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Posted
3 hours ago, alanrchase said:

The income was processed under 1. 1. 40(1). That is for salary, wages, pension etc.. Theoretically it should be under interest I suppose but I am retired so it is like a pension to me.

 

If you had entered your foreign interest in 40(4), the system may have required matching with bank withholding records, with option not to declare if tax paid.

 

Might be that the system is designed for the Thai banking system with interest withheld at source, and taxed at a standard 15%.

 

Foreign interest likely does not fall under the Thai 15% rule, and is taxed as normal income, according to your specific tax bracket.

 

Putting the foreign interest as "derived from employment" means you should have paid tax at the 5% rate.  That also allowed you to take the 100K exemption.  If declared as interest, the "pension expense" would not be applicable.

 

Just my guess.

 

 

Posted
On 2/4/2025 at 12:58 PM, alanrchase said:

454,000 transfered from an offshore account, source of funds declared as interest, no dual taxation treaties apply.

 

I assume you were unable to apply a foreign tax credit for any tax paid on that interest?

 

 

Posted
3 minutes ago, NoDisplayName said:

 

If you had entered your foreign interest in 40(4), the system may have required matching with bank withholding records, with option not to declare if tax paid.

 

Might be that the system is designed for the Thai banking system with interest withheld at source, and taxed at a standard 15%.

 

Foreign interest likely does not fall under the Thai 15% rule, and is taxed as normal income, according to your specific tax bracket.

 

Putting the foreign interest as "derived from employment" means you should have paid tax at the 5% rate.  That also allowed you to take the 100K exemption.  If declared as interest, the "pension expense" would not be applicable.

 

Just my guess.

 

 

The calculations were as follows

Declared 454,575

Deductible expenses 100,000

Total 354,575

Thai bank interest 4,542

Total 359,117

Then 2×60,000 deductible for personal allowance for wife and I.

Total 239,117 

First 150,000 tax exempt

Total 89,117

Tax bracket 5%.

5% of 89,117 = 4,455 to be paid

Subtract 681 for withholding tax paid

Total 3,774 tax to be paid.

 

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Posted
11 minutes ago, NoDisplayName said:

 

I assume you were unable to apply a foreign tax credit for any tax paid on that interest?

 

 

My accounts are tax free offshore.

Posted
On 2/4/2025 at 12:58 PM, alanrchase said:

454,000 transfered from an offshore account, source of funds declared as interest

 

On 2/4/2025 at 12:58 PM, alanrchase said:

requested a FST for the single transfer I had made in April last year

 

Wait................you declared US$13,500 interest earned entirely in the first quarter of 2024?

 

None of that was "in the bank" prior to Jan 01 2024, and thus non assessable?????????

Posted
1 minute ago, NoDisplayName said:

 

 

Wait................you declared US$13,500 interest earned entirely in the first quarter of 2024?

 

None of that was "in the bank" prior to Jan 01 2024, and thus non assessable?????????

I am not getting into arguments about whether interest earned was left in the account and savings from 2023 were transferred with the RD over 3,774 baht. I inherited some money from my grandmother years ago, I suppose I could argue that I have not spent any of that yet and am just starting to use it in Thailand. That would be tax free as well. 

Posted
19 hours ago, NoDisplayName said:

Another Expat Tax video on the Youtubes, thoroughly frustrating.  TRD legal guy drones on endlessly, translator gives a short, muddled, sort of English version, but can't seem to follow the script.

 

Foreigner guy asks what to do if we get conflicting statements from TRD office, if you know you owe tax and need to file, but TRD staff send you away.  Answer -- basically, learn Thai.

 

Foreigner guy asks about filing requirements for non-assessable income.  Answer -- if your social security is not assessable, however if you bring the assessable income and you want a tax credit you need to file the tax return.

 

Foreigner guy asks about prior "cash in the bank"...and he quickly under his breath adds "pre-2024 income that is actually moved into cash."

 

Foreigner guy gets the expected, known answer and says "just for cash in the bank, not pensions, not investments.  great, that's really useful.  fine, so moving on...."   But we already know this, ask the real questions, dammit!  Why move on, instead of following up with, "well, what about investments pre-2024?" 

 

Sad.  Bigly sad.  A prestigious internet law firm should be able to hire a competent translator.

 

 

 

Foreigner guy asks what to do if we get conflicting statements from TRD office, if you know you owe tax and need to file, but TRD staff send you away.  Answer -- basically, learn Thai.

