Popular Post swissie Posted Saturday at 02:00 PM Popular Post Posted Saturday at 02:00 PM Taxation of "foreighn-income" is all the rage here. Why not hire a reputable Thai Accountant, specialising in taxes generally? If Problems arise, refer the Thai Tax Wizards to your Thai Accountant. Under the Motto: "If my Thai Accountant can't handle my Thai taxes, how could I"? Example: I had my Visa-Stuff handled by a Thai Visa Agent. Once immigration discovered some "irregularity". I refered them to my Visa Agent. I never heard anything from immigration in this matter ever again. I am absolutely sure, that such a constellation would also be applicable in connection with "foreighn income". Money well spent, especially if larger amounts are involved. 1 1 1 6
Popular Post topt Posted Saturday at 04:15 PM Popular Post Posted Saturday at 04:15 PM Instead of an agent how about getting a new spellchecker - foreign spelling is wrong in the title and twice in the message....doesn't inspire any confidence in the poster if you were unaware of the poster before......... 2 hours ago, swissie said: Example: I had my Visa-Stuff handled by a Thai Visa Agent. Once immigration discovered some "irregularity". I refered them to my Visa Agent. I never heard anything from immigration in this matter ever again. If you do it yourself perhaps you never have these irregularities...........I would not know.......... 2 1 4
Popular Post motdaeng Posted Sunday at 12:31 AM Popular Post Posted Sunday at 12:31 AM 8 hours ago, topt said: Instead of an agent how about getting a new spellchecker - foreign spelling is wrong in the title and twice in the message....doesn't inspire any confidence in the poster if you were unaware of the poster before......... are you the spelling police ... 1 2 1 1
Klonko Posted Sunday at 06:57 AM Posted Sunday at 06:57 AM 16 hours ago, swissie said: Taxation of "foreighn-income" is all the rage here. Why not hire a reputable Thai Accountant, specialising in taxes generally? If Problems arise, refer the Thai Tax Wizards to your Thai Accountant. Under the Motto: "If my Thai Accountant can't handle my Thai taxes, how could I"? Example: I had my Visa-Stuff handled by a Thai Visa Agent. Once immigration discovered some "irregularity". I refered them to my Visa Agent. I never heard anything from immigration in this matter ever again. I am absolutely sure, that such a constellation would also be applicable in connection with "foreighn income". Money well spent, especially if larger amounts are involved. This is a very good idea. The challenge is to find an accountant who is (1) familiar with your home country and respective DTA, (2) understands foreign language (possibly not English) documents, and (3) has a good relationship with your local TRD office, which may be difficult to find if you do not reside in Bangkok. 1
KhunHeineken Posted Sunday at 11:38 AM Posted Sunday at 11:38 AM 4 hours ago, Klonko said: (3) has a good relationship with your local TRD office A "good relationship" can be bought here, and I don't mean for just 1 hour. 1 1
zepplin Posted Monday at 07:40 AM Posted Monday at 07:40 AM On 1/26/2025 at 1:57 PM, Klonko said: This is a very good idea. The challenge is to find an accountant who is (1) familiar with your home country and respective DTA, (2) understands foreign language (possibly not English) documents, and (3) has a good relationship with your local TRD office, which may be difficult to find if you do not reside in Bangkok. That’s why the “plan” from the government will never ever work, way too much hassle involved, no way they have even 5% of the required fully qualified tax specialists who speak all the required languages and know when the remittance was actually earned overseas, make that 1%!! 2
Popular Post Klonko Posted Monday at 09:35 AM Popular Post Posted Monday at 09:35 AM 1 hour ago, zepplin said: That’s why the “plan” from the government will never ever work, way too much hassle involved, no way they have even 5% of the required fully qualified tax specialists who speak all the required languages and know when the remittance was actually earned overseas, make that 1%!! TRD will kindly ask tax residents to prove that remittances are not assessable income or subject to DTA. TRD can request certified translation from languages other than English. Lucky if copies of bank statements and tax invoices suffice and are self explanatory, less lucky if documents are not in English or specific signatures are required (cf. foreign health insurance). If TRD is not happy with a tax resident's explanation, they can qualify the remittances as tax assessable and declare respective taxes due. The bottle neck will be resources. I would not be surprised if annual remittances below THB 1-2m will remain under the radar for the time being even if TRD is serious about more tax revenues. 1 2
newbee2022 Posted Monday at 12:59 PM Posted Monday at 12:59 PM On 1/25/2025 at 9:00 PM, swissie said: Taxation of "foreighn-income" is all the rage here. Why not hire a reputable Thai Accountant, specialising in taxes generally? If Problems arise, refer the Thai Tax Wizards to your Thai Accountant. Under the Motto: "If my Thai Accountant can't handle my Thai taxes, how could I"? Example: I had my Visa-Stuff handled by a Thai Visa Agent. Once immigration discovered some "irregularity". I refered them to my Visa Agent. I never heard anything from immigration in this matter ever again. I am absolutely sure, that such a constellation would also be applicable in connection with "foreighn income". Money well spent, especially if larger amounts are involved. You're joking, aren't you?😳 You really think you can do in Switzerland? No? But in Thailand you can do illegal things? I read the other day about a Swiss on Phuket. Are you related to him? 2
swissie Posted 21 hours ago Author Posted 21 hours ago On 1/27/2025 at 1:59 PM, newbee2022 said: You're joking, aren't you?😳 You really think you can do in Switzerland? No? But in Thailand you can do illegal things? I read the other day about a Swiss on Phuket. Are you related to him? Clearly, you have not been living in Thailand for a long time. 2
