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Posted
9 minutes ago, kingstonkid said:

 

Great info. I am truly surprised that there are no accountants who are searching for Expats.  You would think there is a very large market especially for an English speaking accountant or tax specialist

 there are companies who provide the service which you refer to.

However -I am convinced that you only need such companies if you cannot be bothered to do it yourself.

Basically it is easy. You will -however -have to get a TM30.

There is a Thai website dedicated to provide such a document. I applied some time ago-they acknowledged my request.

So far nothing. Suspect that will have to visit immigration.

You basic difficulty will be communication with the TRD. Thai language only

Posted
1 hour ago, Delight said:

 there are companies who provide the service which you refer to.

However -I am convinced that you only need such companies if you cannot be bothered to do it yourself.

Basically it is easy. You will -however -have to get a TM30.

There is a Thai website dedicated to provide such a document. I applied some time ago-they acknowledged my request.

So far nothing. Suspect that will have to visit immigration.

You basic difficulty will be communication with the TRD. Thai language only

I always use experts. That way, I can save as much money as possible and ensure that I am doing it right.  Also, having someone navigate things for me is never a bad thing here, so I do not miss anything in translation. LOL

 

 

Posted
1 hour ago, Samh said:

Can I jump in here. If I pay 20% tax in the UK on my pension are the Thais going to take another 25%?

 

The short answer is no.

 

Any tax that you might have to pay in Thailand can be offset with tax paid in the UK.

 

The trick will be having the paperwork to hand to show the tax paid in the UK.

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Posted

i believe the RD will be extremely busy from 02 January.

 

I wonder how many Thai/Eng translators they've taken on board.

Posted
2 hours ago, Delight said:

You basic difficulty will be communication with the TRD. Thai language only

Not if you use Phitsanulok Taxman, lovely bloke, perfect English, but unfortunatley a Man Utd fan.

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Posted
3 hours ago, Samh said:

Can I jump in here. If I pay 20% tax in the UK on my pension are the Thais going to take another 25%?

That depends on the amount of other income sources. which end up in Thailand

The UK has a double Taxation agreement with Thailand-so tax paid in the UK will act as a credit against Thai tax.

The UK HMRC website facilitates you to download a document detailing tax paid IN 2024.

In the meantime you may wish to spend time understanding this HMRC website such that in Jan. 2025 this tax paid information  document can be downloaded. You will need your unique NATIONAL   INSURANCE NUMBER.

Good luck

 

Posted
On 12/18/2024 at 11:51 AM, Benjamin1975 said:

I have read and re-read. I have seen video after video and still I don't understand anything. At the moment I am in Thailand to look for a house to rent for February, because I will be moving permanently between the end of January and the beginning of February. My question is about the new taxes rules: once I am here in Thailand, I will have an amount equal to 150,000 thb every month transferred to my Thai account. It is an amount deriving from the rent of my house and my shop. Do I have to fill out the tax form on this amount or am I exempt? Here in Thailand I will not work and I will not have any income other than that from abroad. Thank you.

Go to a tax office. They speak English and are friendly. If you will live here on a pension either gov or company you will not pay tax here cos there is an agreement between uk and Thailand, but you can be asked to go see them so keep all your paper work to prove. There is no other tax at the moment for us to pay cos it's not official. If I say red somebody eles says blue. Go talk with tax office. Please look integrity legal Thailand utube, he is great and straight talking. As he say many post even from newspapers here make it sound it's all in place now, no it's not. Look seriously, only listen to him and the tax office, not face book or anywhere else.

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Posted
On 12/18/2024 at 12:43 PM, KhunLA said:

Yes, and read it as such.  (Did an edit while you were typing)

 

150 X 12 = 1.8M, and falls in th 1M-2M income bracket, taxable @ 25%, if I read it correctly, at link provided in my first reply.

 

image.png.bd3f188ea1e26f115f802b3e75fe83d2.png

apologies if this question has been answered but I couldn't find anything pertaining to it, kindly advise if you know the answer. Since the majority of us here are on Non O retirement extension of stay, thus not residents and they can kick us out anytime they want, should I understand that we will become permanent residents if we start to pay taxes and therefore no need for renewal of extension of stay every year, thanks

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Posted
9 minutes ago, Mavideol said:

apologies if this question has been answered but I couldn't find anything pertaining to it, kindly advise if you know the answer. Since the majority of us here are on Non O retirement extension of stay, thus not residents and they can kick us out anytime they want, should I understand that we will become permanent residents if we start to pay taxes and therefore no need for renewal of extension of stay every year, thanks

No, we will always be 'guests', and have to ask permission to stay, every year.  I doubt if that will every change, and a good think ... for TH.  

Posted
On 12/18/2024 at 11:51 AM, Benjamin1975 said:

I will have an amount equal to 150,000 thb every month transferred to my Thai account.

 

Why?  It can't be for the juicy 1% interest on savings.....

 

Park it in an offshore brokerage account, only bring in what you need.

 

As to rental income, I believe there are larger deductions and allowances for expenses on that particular category.

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Posted
On 12/18/2024 at 5:51 AM, Benjamin1975 said:

I have read and re-read. I have seen video after video and still I don't understand anything. At the moment I am in Thailand to look for a house to rent for February, because I will be moving permanently between the end of January and the beginning of February. My question is about the new taxes rules: once I am here in Thailand, I will have an amount equal to 150,000 thb every month transferred to my Thai account. It is an amount deriving from the rent of my house and my shop. Do I have to fill out the tax form on this amount or am I exempt? Here in Thailand I will not work and I will not have any income other than that from abroad. Thank you.

It's actually very simple:

 

If you stay for 180 days or longer in Thailand within a tax-year (calendar year), you are fully income taxable to Thailand.

 

Before end of March the following year, you have to declare your taxable income in a tax return form.

 

If you are already income-taxed in your home country of the money you transfer into Thailand, then check if your country has a double taxation agreement with Thailand, and find your income source in that statement.

Posted
On 12/18/2024 at 11:51 AM, Benjamin1975 said:

I have read and re-read. I have seen video after video and still I don't understand anything. At the moment I am in Thailand to look for a house to rent for February, because I will be moving permanently between the end of January and the beginning of February. My question is about the new taxes rules: once I am here in Thailand, I will have an amount equal to 150,000 thb every month transferred to my Thai account. It is an amount deriving from the rent of my house and my shop. Do I have to fill out the tax form on this amount or am I exempt? Here in Thailand I will not work and I will not have any income other than that from abroad. Thank you.

I will buy into this, you seen what the other guys are saying, I will add, just bring in what you need to live per month leave the rest of your money at home, you can bring in  between 4 to 500,000 per year before the need to pay tax depending on age.

 

If you can show savings of amounts before the start of 2024 that you may want to bring in for various reasons like buy a condo, make sure you have proof, depending on the mood of the tax officer high chance it wont be seen as a taxable amount, some forward planning and thinking you can work your way around the new tax rules but really why do you need to bring in 150,000 a month?

Posted
6 hours ago, anchadian said:

i believe the RD will be extremely busy from 02 January.

 

I wonder how many Thai/Eng translators they've taken on board.

 

Probably zero.

 

This thread is exhibit A for why even if the worst rumors and speculation about new enforcement of the old tax laws are true, then the sensible thing to do is keep money offshore and/or don’t come to Thailand more than 180 days per year. Both cost the Thai economy more money than any revenue they might collect, and it’s a net negative. 

 

But personally, I’m looking forward to the conversation in April about despite *NOTHING* having happened, but about how it will in June or January or the next BS milestone. 

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