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Thai tax tangle: Expats warned of new rules on overseas income


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Posted
7 hours ago, gamb00ler said:

I understand that using an ATM owned by a Thai bank you can choose to allow the Thai bank to do the conversion rather than taking the card processor's rate.  Is that also possible when making a retail purchase?

 

Yes, but it is not automatic. I have not always been offered the choice when making a payment at a checkout with a touch-and-go type card payment, but I have had sales staff who are processing the payment 'manually' offer the POS device so that I can make the choice. I have noted that some sales staff will do that selection and not offer you the choice, but I am not sure if that is their employer's policy or something they do just to speed-up the payment process.

Posted
11 hours ago, Airalee said:

“All foreign income must be declared but this doesn’t always mean a tax liability.”

Clear as mud

 

It is not at all uncommon that one would have to declare for tax in a given country even if that does not involve a tax liability.

 

I give an example I know very well. Certain foreign residents in Portugal have had for years been living under the so-called RNH system ("Residente Não Habitual") with the requirement to declare their worldwide income to the Portuguese authorities while as a matter of fact the taxation rate applied to the declared income was 0% (YES!). Needless to say, that system was fiercely attacked by other countries and the taxation rate under the RNH regime is not 0% anymore (but still rather low).

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Posted
11 hours ago, MikeandDow said:

They will have to be knocking on my door before i fill out any of there BS

Ive been to my tax office, they don't speak english(not their fault) asked about paying tax on my 3 small pensions from the UK ( I pay tax on all 3 in the UK) 

Answer, "if you pay tax in your country you won't pay tax here" basically they seemed uninterested.

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Posted
11 minutes ago, gejohesch said:

 

It is not at all uncommon that one would have to declare for tax in a given country even if that does not involve a tax liability.

 

I give an example I know very well. Certain foreign residents in Portugal have had for years been living under the so-called RNH system ("Residente Não Habitual") with the requirement to declare their worldwide income to the Portuguese authorities while as a matter of fact the taxation rate applied to the declared income was 0% (YES!). Needless to say, that system was fiercely attacked by other countries and the taxation rate under the RNH regime is not 0% anymore (but still rather low).

Portugal is Portugal.

In Thailand no need to include non accessable income in filing and no need to file if accessable income is under the threshold.

Just keep records.

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Posted
28 minutes ago, gejohesch said:

 

It is not at all uncommon that one would have to declare for tax in a given country even if that does not involve a tax liability.

 

I give an example I know very well. Certain foreign residents in Portugal have had for years been living under the so-called RNH system ("Residente Não Habitual") with the requirement to declare their worldwide income to the Portuguese authorities while as a matter of fact the taxation rate applied to the declared income was 0% (YES!). Needless to say, that system was fiercely attacked by other countries and the taxation rate under the RNH regime is not 0% anymore (but still rather low).

Thanks for the clarification 🙏

Posted
12 hours ago, snoop1130 said:

For others, the advice is clear: obtain a tax identification number and file a return by March 2025.

By March 2025, translated into English means February 28th.   This is NOT true.   You must file by the END of March 2025.  

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Posted
12 hours ago, stubuzz said:

If you transfered money to buy proerty, would this be taxed?

It doesn't matter what the purpose of the remitted money is. It's what the source of the funds that's important. If it's taxable earnings that you transfer to buy a property then it is assessable income.

Posted
10 hours ago, Briggsy said:

What would be the incentive to file?

 

Let me give you some completely hypothetical examples.

 

1. They refuse to extend your permission to stay unless you provide proof you have filed a tax return.

2. They issue an estimated assessment for a year you did not file.

3. They issue a fine for a year you did not file.

4. The Thai bank freezes your bank account unless you provide proof you have filed a tax return.

 

Currently these all seem very unlikely.

 

So I am back to my original question, what would be the incentive to file a Thai tax return.

Google the penalties.

Posted
12 hours ago, MikeandDow said:

They will have to be knocking on my door before i fill out any of there BS

I am sure they appreciate you putting your contact information at the top of the “needs to be audited” pile.  

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Posted
3 minutes ago, Card said:

It doesn't matter what the purpose of the remitted money is. It's what the source of the funds that's important. If it's taxable earnings that you transfer to buy a property then it is assessable income.

Agreed. Unless they carve out an exception for real estate buying which doesn't yet exist.

