Jump to content

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


Recommended Posts

Posted
31 minutes ago, JimGant said:

So, yeah -- big question -- when does income transform into savings? Hmmmm.

 

Riddle me this, Batman!

 

You have capital gains from stock sales in the US of $25,000 in 2024.  The original capital is reinvested, and the gain is put into a separate account to sit idle for two years.

On December 30, 2026 you invest that idle $25,000 gain in a random mutual fund.

On January 02, 2027 you sell that mutual fund for $24,950.

You are continuously tax resident in Thailand over the entire period.

 

None of that idle gain nestled in its isolated account was remitted during 2024-2026, no nothing assessable during that period.

 

For your 2027 taxes, you have a sale resulting in receiving most of the original capital, and a short term capital loss of $50.  No gain to be taxed, and the cash in your account is now considered capital, not capital gains.

 

You have a 2027 1040 showing a sale resulting in a loss, with nothing taxable.

 

Assuming you can point to this particular bag of money as that particular remittance, what is it?

 

If it's the capital gains from 2024, then it's assessable, and must be declared as income in the year remitted.

 

If it's the original capital from a fund sale, not resulting in a gain to pollute the calculations, then it's non-assessable and need not be reported in the year remitted.

 

If audited, Is my 2027 1040 or 1099 satisfactory to show the funds are non-assessable?  Is TRD going to demand to know when the fund sold in 2027 was purchased, with what funds, and where did those funds come from, and before that, and before that, with a clear path back to pre-2024?  How many degrees to Kevin Bacon must I document?

 

I suppose we'll have to bring in a truckload of invoices and receipts and tax statements.................unless TRD continue to have us self-determine assessablility of remittances.  Otherwise they're gonna be frightfully busy.

 

 

Posted
22 minutes ago, Badrabbit said:

Maybe, I've been told I don't have to so I wont,

What will they do send me to prison for 30 years.

I'm in the same boat as yourself. 

 

My total income is THB389,00 of assessable income by way of two pensions which I have printed, UK bank, Thai bank statements 2024 and breakdown. I wont be filing and I'm pretty sure like us many wont be entertaining the RD.

We might even end up as cellmates if the worst comes to the worst.

 

Let's see what transpires from the Govt or RD, if at all,

  • Haha 1
Posted
38 minutes ago, The Cyclist said:

 

Fair enough, go with what your RD Office says.

Also the UK state is a Government Pension as it is issued by the department for works and pensions which is a Government department.

If you think it's not use your friend Google.

Posted
2 minutes ago, anchadian said:

I'm in the same boat as yourself. 

 

My total income is THB389,00 of assessable income by way of two pensions which I have printed, UK bank, Thai bank statements 2024 and breakdown. I wont be filing and I'm pretty sure like us many wont be entertaining the RD.

We might even end up as cellmates if the worst comes to the worst.

 

Let's see what transpires from the Govt or RD, if at all,

Cell mates! Hope you don't snore lol 

  • Haha 2
Posted
35 minutes ago, Badrabbit said:

What will they do send me to prison for 30 years.

No, but possibly no visa extension. 

 

Ask yourself this question, "If every foreigner didn't file, what course of action would the Thai government take to force them to file?"

 

Why go around arresting them when they must go to an immigration office?  

Posted
44 minutes ago, JimGant said:

That's the best question asked on this forum in ages. Say your rental income from 2024 rests in your bank account until 2030, when you, as a Thai tax resident, finally remit it to Thailand. How will it be treated? Bounce that off of the following:

 

This says, yeah, when remitted to Thailand in 2030, it has to be declared as income. That's bonkers! How about remitted in 2045? At some point income transitions into savings. And I would suggest that point is when subject income has gone through your home country tax process, either to be taxed, to not be taxed, or to be determined as tax exempt. After which, it is no longer income. Would TRD buy that? Dunno.

 

Of course, the same logic could be applied to: 2024 rental income being declared when you file your home country taxes in 2025. Then, after it's gone through this home country tax process, it becomes savings. And, as such, if you then remit it to Thailand after doing your home country taxes, it is, as savings, no longer taxable by Thailand.

 

This might be a stretch, as far as TRD is concerned. But what exactly is the difference in this scenario between after tax rental income in home country bank account, after home country tax return accomplished in 2025 -- and same scenario, but now in 2045?

 

So, yeah -- big question -- when does income transform into savings? Hmmmm.

 

 

Thank you for your reply.

yes,  all very complicated.

 

Posted
On 1/15/2025 at 6:29 PM, Jingthing said:

Misinformation.

No need to get a TIN or file unless your remitted  accessable income is over the threshold.

For example if you're only remitting exempt US social security no need for tin or to file.

Ido not know about the Americans, but if are not over the threshold of remittences although you do not need to file a tax return, you have to go to the revenue office with  a years bank statement showing  transfers from aboard., to get a tax clearence . I did that this morning 

Posted
6 minutes ago, jonesthepost said:

Ido not know about the Americans, but if are not over the threshold of remittences although you do not need to file a tax return, you have to go to the revenue office with  a years bank statement showing  transfers from aboard., to get a tax clearence . I did that this morning 

I can do that, what is a tax clearance? Is it a form stating tax exempt?

I only have one pension which is approx 1,700bht per month.

2 others are Government.

I'm not worried any more.

Posted
30 minutes ago, Badrabbit said:

Also the UK state is a Government Pension as it is issued by the department for works and pensions which is a Government department.

 

Correct, it is issued by the DWP.

 

For tax purposes and DTA's it is not a Government Pension

 

Government Pensions consist of

 

Civil Servants

 

Police

 

Fire Brigade

 

Armed Forces

 

etc.