 

 

18 hours ago, NoDisplayName said:

 

Did he?  Let's hear from some posters who can translate what the man actually said.

 

It was uncomfortable from the start, as foreign guy was accusing TRD staff of incompetence.  Translator says "sensative question... hahahah ..(nervous laughter)" to which foreigner guy gives him an out by offering stupid foreigners can't speak Thai.

 

TRD legal guy speaks for well over a full minute, and translator guy and foreigner guy agree it's just a language issue, so just bring more paper.

 

He didn't address the issue.  Foreign shows up, claims need to file due to assessable income, TRD official either isn't interested or doesn't know how to do the job.

 

Watch the body language of TRD legal guy during the explanation.  If he was in court for a parking ticket, the jury would find him guilty of murder!

 

Foreigner guy just goes along with the farce, "just need to take documentary evidence to prove you owe tax."

 

"and yeah, ok, clear, that makes sense."

 

Translator says "sensative question... hahahah ..(nervous laughter)" to which foreigner guy gives him an out by offering stupid foreigners can't speak Thai.

 

 

18 hours ago, KhunHeineken said:

I accept this, but will it "fly" with your immigration office at extension time, or the immigration desk at the airport? 

 

The TRD gets your bank remittance details.  Somchai at your local TRD says, "No need to file" because it's near his lunch break.

 

Is it soooo left field that Somchai gave the wrong advice, and you may have problems down the track? 

 

Yeah, yeah, I know.  In Somchai we trust, and it's just scaremongering blah blah blah.  :cheesy:

 

@NoDisplayName & @KhunHeineken

 

Yes, I felt the same way about this webinar, TRD Q&A. Blaming the various interpretations/responses given by different TRD officers/offices reported by many foreigners "on language difficulties" is completely wrong, (in my experience). Every inquiry I have made to TRD, by phone or in person within Sathorn district (there are several offices) have received varying replies, and have been made by a Thai person in Thai. Language has nothing to do with it. A complete lack of clarity from TRD management is to blame. Of course it's a "sensitive subject", because it exposes the incompetence of this exercise, the norm for Thai bureaucracy.

 

 

16 hours ago, WingNut said:

 

I wanted to add that if you only submit photo copies of your bankbook pages that they could still request statements later if they decide to dig deeper. It might seem redundant, but it is a known fact that bankbooks in Thailand often don't contain all the transactions that occurred on the account whereas a statement does. This is why the Immigration department requires 12 month's of bank statements, in addition to the updated bankbook, when extending a long term visa.

 

For me the issue is submitting bank statements of my accounts in another country, where the transactions, (ATM withdrawals, debit card usage, QR debits and pensions and dividends all take place). I have prepared an Excel reconciliation sheet, but it would be difficult to follow if the checker here is not familiar with a composite multicurrency bank statement, and when for example my UK State Pension is paid into my UK account and partially transferred to my foreign multicurrency account in GBP, and then converted to HKD or THB depending on my required usage.

 

But if it's paper they want, however meaningless to them, they can have it. My only fear is giving all this information, like name & account numbers and data protection being flouted, as it routinely is by government agencies.

Posted
2 hours ago, alanrchase said:

I am not getting into arguments about whether interest earned was left in the account and savings from 2023 were transferred with the RD over 3,774 baht. I inherited some money from my grandmother years ago, I suppose I could argue that I have not spent any of that yet and am just starting to use it in Thailand. That would be tax free as well. 

 

Not arguing.  Merely asking for clarification.  This is all new to most here, and the rules are.........complicated.

 

Asked about tax credits, because none have reported actually filing with a tax credit approved.  (unless I missed one)

 

Asking whether your interest (which really wasn't interest?) was earned pre-2024, but TRD wouldn't let you claim prior savings.

 

It appears you could easily have self-determined, and provided documentation if asked, that your remittances were all non-assessable.

 

In that case you didn't need to pay tax, didn't need to file, and may not have even needed a TIN.

 

It appears you chose to self-determine, for your own reasons, that your remittances were assessable, and chose to owe tax.

 

Again, not arguing, asking for clarification.  Your case would be atypical.

