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Posted
20 minutes ago, newbee2022 said:

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

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

You still don't try to understand why what they are stating is nonsense.

If I buy a car for my wife, from your "Legal precise Advice"  I would need to declare it and it then it will be taxable. - Despite the fact that I earnt the money and it has been taxed already?
I can do what i want with that money. Why would it be declarable and taxable again.

I can understand that the law does however put a limit on what can be gifted.


Have you not seriously considered that the "Legal precise advice" implies that I have the same problem for everything that I give to my wife?

On the same basis, when anybody gives money to their wife as a monthly allowance, then surely your officer would need it treated as a gift and taxable. Any monthly allowance given to the wife can be considered as giving benefit.
There would be plenty of people livid if they thought Thailand RD wanted to do that, including Thais.

 

  • Confused 1
Posted
1 hour ago, newbee2022 said:

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

The legal advice opinion given on a specific day at a particular office from a certain tax official is as sustainable as the fly life expectancy on a spider web.

  • Like 1
Posted
1 hour ago, Yumthai said:

The legal advice opinion given on a specific day at a particular office from a certain tax official is as sustainable as the fly life expectancy on a spider web.

🥱🥱🥱

Posted
10 hours ago, PomPolo said:

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?

Not an expert , but reading all the replies , a summary might be ...

 

# no tax on gifts , 20 m Bt to wife or kids ( must be legally married ) or 10 m Bt anyone else , per year .

note - to avoid confusion at the tax office , better to transfer directly to the beneficiary , rather than to your own account , then  the recipient .

Posted
On 2/7/2025 at 1:50 AM, jojothai said:

Yes,

this has been reported in topics before but some things are not yet clear, and whether a gift has to be declared in your tax return. The gift must be for use by the wife and not for your benefit.
You can obviously directly transfer money here to the wife's account. If you have the money in your bank account.
From the posts I have read and legal advice sites, then I believe a gift is tax exempt. 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.


Most of the discussion i have seen concerns gifting money to the wife when you have funds from overseas.
If you transmit the money into your account here, it will be considered taxable irrelevant if you then gift it.
What has been stated is that if you gift it directly from overseas to your wife's account as a gift, then it should not be taxable. I have seen posts that contradict this but most seem to indicate it is correct.
I stand to be corrected if somebody has researched this and can confirm whether it is not taxable or clarify why it is still taxable, even though it is a gift.

Most gifts in Thailand are taxed at a flat rate of 5%. However, the gift will be exempt from taxation if it is given by a parent, child, or spouse — up to THB 20 million per year.Sep 6, 2024

https://www.greenbacktaxservices.com/country-guide/expat-taxes-for-thailand/

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