Posted
11 hours ago, Briggsy said:

What would be the incentive to file?

 

Let me give you some completely hypothetical examples.

 

1. They refuse to extend your permission to stay unless you provide proof you have filed a tax return.

2. They issue an estimated assessment for a year you did not file.

3. They issue a fine for a year you did not file.

4. The Thai bank freezes your bank account unless you provide proof you have filed a tax return.

 

Currently these all seem very unlikely.

 

So I am back to my original question, what would be the incentive to file a Thai tax return.

But when they bring in the global assets tax soon you will have to file or not be able to renew your visa and they will want to know why u did not file for previous years if u had transferred taxable assets. Google the penalties 

Posted
10 hours ago, nglodnig said:

Good luck with that. I'm a Brit but after Barclays kicked me out I don't have a UK bank account.  How are they going to trace me - black magic? Dowsing rods?

Through Thai financial institutions that you use to transfer cash to or from or exchange it in thailand

Posted
1 hour ago, thaibreaker said:

Chonburi Immigration stated 2 days ago at Pattaya Mail that there are no plans to link any visa or visa extension to any tax IDs, or TINs.

 

So just forget that. Won't happen.

Yes.  I know a high ranking Immigration officer they have no knowledge of, or training or information of any tax requirements for Visas or extentions at this time.

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Posted
10 hours ago, Moonlover said:

And just to add to that, were the TRD to go chasing around tracking down all us 'miscreants', they would find that most retirees won't owe them any money. Most of us are protected by DTAs in various forms or are drawing pensions that cannot be taxed in any other country anyway.

 

The yield IMO would not be worth the effort and I wouldn't like to contemplate the anguish it might cause amongst the community.

 

Let sleeping dogs lie is, by far their best policy.

The proof is on you not them. You will need to prove the transferred cash is not taxable. They don't need to prove anything.

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Posted
8 hours ago, gamb00ler said:

I understand that using an ATM owned by a Thai bank you can choose to allow the Thai bank to do the conversion rather than taking the card processor's rate.  Is that also possible when making a retail purchase?

It doesn't matter how u transfer cash,  or in what currency, Thai baht or dollars. It's the source of the funds that's important. Using a fireign credit card fir goods and services in thailabd means it is assessable. Whether it's taxable earnings depends on its source.

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Posted
1 hour ago, Badrabbit said:

Ive been to my tax office, they don't speak english(not their fault) asked about paying tax on my 3 small pensions from the UK ( I pay tax on all 3 in the UK) 

Answer, "if you pay tax in your country you won't pay tax here" basically they seemed uninterested.

The UK DTA is to give credits against thai tax. That may mean your remitted earnings are not taxed but it doesn't mean you don't need yo file a tax return

Posted
1 hour ago, Kenneth White said:

I have concerns about my Social Security income. This is the first time I have read the double tax agreement, which states that if I live in Thailand for more than 180 days, I am considered a resident and must fill out a tax form. It does not mention paying taxes. I am married to a beautiful Thai lady and have lived here for many years. However, each time I apply for my one-year visa extension, I have never been asked to fill out a tax form. I guess I should continue and not say anything; keep my mouth shut. 

 

I agree with most that this article is a bit ambiguous. 

They will prob start to ask fir tax filing when they bring in a global assets tax maybe this or next year

Posted

Why anyone would want to be in Thailand more than 180 days a year is beyond me. Most probably burnt their bridges, so time to pay up or ship out. 🤣😂🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

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Posted
2 minutes ago, Card said:

The UK DTA is to give credits against thai tax. That may mean your remitted earnings are not taxed but it doesn't mean you don't need yo file a tax return

Where do I go to get help with this which isn't going to cost an arm and a leg, the tax office doesn't seem to care or are not bothered.

Posted
8 minutes ago, Kerryd said:

Then they would deduct the "Personal Deduction" (60k ? I haven't verified the amounts.) 

General deductions are:

Standard: 60,000

For the person: 100,000

If tax payer over 65 years old: 190,000

Other deductions are possible, e.g 50% from health insurance contribution, max 25,000

 

Posted
24 minutes ago, bkk6060 said:

Yes.  I know a high ranking Immigration officer they have no knowledge of, or training or information of any tax requirements for Visas or extentions at this time.

Until.they bring in global assets tax this year or next. All they will need to renew will be an acknowledgement from the TRD that you have filed. Just like they do fir our bank balances now 

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