Posted
30 minutes ago, The Cyclist said:

 

Correct, it is issued by the DWP.

 

For tax purposes and DTA's it is not a Government Pension

 

Government Pensions consist of

 

Civil Servants

 

Police

 

Fire Brigade

 

Armed Forces

 

etc.

Google is wrong. Wow.

I believe Google but it does not matter as I wouldn't be taxed on 25k per month so all is good. 

Posted
58 minutes ago, NoDisplayName said:

 

Riddle me this, Batman!

 

You have capital gains from stock sales in the US of $25,000 in 2024.  The original capital is reinvested, and the gain is put into a separate account to sit idle for two years.

On December 30, 2026 you invest that idle $25,000 gain in a random mutual fund.

On January 02, 2027 you sell that mutual fund for $24,950.

You are continuously tax resident in Thailand over the entire period.

 

None of that idle gain nestled in its isolated account was remitted during 2024-2026, no nothing assessable during that period.

 

For your 2027 taxes, you have a sale resulting in receiving most of the original capital, and a short term capital loss of $50.  No gain to be taxed, and the cash in your account is now considered capital, not capital gains.

 

You have a 2027 1040 showing a sale resulting in a loss, with nothing taxable.

 

Assuming you can point to this particular bag of money as that particular remittance, what is it?

 

If it's the capital gains from 2024, then it's assessable, and must be declared as income in the year remitted.

 

If it's the original capital from a fund sale, not resulting in a gain to pollute the calculations, then it's non-assessable and need not be reported in the year remitted.

 

If audited, Is my 2027 1040 or 1099 satisfactory to show the funds are non-assessable?  Is TRD going to demand to know when the fund sold in 2027 was purchased, with what funds, and where did those funds come from, and before that, and before that, with a clear path back to pre-2024?  How many degrees to Kevin Bacon must I document?

 

I suppose we'll have to bring in a truckload of invoices and receipts and tax statements.................unless TRD continue to have us self-determine assessablility of remittances.  Otherwise they're gonna be frightfully busy.

 

 

 

"UNpossibly" complex for the TRD to even begin to calculate. Helps identify why almost nowhere in the world operates remittance taxation, it's practically unenforceable.

 

Anyone who pays a single baht of tax on any foreign remittance to Thailand is IMO, a poor tax planner.

 

Firstly you can use the gifting provisions, they are pretty simple. 

 

Secondly, you can take income and buy something with it (anything, a stock, a car, some art) , then immediately sell said something at cost, and remit the proceeds of the sale, squeaky clean. No capital gains.

 

In both cases, the remitted funds are non assessable/exempt/whatever the latest term is,  and no need to declare. 

  • Like 1
Posted
8 hours ago, Badrabbit said:

Can you say what was needed as my tax office say I would need documents from the UK confirming funds coming into Thailand.

Yes this was about a year  ago and I took my passport and chanoot as residence proof.i was out in 5 mins as the place was empty.

Posted

Is there another thread for these Tax question but only for the Brits ? It's great seeing everyone else's input and how this may/may not affect them, but there is also a lot of unnecessary noise... 

thanks

Posted
3 hours ago, JimGant said:

So, yeah -- big question -- when does income transform into savings? Hmmmm.

TRD auditors can ask for information going back 10 years, past this period everything becomes savings.

Posted
2 hours ago, anrcaccount said:

"UNpossibly" complex for the TRD to even begin to calculate. Helps identify why almost nowhere in the world operates remittance taxation, it's practically unenforceable.

 

So shall I put you down under "effectively no change, we will continue to self-determine assessablility of remittances as before"?

 

2 hours ago, anrcaccount said:

you can take income and buy something with it (anything, a stock, a car, some art) , then immediately sell said something at cost, and remit the proceeds of the sale

 

It certainly seems that way in the absence of clear instructions, but I'd still like to have the purchase in one tax year, and the sale of said asset in the following year.  IRS regulations easily cover this situation, but that isn't a remittance system with earning and remittances separated by potentially decades.

 

What to do when your 2024 earnings have been through multiple cycles of invest, sell, re-invest over three or four years or ten years? 

 

Problem is that the regulations, and the overly -simplified explanations and examples we get from TRD and news articles don't take this into account.  They all seem to expect that everyone keeps all their money in a single passbook savings account.

Posted
31 minutes ago, Wyabcp said:

Is there another thread for these Tax question but only for the Brits ? It's great seeing everyone else's input and how this may/may not affect them, but there is also a lot of unnecessary noise... 

thanks

Would not be a bad idea that new threads start for each country to keep down the confusion over each country's DTAs, which are not the same.

Posted
4 minutes ago, DrPhibes said:

Would not be a bad idea that new threads start for each country to keep down the confusion over each country's DTAs, which are not the same.

 

I suspect there are only a handful of such threads needed dedicated to specific countries and the remainder could be lumped into one thread. 

 

Case in point, there is an old thread for DTAs for Canada , and that thread is dead as a door nail :

 

 

Posted
52 minutes ago, Yumthai said:

TRD auditors can ask for information going back 10 years, past this period everything becomes savings

Well, before Por 161, out year remittances weren't considered income for taxation purposes. The 10 year audit window was, then, to monitor income from within Thailand. I think I might feel fairly secure that once my income had been processed by my home country tax service -- in my case, the IRS -- I could consider it savings. And, I'd probably self-assess on that basis. But, I certainly wouldn't welcome the chance to explain this to an auditor.... Nevertheless, this is another gray area among many in this new world of Thai taxation -- and with any gray area, you take the fork in the road that is to your advantage.

 

 

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 account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.




×
×
  • Create New...