Popular Post Celsius Posted December 12, 2024 Popular Post Posted December 12, 2024 This certainly changes things as I can day trade certain chitcoins to oblivion and not worry about any paperwork. Does this also solve the issue of transferring money from overseas which most of you are worried about (for nothing imo). Bitkub FTW!!! 5
richard_smith237 Posted December 12, 2024 Posted December 12, 2024 I do get taxed by BitKub - but its not a large amount (and I don't really understand their taxation system anyway) but its a few thousand baht (on a few million). As far as bringing money in and taking it out. Trx Out: Buying Coins on BitKub (i.e. BitCoin etc) into a Cold Wallet, transfer to another overseas Exchange such as Kraken or Binanace into your overseas account.... Vice Versa. Transferring into Thailand: Purchasing BitCoin on an overseas exchange such as Kraken or Binance, transferring to a Cold Wallet, transferring from Cold wallet into BitKub, then withdrawing from BitKub into your Thai account. Of course, hoops need to be jumped through with setting up accounts etc. >> IF there is No Tax on BitKub With drawals, then that is a good solution (and a strong argument against the Anti-cashless crowd). 1
Celsius Posted December 12, 2024 Author Posted December 12, 2024 28 minutes ago, richard_smith237 said: I do get taxed by BitKub - but its not a large amount (and I don't really understand their taxation system anyway) I think this is VAT. Bitkub site specifically says "As per the Revenue Department's latest announcement on guidelines for collecting cryptocurrency tax as of 31 January 2022 and 2 Decrees announced on 24 May 2022, the details can be summarized as follows." yada yada yada 1
Seppius Posted December 12, 2024 Posted December 12, 2024 Had a BitKub account for a while but never did KYC, It's saying my devise cannot scan my passport, is there a fix for this?
Popular Post JBChiangRai Posted December 12, 2024 Popular Post Posted December 12, 2024 There is crypto tax if you are tax resident. if you bought your coins on a authorized thai exchange, then you pay personal income tax on the profit. If you bought your coins on a foreign or unauthorized exchange, then you pay personal income tax on the entire sale amount. 1 1 1
Celsius Posted December 12, 2024 Author Posted December 12, 2024 4 minutes ago, JBChiangRai said: There is crypto tax if you are tax resident. if you bought your coins on a authorized thai exchange, then you pay personal income tax on the profit. it seems like you are right. There is no withholding tax, but you're still supposed to pay income tax. Scrap this dumb thread. 1 1
JBChiangRai Posted December 12, 2024 Posted December 12, 2024 Well, there is an interesting point. If you are not tax resident, can you avoid the crypto tax? Or does the TRD consider it revenue earned in Thailand? (In which case tax is due).
ukrules Posted December 12, 2024 Posted December 12, 2024 Never sell in Thailand or any profit is treated as personal income which means taxes far higher than which might be considered normal capital gains levels depending on which country you're from. Now I'm not 100% sure on this but I would treat anything bought, traded and eventually sold on a Thai exchange as Thai income which means it would be taxed even if you're non resident - for example, less than 180 days.
JBChiangRai Posted December 13, 2024 Posted December 13, 2024 13 hours ago, ukrules said: Never sell in Thailand or any profit is treated as personal income which means taxes far higher than which might be considered normal capital gains levels depending on which country you're from. Now I'm not 100% sure on this but I would treat anything bought, traded and eventually sold on a Thai exchange as Thai income which means it would be taxed even if you're non resident - for example, less than 180 days. I think it is an area that needs exploring and professional advice. If you bought on BX the TRD probably don't have those records.