swissie Posted 20 hours ago Author Posted 20 hours ago On 1/25/2025 at 5:15 PM, topt said: Instead of an agent how about getting a new spellchecker - foreign spelling is wrong in the title and twice in the message....doesn't inspire any confidence in the poster if you were unaware of the poster before......... If you do it yourself perhaps you never have these irregularities...........I would not know.......... I don't us a "Spellchecker". What I type is what you get. But I am sure your written English, French and Italian is as good as mine. Or better? 2 1
swissie Posted 20 hours ago Author Posted 20 hours ago Not sure if this thread was fully understood by all. It's about TRANSFERRING YOUR RESPONSABILITIES to a Thai professional. Taking the Farang out of the "firing line" of modestly educated "Thai-Officials" that are constantly overwhelmed by new legislation. Not likely available in the deepest of Isaan. But in tourist hubs, yes. All major agreements with the Thai Accountant in writing. All verbal Agreements in Thailand are of no relevance. 1 2
Kwaibill Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago Well, I am 71 now and must admit not as sharp as I once was. Is US social security direct deposited in Bkk Bank likely to be considered an assessable remittance? The rest of my income is likewise direct deposited on a quarterly basis and is largely from “qualified dividends” or some such and non-taxable US sources. At any rate I have gotten a no tax liability result since at least 1999 using both professional tax preparers and the FreeTax app. Worried that the frequent tax forays in either/both countries are going to bite my marginal retired ass. 2
Popular Post thesetat Posted 7 hours ago Popular Post Posted 7 hours ago On 1/25/2025 at 9:00 PM, swissie said: Taxation of "foreighn-income" is all the rage here. Why not hire a reputable Thai Accountant, specialising in taxes generally? If Problems arise, refer the Thai Tax Wizards to your Thai Accountant. Under the Motto: "If my Thai Accountant can't handle my Thai taxes, how could I"? Example: I had my Visa-Stuff handled by a Thai Visa Agent. Once immigration discovered some "irregularity". I refered them to my Visa Agent. I never heard anything from immigration in this matter ever again. I am absolutely sure, that such a constellation would also be applicable in connection with "foreighn income". Money well spent, especially if larger amounts are involved. Quite a statement there. Your tax man Thai or otherwise is not responsible if there is something wrong. You will lose everything if you think this way. You are ultimately liable for what is filed on your taxes. Your tax accountant is only being paid to fill in what you have told him and try to get you the best tax return. He is not responsible for mistakes. He can easily claim you never told him something important or gave the wrong information. So good luck with your theory that you can blame him. 1 2
soalbundy Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago On 1/26/2025 at 7:31 AM, motdaeng said: are you the spelling police ... There is no need for poor spelling with a spell checker which most, if not all, computer users have, if a word is red underlined and you don't correct it it's a sign of laziness and disrespect. 1 1 1
nofarang Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago On 1/26/2025 at 7:57 AM, Klonko said: This is a very good idea. The challenge is to find an accountant who is (1) familiar with your home country and respective DTA, (2) understands foreign language (possibly not English) documents, and (3) has a good relationship with your local TRD office, which may be difficult to find if you do not reside in Bangkok. and who has a good understanding of the various tax regulations in the different countries
statman78 Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago 1 hour ago, Kwaibill said: Well, I am 71 now and must admit not as sharp as I once was. Is US social security direct deposited in Bkk Bank likely to be considered an assessable remittance? The rest of my income is likewise direct deposited on a quarterly basis and is largely from “qualified dividends” or some such and non-taxable US sources. At any rate I have gotten a no tax liability result since at least 1999 using both professional tax preparers and the FreeTax app. Worried that the frequent tax forays in either/both countries are going to bite my marginal retired ass. I just came back from my accountant in Bangkok who always handles my US returns. He now has Thai tax accountants. US Social Security is not subject to Thai taxes. It doesn’t matter if it is directly deposited into your Thai account or if it goes into a US account then transferred into a Thai account.
timendres Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago In English, straight from the Revenue Department: https://www.rd.go.th/fileadmin/download/english_form/030265guide91.pdf If you have less than 120,000THB (220,000THB for married couples) of taxable income, no filing is required. It is not clear to me, and I will be asking my account soon, if exempt income (say US SS payments) apply to the above. Interestingly, the document states that even non-residents (less than 180days in TH) must file a return if they exceed the above. You will (I believe) not owe tax, but apparently must file. That is going to get messy. Also keep in mind - if your accountant is not a Thai national, they are operating illegally. Accounting is a restricted occupation.
Samh Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 15 hours ago, swissie said: I don't us a "Spellchecker". What I type is what you get. But I am sure your written English, French and Italian is as good as mine. Or better? Are we taling about this "I am absolutely sure, that such a constellation would also be applicable in connection with "foreighn income"." I must admit I was confused. What has a constellation got to do with it. Not interested in the incorrect spelling of foreign.
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