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Posted
1 hour ago, samtam said:

For me the issue is submitting bank statements of my accounts in another country, where the transactions, (ATM withdrawals, debit card usage, QR debits and pensions and dividends all take place). I have prepared an Excel reconciliation sheet, but it would be difficult to follow if the checker here is not familiar with a composite multicurrency bank statement, and when for example my UK State Pension is paid into my UK account and partially transferred to my foreign multicurrency account in GBP, and then converted to HKD or THB depending on my required usage.

 

But if it's paper they want, however meaningless to them, they can have it. My only fear is giving all this information, like name & account numbers and data protection being flouted, as it routinely is by government agencies.

 

I understand your concern. There are two possible solutions:

 

1 - Set up a second bank account at the same Thai bank you are using now, dedicated solely to incoming transfers. Once the funds arrive, transfer them to your older primary account for everyday spending. This keeps one account "clean," showing only incoming transfers on its statements. I use a similar setup already. My transfer account has no daily spending activity, just a few incoming and outgoing transfers to my other Thai bank accounts and some occasional interest. My main account handles all my regular transactions, keeping things organized and reducing the chance of the TRD scrutinizing other regular spending activities.

 

2 - Provide them funds transfer receipts instead of bank statements. Instead of submitting full bank statements, you can provide copies of transfer receipts from your sending bank as supporting documentation for the amount you are claiming you transferred in as income for the year. I should have done that this year, but I didn't think of it at the time. But this is my planned approach going forward. Since I send all my funds transfers to my Thai bank account through Wise, I can easily download PDF receipts from my Wise account for all the transfers. Next year, I’ll submit only those receipts, ensuring they all add up to the total amount declared as income on my tax return.

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Posted
1 hour ago, NoDisplayName said:

 

Not arguing.  Merely asking for clarification.  This is all new to most here, and the rules are.........complicated.

 

Asked about tax credits, because none have reported actually filing with a tax credit approved.  (unless I missed one)

 

Asking whether your interest (which really wasn't interest?) was earned pre-2024, but TRD wouldn't let you claim prior savings.

 

It appears you could easily have self-determined, and provided documentation if asked, that your remittances were all non-assessable.

 

In that case you didn't need to pay tax, didn't need to file, and may not have even needed a TIN.

 

It appears you chose to self-determine, for your own reasons, that your remittances were assessable, and chose to owe tax.

 

Again, not arguing, asking for clarification.  Your case would be atypical.

Not saying you are arguing, saying I don't want an argument with the TRD. 

The  money is interest.

Yes, I could just tell myself the money transferred was pre 2024 but as I was paid interest from the account in 2024 how would I prove to the TRD that I transferred pre 2024 capital and not the interest earned? Maybe they would never ask but for this year I am happy to keep it simple. 

If there is more clarification about what they will and will not accept during the year I will adapt to any confirmed information.

Posted
3 hours ago, samtam said:

Yes, I felt the same way about this webinar, TRD Q&A. Blaming the various interpretations/responses given by different TRD officers/offices reported by many foreigners "on language difficulties" is completely wrong, (in my experience). Every inquiry I have made to TRD, by phone or in person within Sathorn district (there are several offices) have received varying replies, and have been made by a Thai person in Thai. Language has nothing to do with it. A complete lack of clarity from TRD management is to blame. Of course it's a "sensitive subject", because it exposes the incompetence of this exercise, the norm for Thai bureaucracy.

I've always said there will be chaos, but at the end of the day, the Thai's will turn a baht out of this. 

 

There's already some chaos, and some members have already filed, so they have turned a baht out of it. 

 

What remains to be seen is how hard they go at every single baht, from every single person.   

Posted
27 minutes ago, KhunHeineken said:

I've always said there will be chaos, but at the end of the day, the Thai's will turn a baht out of this. 

 

There's already some chaos, and some members have already filed, so they have turned a baht out of it. 

 

What remains to be seen is how hard they go at every single baht, from every single person.   

Most likely it will be a gradual thing over the next few years. But the trouble with that for expats is that they have the power to demand back year audits.

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Posted

One way to avoid the inevitable chaos/complications and not pay too much tax is (if possible) to remit only slightly more than your allowances/deductions forget about dta's and money in the bank pre 2024.Not ideal but I got the impression filing at Jomtien if they could tax you a little to make it worth their time things would go smoother for all concerned.TIT.

Posted
On 2/5/2025 at 3:18 PM, KhunHeineken said:

Will that be your excuse at extension time, or at the airport immigration desk? 