zepplin Posted December 13, 2024 Posted December 13, 2024 13 hours ago, ukrules said: Never sell in Thailand or any profit is treated as personal income which means taxes far higher than which might be considered normal capital gains levels depending on which country you're from. Now I'm not 100% sure on this but I would treat anything bought, traded and eventually sold on a Thai exchange as Thai income which means it would be taxed even if you're non resident - for example, less than 180 days. The tax rate is 15% 1
zepplin Posted December 13, 2024 Posted December 13, 2024 19 hours ago, richard_smith237 said: I do get taxed by BitKub - but its not a large amount (and I don't really understand their taxation system anyway) but its a few thousand baht (on a few million). As far as bringing money in and taking it out. Trx Out: Buying Coins on BitKub (i.e. BitCoin etc) into a Cold Wallet, transfer to another overseas Exchange such as Kraken or Binanace into your overseas account.... Vice Versa. Transferring into Thailand: Purchasing BitCoin on an overseas exchange such as Kraken or Binance, transferring to a Cold Wallet, transferring from Cold wallet into BitKub, then withdrawing from BitKub into your Thai account. Of course, hoops need to be jumped through with setting up accounts etc. >> IF there is No Tax on BitKub With drawals, then that is a good solution (and a strong argument against the Anti-cashless crowd). Totally wrong , if you transfer it to a Thai bank account to spend it , your gains are taxed at 15% , plus penalties if you think you can not pay it! 1
JBChiangRai Posted December 13, 2024 Posted December 13, 2024 23 minutes ago, zepplin said: Totally wrong , if you transfer it to a Thai bank account to spend it , your gains are taxed at 15% , plus penalties if you think you can not pay it! Sorry you are wrong, Tax is paid under PIT rates, it could be as high as 35%. if you bought your coins on a authorized Thai exchange, then you pay personal income tax on the profit. If you bought your coins on a foreign or unauthorized exchange, then you pay personal income tax on the entire sale amount. I'm not posting what I think to be the case, I'm posting what I know to be the case. 1
Democracy74 Posted December 13, 2024 Posted December 13, 2024 On 24 September 2024, royal decrees no. 788 and 789 issued under the Revenue Code were published in the Royal Gazette, granting tax exemptions for digital assets. Royal decree no. 788 extends a VAT exemption for the sale of cryptocurrency and utility tokens through licensed digital exchanges, as well as expanding the exemption to sales made through licensed brokers and dealers, effective from 1 January 2024 onwards. A VAT exemption for sales made through licensed digital exchanges under royal decree no. 744 expired on 31 December 2023. Royal decree no. 789 allows individuals to exclude from their personal income tax returns the share of profits or other similar benefits obtained from holding cryptocurrency and utility tokens received from 1 January 2024 if 15% withholding tax has been deducted from such income. The taxpayer cannot ask for a refund of the tax deducted or use it as a tax credit. https://www.hlbthai.com/tax-exemptions-for-digital-assets/ 1
Jenkins9039 Posted December 13, 2024 Posted December 13, 2024 Wife pays income tax on Stablecoin deposits as income.
Seppius Posted December 13, 2024 Posted December 13, 2024 I've just done KYC with Bitkub, I am holding a coin that is doing very well in an off-exchange wallet from where I could send straight to Bitkub,. If not, they would have to go to Coinbase-UK bank-Thai bank I will check with an accountant here about tax/VAT situation first, as there seems different views on this thread 1
john donson Posted December 13, 2024 Posted December 13, 2024 On 12/12/2024 at 11:38 AM, Celsius said: This certainly changes things as I can day trade certain chitcoins to oblivion and not worry about any paperwork. Does this also solve the issue of transferring money from overseas which most of you are worried about (for nothing imo). Bitkub FTW!!! are you the same cry baby that wrote he is on his last million baht?
Celsius Posted December 13, 2024 Author Posted December 13, 2024 5 minutes ago, john donson said: are you the same cry baby that wrote he is on his last million baht? WRONG THREAD
BigStar Posted December 13, 2024 Posted December 13, 2024 Are Americans welcome on BitKub? FATCA paperwork?
richard_smith237 Posted December 13, 2024 Posted December 13, 2024 6 hours ago, zepplin said: Totally wrong , if you transfer it to a Thai bank account to spend it , your gains are taxed at 15% , plus penalties if you think you can not pay it! I'm outside of the 180 days rule - penalties still count then ? I've not yet tried brining in Massive Crypto sums via Cold Wallet into BitKub then to my account, but I could investigate dropping into my Wifes account as a 'Gift'. I usually transfer into my Wife's account as a Gift directly from my overseas account anyway as if I'm not mistaken we can transfer up 15 MB... (but I must admit, this is all muddy water for me - I also fall outside of the 180 days so am not a Thai tax resident anyway).
