Russian man arrested for rampage and knife attack at Phuket hotel
-
Recently Browsing 0 members
- No registered users viewing this page.
-
Topics
-
Latest posts...
-
14
Which new laptop?
Sorry Centigrade32. I misunderstood. I want to down load mkvs to an external hd, organize them on a pc, and retain for ages. Not connected to the tv, and on all day. -
60
British Holidaymaker, 28, Dies in Motorbike Crash in Thailand: Twin Pays Tribute
Excellent idea.....been looking at getting one of these......but then I think about all the drivers I see on their phones, speeding....possibly drunk.....and then think .......no...... bin that. -
97
they just killed 2 of my dogs
With the street dog problems in Thailand, poisoning dogs has become a "normal" ting. It is cruel, but too many dogs makes people hate them!! -
427
Yes, Virginia, Donald J. Trump WILL be the first convicted felon to become U.S. president
Perhaps - my suspicion is rather that money for its own sake is central to Trump, not because of what he can use it for. Again, true, but in Trumps case money is central to, the foundation on which his ego is built. Musk has money, that ( pun rather intended) trumps all other considerations. -
255
-
80
Transgender Woman Assaulted by Foreigner on Pattaya Beach
Indeed, then the Trump voters will be crying............😥 -
427
Yes, Virginia, Donald J. Trump WILL be the first convicted felon to become U.S. president
Read his statement. He says it's "political," not legal. Of course it's political, but you can hardly say it's not a "legal" action. It's part and parcel of the constitutional impeachment process and very much "legal." -
378
Revenue Department boss calls on tax residents in Thailand to file 2024 returns by March 31
The "issue" as I read it, is the translation of the Royal Decree causes an ambiguity. Does the Royal Decree for the LTR visa intend to state for LTR-WP that the "tax law paragraph requiring assessable income be reported for tax" is exempt, or does it mean that just the "assessable income is tax exempt". (Those are my words - not the exact tax law nor Royal Decree words). There is a difference. Current translations I have read seem to refer to the later and not the former. I understand your interpretation. And I like your interpretation - but I am honest in stating I do not know what is correct. So as a result, given it was easy for me to do (fortunately) , I elected to bring no money into Thailand for the next few years. Further in this regard, at an unplanned moment of opportunity confirmed with a Phuket RD official that I neither needed to obtain a Thai TIN (in my circumstance) nor file a Thai tax return given I was bringing no money into Thailand. My hope is based on the experience of others, in a few years there will be no ambiguity. Clearly everyone's tax situation is different, and I suggest everyone find what they consider to be the best legally compliant approach for themselves in regards to tax-returns and taxation, optimising such as much as possible to their benefit within the letter of the law.
-
-
Popular in The Pub
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