 

I suppose they could have handed everyone applying for an extension in 2023, or 2024, a piece of paper warning them.  That would not have reached ALL foreigners that are tax residents of Thailand, but it would have went a long way to spreading the word, but they didn't.  TiT.  

Why would I need an excuse at extension time! 🙂

 

So now you are deflecting the tax authorities role to that of immigration office? This is laughable. I sign and hold up forms with a mug shot acknowledging my commitments that the IO clearly writes out for me every annual extension of stay at the IO and I am damned sure it never mentioned anything about tax and I wouldn't expect them to - they are not tax officers after all : -)

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Posted
14 hours ago, WingNut said:

 

I understand your concern. There are two possible solutions:

 

1 - Set up a second bank account at the same Thai bank you are using now, dedicated solely to incoming transfers. Once the funds arrive, transfer them to your older primary account for everyday spending. This keeps one account "clean," showing only incoming transfers on its statements. I use a similar setup already. My transfer account has no daily spending activity, just a few incoming and outgoing transfers to my other Thai bank accounts and some occasional interest. My main account handles all my regular transactions, keeping things organized and reducing the chance of the TRD scrutinizing other regular spending activities.

 

2 - Provide them funds transfer receipts instead of bank statements. Instead of submitting full bank statements, you can provide copies of transfer receipts from your sending bank as supporting documentation for the amount you are claiming you transferred in as income for the year. I should have done that this year, but I didn't think of it at the time. But this is my planned approach going forward. Since I send all my funds transfers to my Thai bank account through Wise, I can easily download PDF receipts from my Wise account for all the transfers. Next year, I’ll submit only those receipts, ensuring they all add up to the total amount declared as income on my tax return.

 

With both your suggestions, I am only "transferring", "remitting", "bringing in" by:

1) ATM using a foreign card

2) Using a debit card on a foreign account

3) Using FPS QR app on a foreign account

 

There is no money "transferred" into Thailand in the normal sense, and I think TRD might not be able to understand that.

 

I do however have the ATM withdrawal slips, the debit card transaction slip, and the FPS QR code transaction slip... in all about 74 items, which I could scan and copy for them. I deliberately started retaining them since 01 Jan 2024.

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Posted
4 hours ago, samtam said:

 

With both your suggestions, I am only "transferring", "remitting", "bringing in" by:

1) ATM using a foreign card

2) Using a debit card on a foreign account

3) Using FPS QR app on a foreign account

 

There is no money "transferred" into Thailand in the normal sense, and I think TRD might not be able to understand that.

 

I do however have the ATM withdrawal slips, the debit card transaction slip, and the FPS QR code transaction slip... in all about 74 items, which I could scan and copy for them. I deliberately started retaining them since 01 Jan 2024.

The ATM slips and can assure you can all fade very quickly!!!

Posted
On 2/6/2025 at 12:58 AM, WingNut said:

 

Thank you. Yes, I have used them in the past and used one the other night to update my passbook again. Many of them operate 24 hours. But in general, I have no reason to update my passbook often. I do all my banking online. Sometimes there are so many transaction too that the book would fill up quickly and would need to be replaced regularly if I update it too regularly. So I rather update it once in a great while and get a consolidated updated entry that doesn't eat up multiple pages. I only ever really need to update it once a year for visa extension purposes anyway.

Fair point and there are few pages and if leaving got a year will fill the whole book and would have to go to the branch inside.

Posted
6 hours ago, samtam said:

 

With both your suggestions, I am only "transferring", "remitting", "bringing in" by:

1) ATM using a foreign card

2) Using a debit card on a foreign account

3) Using FPS QR app on a foreign account

 

There is no money "transferred" into Thailand in the normal sense, and I think TRD might not be able to understand that.

 

I do however have the ATM withdrawal slips, the debit card transaction slip, and the FPS QR code transaction slip... in all about 74 items, which I could scan and copy for them. I deliberately started retaining them since 01 Jan 2024.


Best wishes, I hope everything works out smoothly for you with the TRD with that type of income and transfer reporting.

 

Unfortunately, I don’t have any experience bringing money into Thailand via ATM withdrawals, so I can’t offer any direct insight on that method. However, I strongly recommend scanning or photocopying your ATM receipts as soon as possible. Since these receipts are typically printed using a heat transfer method rather than ink, they tend to fade quickly over time. To avoid losing important records, it’s best to make copies before they become illegible.