JBChiangRai Posted December 13, 2024 Posted December 13, 2024 3 hours ago, Seppius said: I've just done KYC with Bitkub, I am holding a coin that is doing very well in an off-exchange wallet from where I could send straight to Bitkub,. If not, they would have to go to Coinbase-UK bank-Thai bank I will check with an accountant here about tax/VAT situation first, as there seems different views on this thread There's no VAT currently. I explained the tax situation very clearly for (say) BitKub if you are tax resident here. I'm aware some people dispute this because they are ignorant of the tax situation. Thailand Cryptocurrency Income Personal Tax - SHERRINGS The issue with Coinbase-UK bank-Thai bank is you could incur a CGT liability in the UK if you're a British Citizen, your UK bank should ask questions if it's over 10,000 GBP due to AML, when you bring it into a Thai bank, if you're tax resident you still have a liability here in Thailand even though you're bringing FIAT (overseas capital gains are subject to PIT here when remitted unless following year with LTR visa). 1 1
Democracy74 Posted December 13, 2024 Posted December 13, 2024 54 minutes ago, JBChiangRai said: There's no VAT currently. I explained the tax situation very clearly for (say) BitKub if you are tax resident here. I'm aware some people dispute this because they are ignorant of the tax situation. Thailand Cryptocurrency Income Personal Tax - SHERRINGS The issue with Coinbase-UK bank-Thai bank is you could incur a CGT liability in the UK if you're a British Citizen, your UK bank should ask questions if it's over 10,000 GBP due to AML, when you bring it into a Thai bank, if you're tax resident you still have a liability here in Thailand even though you're bringing FIAT (overseas capital gains are subject to PIT here when remitted unless following year with LTR visa). https://sherrings.com/digital-investment-tokens-income-tax-thailand.html read the section related to Royal Decree (789) BE 2567 Royal decree no. 789 allows individuals to exclude from their personal income tax returns the share of profits or other similar benefits obtained from holding cryptocurrency and utility tokens received from 1 January 2024 if 15% withholding tax has been deducted from such income 1
JBChiangRai Posted December 13, 2024 Posted December 13, 2024 3 minutes ago, Democracy74 said: https://sherrings.com/digital-investment-tokens-income-tax-thailand.html read the section related to Royal Decree (789) BE 2567 Royal decree no. 789 allows individuals to exclude from their personal income tax returns the share of profits or other similar benefits obtained from holding cryptocurrency and utility tokens received from 1 January 2024 if 15% withholding tax has been deducted from such income The key words is there are "holding cryptocurrency and utility tokens", not trading them.
Democracy74 Posted December 13, 2024 Posted December 13, 2024 Just now, JBChiangRai said: The key words is there are "holding cryptocurrency and utility tokens", not trading them. Yes, agreed. I wonder how long you have to hold them for to not be classed a trader?
ukrules Posted December 13, 2024 Posted December 13, 2024 53 minutes ago, Democracy74 said: if 15% withholding tax has been deducted from such income That 'if' is the important part - as none of the crypto exchanges currently withhold any tax at all leaving it all subject to PIT Right?
youke Posted December 15, 2024 Posted December 15, 2024 On 12/12/2024 at 5:14 PM, JBChiangRai said: If you bought your coins on a foreign or unauthorized exchange, then you pay personal income tax on the entire sale amount. My understanding is that if you transfer cryptocurrency from a foreign exchange(or cold wallet) to a Thai exchange, you only need to pay personal income tax on the profit portion. The cost basis of the cryptocurrency is calculated based on the price on the day it is transferred to the Thai exchange, not on the entire sale amount.
JBChiangRai Posted December 15, 2024 Posted December 15, 2024 2 hours ago, youke said: My understanding is that if you transfer cryptocurrency from a foreign exchange(or cold wallet) to a Thai exchange, you only need to pay personal income tax on the profit portion. The cost basis of the cryptocurrency is calculated based on the price on the day it is transferred to the Thai exchange, not on the entire sale amount. That would be nice but unfortunately, it's not the case. 1
Seppius Posted February 9 Posted February 9 On 12/13/2024 at 4:41 PM, JBChiangRai said: There's no VAT currently. I explained the tax situation very clearly for (say) BitKub if you are tax resident here. I'm aware some people dispute this because they are ignorant of the tax situation. Thailand Cryptocurrency Income Personal Tax - SHERRINGS The issue with Coinbase-UK bank-Thai bank is you could incur a CGT liability in the UK if you're a British Citizen, your UK bank should ask questions if it's over 10,000 GBP due to AML, when you bring it into a Thai bank, if you're tax resident you still have a liability here in Thailand even though you're bringing FIAT (overseas capital gains are subject to PIT here when remitted unless following year with LTR visa). Bit late, but thank you for the answer. Not really worried about CGT in the UK, as no assets there other than the crypto, and no plans to go back, I am well above pension age. Not ready to sell yet, but still not really sure how I will do it .
Celsius Posted February 9 Author Posted February 9 Bitkub has no volume. I thought I could trade certain crypto easily and I could on Coinbase or Biance, but bitkub is motionless crypto hub
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now