother?

Posted
2 minutes ago, Jingthing said:

I have a fun question.

I intend to file Kbank form even though they didn't email me and I also don't intend to get a TIN as I won't have any Thai accessible income this year.

But Iikely will have such income at a later year.

So then I will probably get a TIN and file (assuming it's clear by now that Thai Revenue is actually enforcing anything on retired expats with no in Thailand income (it should be clear by then).

So then I should go in an update or not bother?

If you aren't asked to do so, I wouldn't.

Posted
1 hour ago, The Cyclist said:

Do you see who makes an assessment of assessable income ? An assessment Officer, not an individual.

 

If it was up to individuals, there would be no need for a dispute resolution mechanism, every filing would be spot on.

No, go back and read all the lead-up to where an assessment officer enters the picture. It's where a return is "suspect" because of math errors, or some other out-of-sync number inclusions. The routinely filed "self-assessed" return will -- unless it raises a flag of some sort -- just be accepted, with the payment banked, or the over withheld taxes refunded. I would assume they have some kind of software algorithm to do a cursory screening of tax returns for blatant errors. But it's nonsensical, from a cost standpoint, to have assessment officers hold everyone's hand, and go over their tax returns -- at least initially. But, if problems discovered down the road, then, yeah, time to come to TRD for an audit.

Posted
41 minutes ago, chiang mai said:

If you want me to accept your contrarian view, you'll need to support it with something more than just hot air and abusive language.

How about common sense?

Posted
9 minutes ago, JimGant said:

How about common sense?

 

If it's a question of common sense versus what the Revenue Code states, the Code wins. If it's a members views versus a law firms publication or a national newspaper article, common sense takes second place.

 

Common sense varies from person to person, some people have none. It's hardly an objective benchmark by which to make important, potentially life changing decisions, in a foreign land that is still developing. 

 

If you or anyone else has evidence to dispute the various issues I have provided evidence for, post it and let's see it's merits. But let's not go round this loop yet again, either accept that we have different perspectives or dispute mine with evidence. Put up or shut up.

 

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