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Posted

According to the tax legislation, one can apparently gift up to THB 20 million without having to pay taxes.

Does anyone know how to technically do this?

Posted
22 hours ago, Lamphen said:

Does anyone know how to technically do this?

@sometimewoodworker posted in one/several of the threads about this after getting "advice" from what I recall is a major Bangkok law firm. 

Either do a search in the tax threads or perhaps pm him?

Expattax may have something in their FAQs or in one of their videos - been so many sorry I cannot remember.

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Posted
23 hours ago, Lamphen said:

According to the tax legislation, one can apparently gift up to THB 20 million without having to pay taxes.

Does anyone know how to technically do this?

If you buy earrings or necklaces it's ok. Because normally you would not wear it, would you? So you're not benefitting.

In case you give her money you could benefit. So it's not acknowledged as a gift.

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Posted
6 hours ago, Dirk Z said:

A senior executive from Mazars held a talk and in the Q&A it was explained that if you transfer money from abroad directly to your (Thai) wife's account it is not taxable up to 20M baht per year. Even my wife doesn't spend that. What happens if the wife then buys you are car or a beer is unclear so far. And also not very easy to quantify.

Carl Turner said on a webinar what I posted above.

If you buy earrings or necklaces it's ok. Because normally you would not wear it, would you? So you're not benefitting.

In case you give her money you could benefit. So it's not acknowledged as a gift.

It was confirmed by an officer in the Revenue Department.

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Posted
6 hours ago, Dirk Z said:

A senior executive from Mazars held a talk and in the Q&A it was explained that if you transfer money from abroad directly to your (Thai) wife's account it is not taxable up to 20M baht per year. Even my wife doesn't spend that. What happens if the wife then buys you are car or a beer is unclear so far. And also not very easy to quantify.

That's wrong

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Posted
On 2/7/2025 at 2:50 PM, jojothai said:

But I am not sure if you have to declare it on your tax return as tax exempt. I would be grateful for anybody else to clarify this.

As would the recipient.

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Posted
On 2/7/2025 at 12:48 PM, Lamphen said:

According to the tax legislation, one can apparently gift up to THB 20 million without having to pay taxes.

Does anyone know how to technically do this?

I will not answer the query as posed -- just to note when the 20 million baht figure was put in the 2016 Gift Tax regs, to the Thai citizen persons it was intended were saying :

 

WOW Oh no! We can now ON LY declare no more than 20 million baht per year as a tax free gift? -- as gifts at the time were seen in the 2016 regs as a means to avoid inheritance taxes.

 

Now for the expat crowd it has morphed to:

 

WOW You mean we can give up to 20 million baht per year as a tax free gift?
 

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Posted
8 hours ago, jojothai said:

She can sell valuable  ear rings for cash. Especially if they are worth a lot if you really want to give a credible gift.

Otherwise, why buy earrings?

My wife would tell me where to go if i said i will gift her ear rings unless they were gold  at least a few baht.

Then if the ear rings can be sold is it not also tax evasion?

The case stated does not IMHO have any different grounds than a car, because i have my own car and the other car is therefore additional for her.

Just like immigration and visas, it will all be down to what the attending officer thinks, or needs to  make a decision

I guess in the case with the car you both can use it? 

But if you read my post carefully

"The officer in the Revenue department,"".

 

Posted
20 hours ago, sometimewoodworker said:

A correctly documented gift, under the limits, is I untaxable and undeclarable by the recipient.

the rules are well documented on the TRD website so there is little point in repeating them.

 

Ehh why not just close the website in the process? Any information can be found on the Internet. What a stupid comment.

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Posted
The Thai Gift Tax was passed in 2016 and went into effect 2017 and -- at least based on my reading these pages and accountant/tax lawyer websites -- there is not documented one specific test case of a non-Thai tax resident remitting a foreign-sourced large transfer (up to 20 million baht) to a Thai spouse declared as a gift with no tax request from the Thai Revenue Department.
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Posted
2 minutes ago, jerrymahoney said:

The Thai Gift Tax was passed in 2016 and went into effect 2017 and -- at least based on my reading these pages and accountant/tax lawyer websites -- there is not documented one specific test case of a non-Thai tax resident remitting a large transfer (up to 20 million baht) to a Thai spouse declared as a gift with no tax request from the Thai Revenue Department.

As far I know it happens all the time since decades and there never been questions about it. I know in my own network alone a few guys who have bought houses or condo's worth 5-20M baht for their wifes and in their wife name, none are retired too. Land of the red tape.

 

With these figures compared to traditional taxes back home, it is actually cheaper to pay a wife a monthly allowance lol.

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Posted
I will just say again that there is no reference that I have seen of a tax free foreign remittance by a bona fide Thai tax resident as a gift on one of the major websites -- and if it has been done for decades why are the tax advisors still only offering opinions not saying that they have clients who do so regularly
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Posted
On 2/9/2025 at 6:51 AM, newbee2022 said:

I guess in the case with the car you both can use it? 

But if you read my post carefully

"The officer in the Revenue department,"".

 

What i said isn't guesswork. If you have a car and a car is purchased for her. Its hers to do as she pleases.
The earrings can be used by both, or even sold, so where is the logic .

The argument made by the officer is an erroneous opinion IMHO that may have no basis for comparison. 
So as I said before, its down to  the officer attending and what they need to make a decision.

I have been to different immigration offices (justified by my situation) a number of times in the past two weeks checking what to do when a work permit expires and been told three different opinions. 

Its up to you if you believe what you are told by an officer.
The rules only state the gift limits ,etc and clarification is not for your own benefit. From what I read on some posts it is not required to be declared on a tax return if it is exempt.
With respect, did you ask if it needs to be declared on your tax return even if it is exempt? What did the officer say?

Posted

This is by far one of the most interesting topics I have read regarding the current taxation discussions.
I have a question for someone probably who is more knowledgeable than me on this subject.

If I transferred money from the UK to my Thai Bank account (then immediately to my wife's account) or directly to my wife's bank account would any of that be taxable we are talking well under 20M baht.
Also would you need to be married to give it as a tax free gift or would long term partner also be applicable?

Posted
20 minutes ago, jojothai said:

What i said isn't guesswork. If you have a car and a car is purchased for her. Its hers to do as she pleases.
The earrings can be used by both, or even sold, so where is the logic .

The argument made by the officer is an erroneous opinion IMHO that may have no basis for comparison. 
So as I said before, its down to  the officer attending and what they need to make a decision.

I have been to different immigration offices (justified by my situation) a number of times in the past two weeks checking what to do when a work permit expires and been told three different opinions. 

Its up to you if you believe what you are told by an officer.
The rules only state the gift limits ,etc and clarification is not for your own benefit. From what I read on some posts it is not required to be declared on a tax return if it is exempt.
With respect, did you ask if it needs to be declared on your tax return even if it is exempt? What did the officer say?

You're wrong in many ways. So it's best you'd make your own experience.

Walk in to a revenue office and ask for yourself only.😳

Posted
26 minutes ago, newbee2022 said:

You're wrong in many ways. So it's best you'd make your own experience.

Walk in to a revenue office and ask for yourself only.😳

Its wrong to use the word wrong, when it may not be correct.
Hearsay or opinions is not fact.
Can you refer to the legal facts and not opinion?
Why would i waste time going into an RD office to get opinion.

Posted
42 minutes ago, jojothai said:

Its wrong to use the word wrong, when it may not be correct.
Hearsay or opinions is not fact.
Can you refer to the legal facts and not opinion?
Why would i waste time going into an RD office to get opinion.

I went to the TD office and got legal, precise advice.

But you're free to do what you want. Not my business 🤣

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