Posted
7 hours ago, WorriedNoodle said:

Why would I need an excuse at extension time!

It's possible immigration MAY require a certificate of clearance from a TRD Office at extension time. 

 

7 hours ago, WorriedNoodle said:

So now you are deflecting the tax authorities role to that of immigration office?

No, I am not. 

 

I am saying the Thai government could use immigration laws to ensure tax compliance.  Basically, just another piece of paper needed at extension time. 

 

7 hours ago, WorriedNoodle said:

This is laughable.

I find it laughable that you don't even consider the Thai have even thought about it. 

 

7 hours ago, WorriedNoodle said:

I sign and hold up forms with a mug shot acknowledging my commitments that the IO clearly writes out for me every annual extension of stay at the IO and I am damned sure it never mentioned anything about tax and I wouldn't expect them to - they are not tax officers after all : -)

As I said, they may need a TRD document at extension time, just like they need a bank document, but feel free to ask the immigration officer "why" when they inform you of this. 

 

Tell him, "You are immigration, not TRD."  His reply will be, "I am not bank either,  but you need bank paper."  :smile:  

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Posted
1 hour ago, WingNut said:

However, I strongly recommend scanning or photocopying your ATM receipts as soon as possible. Since these receipts are typically printed using a heat transfer method rather than ink, they tend to fade quickly over time. To avoid losing important records, it’s best to make copies before they become illegible.

What's the tax benefit to do this?

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Posted
3 hours ago, jwest10 said:

The ATM slips and can assure you can all fade very quickly!!!

 

2 hours ago, WingNut said:


Best wishes, I hope everything works out smoothly for you with the TRD with that type of income and transfer reporting.

 

Unfortunately, I don’t have any experience bringing money into Thailand via ATM withdrawals, so I can’t offer any direct insight on that method. However, I strongly recommend scanning or photocopying your ATM receipts as soon as possible. Since these receipts are typically printed using a heat transfer method rather than ink, they tend to fade quickly over time. To avoid losing important records, it’s best to make copies before they become illegible.

 

Thanks. Yes, all legible and scanned and can send it as the supporting documents file with my online reporting. No idea what TRD will make of it, but I can explain it to them, if I'm asked to do so. I suspect in many cases they want documentary evidence on file, but do not review it. It's just a box ticking exercise, not unlike the forests of paper required at visa extension at IMM.

Posted
37 minutes ago, samtam said:

 

 

Thanks. Yes, all legible and scanned and can send it as the supporting documents file with my online reporting. No idea what TRD will make of it, but I can explain it to them, if I'm asked to do so. I suspect in many cases they want documentary evidence on file, but do not review it. It's just a box ticking exercise, not unlike the forests of paper required at visa extension at IMM.

<My old slips fade within a month but I suppose the bank passbook will suffice but do not think that will be needed.
Also my withdrawals are from my bank in Thailand and do not use a credit card and do not have one but get the bank book updated in due course but that will not be reported at all.

 

Posted
42 minutes ago, samtam said:

I suspect in many cases they want documentary evidence on file, but do not review it. It's just a box ticking exercise, not unlike the forests of paper required at visa extension at IMM.

 

I agree. When the TRD suggests submitting supporting documents to justify the income reported in a tax filing, it may simply be a procedural step, more about ticking a box than thoroughly scrutinizing the documents as you said.

 

With millions of people in Thailand filing personal income tax returns each year, it’s hard to imagine that the TRD has the staff or resources to closely examine most individual filings. It’s likely that they only conduct deeper reviews when someone is requesting a large tax refund or if there’s something unusual about the reported income or expenses.

 

In the end, all the extra effort of providing bank statements and evidence of incoming bank transfers or cash withdrawals within Thailand might ultimately prove unnecessary and end up being more paper that merely piles up in boxes somewhere and never gets looked at again.
 

However, I believe it’s always best to follow common standards of practice if you can (without too much extra hassle to yourself) and provide a clear, transparent record of things when it comes to matters like this. Doing so may help avoid drawing unnecessary attention to yourself in the future, which could otherwise lead to additional scrutiny, wasted time, and potential aggravation for yourself down the line.

Posted
10 minutes ago, WingNut said:

 

I agree. When the TRD suggests submitting supporting documents to justify the income reported in a tax filing, it may simply be a procedural step, more about ticking a box than thoroughly scrutinizing the documents as you said.

 

With millions of people in Thailand filing personal income tax returns each year, it’s hard to imagine that the TRD has the staff or resources to closely examine most individual filings. It’s likely that they only conduct deeper reviews when someone is requesting a large tax refund or if there’s something unusual about the reported income or expenses.

 

In the end, all the extra effort of providing bank statements and evidence of incoming bank transfers or cash withdrawals within Thailand might ultimately prove unnecessary and end up being more paper that merely piles up in boxes somewhere and never gets looked at again.
 

However, I believe it’s always best to follow common standards of practice if you can (without too much extra hassle to yourself) and provide a clear, transparent record of things when it comes to matters like this. Doing so may help avoid drawing unnecessary attention to yourself, which could lead to additional scrutiny, wasted time, and potential aggravation for yourself down the line.

Yes, have hand written ones and when my Thai book updated it will show my state pension income from the UK but have a manual record if it and any pensions taxed by means of a P60
In any case have been told by my local Revenue office as my personal allowances outweigh any income and again asked many times "Do you work in Thailand " and no and why do you need to want to file and no need.
Yes mentioned again got a pink Id card and again not need to file.

Posted
11 minutes ago, WingNut said:

However, I believe it’s always best to follow common standards of practice if you can (without too much extra hassle to yourself) and provide a clear, transparent record of things when it comes to matters like this.

Best I can determine, there are no "common standards" saying you must file supporting documents with your tax filing. There have been some recommendations that you should provide such documents -- but nothing to say you have to. Have I missed something?

 

And if I haven't -- if you decide to send copies of your ATM slips -- particularly if they're from a bank account containing no assessable income, or maybe comingled assessable income -- please rethink this decision, for your own sanity.

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Posted
14 minutes ago, jwest10 said:

Yes, have hand written ones and when my Thai book updated it will show my state pension income from the UK but have a manual record if it and any pensions taxed by means of a P60
In any case have been told by my local Revenue office as my personal allowances outweigh any income and again asked many times "Do you work in Thailand " and no and why do you need to want to file and no need.
Yes mentioned again got a pink Id card and again not need to file.

 

For those who have been told they don’t need to file, that’s great news, less paperwork floating around with personal information and one less administrative task to worry about. However, as we’ve discussed throughout this topic, the unanswered question remains: could not filing potentially cause problems in the future if guidelines related to visa extension were to change? That’s the big unknown.

 

If I were in a situation where I was told I didn’t need to file, but I either felt I should file or simply wanted to have a record of compliance with the new 180-day residency tax guidelines, I might consider visiting a different TRD district office within a reasonable distance of where I reside to see if their response was the same. It’s possible that different offices may interpret the requirements slightly differently, and getting a second TRD office opinion could provide added clarity or peace of mind.

Posted
5 minutes ago, JimGant said:

Best I can determine, there are no "common standards" saying you must file supporting documents with your tax filing. There have been some recommendations that you should provide such documents -- but nothing to say you have to. Have I missed something?


I agree on this point. I don't think you've missed anything. As far as I know, it's not a compulsory part of the process. 

Posted
1 hour ago, Yumthai said:

What's the tax benefit to do this?

Well, you can show you remitted money from a bank account in home country. Now, that bank account had a lot of pre 2024 income, plus current income from your military pension and social security, and, yeah, some reinvested interest, that would be the only assessable income -- but it only amounts to .5% of average account balance. But, hey, you can spend a nice part of an afternoon dazzling the TRD agent. Don't be surprised if she doesn't offer you an refreshment.

Posted
5 minutes ago, JimGant said:

Well, you can show you remitted money from a bank account in home country. Now, that bank account had a lot of pre 2024 income, plus current income from your military pension and social security, and, yeah, some reinvested interest, that would be the only assessable income -- but it only amounts to .5% of average account balance. But, hey, you can spend a nice part of an afternoon dazzling the TRD agent. Don't be surprised if she doesn't offer you an refreshment.

Well, I don't see any positive outcome here except more admin burden and potential tax to pay, and that's not really a benefit.

 

I mean if TRD, during an audit, can't come up with your foreign credit cards statement asking to justify it, then it just does not exist (as the millions baht in cash/gold/jewelry under your mattress).

Posted
4 hours ago, Yumthai said:

Well, I don't see any positive outcome here except more admin burden and potential tax to pay, and that's not really a benefit.

I guess I need to work on my tongue-in-cheek  routine...

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