Popular Post Scouse123 Posted Monday at 07:24 AM Popular Post Posted Monday at 07:24 AM OK Guys, They have now got the memo here regarding foreigner tax. I produced all documents, all printed from Barclays UK corresponding to my KTB account. This was a SENIOR officer. Plenty of gold braiding on his shoulders. He took my documents as he was required urgently in another meeting. I have kept trace documents since arriving in Thailand all those years ago with explanations for all monies prior to this tax change. He was pleasant, polite, told me he would copy, upload and return my documents. He thanked me on excellent easy to follow paperwork After a quick scan through, he believed I had nothing to worry about, but he would enter in the system I had followed regulations. A final meeting with me tomorrow. 3 2 3
Puccini Posted Monday at 09:39 AM Posted Monday at 09:39 AM 1 hour ago, Scouse123 said: … They have now got the memo here regarding foreigner tax. I produced all documents, all printed from Barclays UK corresponding to my KTB account. … He took my documents as he was required urgently in another meeting. I have kept trace documents since arriving in Thailand all those years ago with explanations for all monies prior to this tax change. … Thank you for this interesting report. I have some questions if you don't mind. Did the Kalasin tax office call you or write to ask you to go to their office and did they specify what documents you should bring? Do the documents you printed from Barclays UK show the name of the beneficiary of the transfers and the reason for them? Who, at another meeting, required the tax official urgently to take your documents? Did you submit your bank documents only for the calendar year 2024 or for "all those years" since you arrived in Thailand? What is the status of your permission to stay, eg one-year extension for marriage, employment, retirement, etc? It will be interesting to see how this new tax collection drive from expats develops. 1
Scouse123 Posted Monday at 12:17 PM Author Posted Monday at 12:17 PM 2 hours ago, Puccini said: Thank you for this interesting report. I have some questions if you don't mind. Did the Kalasin tax office call you or write to ask you to go to their office and did they specify what documents you should bring? Do the documents you printed from Barclays UK show the name of the beneficiary of the transfers and the reason for them? Who, at another meeting, required the tax official urgently to take your documents? Did you submit your bank documents only for the calendar year 2024 or for "all those years" since you arrived in Thailand? What is the status of your permission to stay, eg one-year extension for marriage, employment, retirement, etc? It will be interesting to see how this new tax collection drive from expats develops. 1. No, I took them all voluntarily. 2. Yes, they were all transfers via WISE and I transferred from Barclays to my Thai account through WISE. 3. The senior tax official said he needed time to read, upload and check documents from me, but he could not do it there and then, as he was required in an urgent meeting about something unrelated to me. 4. I submitted only for 2024. He asked about where monies had come from and what source. 5. I am currently on 1 year retirement which expires in July, I already have also a DTV for 5 years, which will kick in and take its place from July. I explained to him, I used to be in business in Thailand with limited companies, we actually retain all documents showing tax paid and I closed the companies correctly through an accountant. He saw my allowances and agreed with my summary statement of what I was stating and what monies had come into the country. I showed up my WISE statement, Barclays statement tying up with it and a year printout signed and stamped from Krung Thai bank. I told him I had no UK pension for another 5 years, so everything was savings from UK. 1
Popular Post Scouse123 Posted Monday at 12:23 PM Author Popular Post Posted Monday at 12:23 PM I will add the low level officials told me not to bother filing. The senior official said they were wrong, they should not have said that, and he would speak to them about the new rules. He was aware of the new rules, and the lower officials were not. My local tax office is a small outpost with not much activity regarding foreigners. I'll let you guys know the outcome tomorrow. 1 2
Popular Post CallumWK Posted Monday at 12:28 PM Popular Post Posted Monday at 12:28 PM Friend of mine went to the Jomtien revenue office. He lives here and owns properties. He had all documents filled in and copies of remitted funds. Officer checked his documents and calculated that he had to pay little over 14000 baht in income tax, but said she would double check with the department that does the collection. Few days later the revenue office called him and said he didn't owe any taxes 3
TallGuyJohninBKK Posted Monday at 12:36 PM Posted Monday at 12:36 PM 17 minutes ago, Scouse123 said: I told him I had no UK pension for another 5 years, so everything was savings from UK. OP, so, are you saying that the ONLY funds you remitted into Thailand during 2024 were savings from pre-12/31/2023 sources? If so, those would be tax-exempt under the TRD's policy of exempting pre-2024 source income. If that's the only funds you remitted in calendar 2024, I would be surprised to hear the supervisor there telling you you needed to file a Thai tax return.... unless you had some other non-pre-2024 income remittances.
Popular Post TallGuyJohninBKK Posted Monday at 01:13 PM Popular Post Posted Monday at 01:13 PM 43 minutes ago, CallumWK said: He had all documents filled in and copies of remitted funds. Officer checked his documents and calculated that he had to pay little over 14000 baht in income tax, but said she would double check with the department that does the collection. Few days later the revenue office called him and said he didn't owe any taxes That's a pretty big difference between owing 14,000 THB and owing NOTHING! What are they doing, throwing a dart and seeing where it lands for any given filer??? 🙂 1 4
KhunHeineken Posted Monday at 01:34 PM Posted Monday at 01:34 PM What about "The Somchai Shuffle" on your other visit/s? No need for a thank you. You are welcome, Scouse123. Do you have a TIN? Be sure the senior TRD officer gives you some type of document to prove the whole meting / interaction / notation on the data base actually occurs. 1 3
Scouse123 Posted Monday at 07:30 PM Author Posted Monday at 07:30 PM 5 hours ago, KhunHeineken said: What about "The Somchai Shuffle" on your other visit/s? No need for a thank you. You are welcome, Scouse123. Do you have a TIN? Be sure the senior TRD officer gives you some type of document to prove the whole meting / interaction / notation on the data base actually occurs. That is happening. They sat smiling, it wasn't a Somchai, it was two women. I told the senior officer that I needed documents returned and proof that he accepted my documents in the form of some kind of receipt. Let's see what he says later today. However, I did say to you, I had done all the bits and pieces to prove everything, I just wasn't going to submit them. I intended to hold them in a file at the house. I'll do that anyway. 1
Scouse123 Posted Monday at 07:31 PM Author Posted Monday at 07:31 PM 6 hours ago, TallGuyJohninBKK said: That's a pretty big difference between owing 14,000 THB and owing NOTHING! What are they doing, throwing a dart and seeing where it lands for any given filer??? 🙂 Who knows. Amazing Thailand, I suppose.
bamnutsak Posted Tuesday at 12:47 AM Posted Tuesday at 12:47 AM 12 hours ago, Scouse123 said: He saw my allowances and agreed with my summary statement of what I was stating and what monies had come into the country. I showed up my WISE statement, Barclays statement tying up with it and a year printout signed and stamped from Krung Thai bank. Can you share what you think your assessable income was in 2024? 1
Scouse123 Posted Tuesday at 10:24 AM Author Posted Tuesday at 10:24 AM 9 hours ago, bamnutsak said: Can you share what you think your assessable income was in 2024? Hi, I don't think I have assessable income, because the money is from savings prior to 2024. I have no pensions, I am not old enough. Thai allowances I am entitled to something like 430,000 baht . I cannot fully update, I haven't forgotten, however the senior officer took my phone numbers and said ' Leave it with him ' and he will phone me. I really don't want to sit in their office as though I am impatient. It's Thailand, they do things in their own sweet time. 1
bamnutsak Posted yesterday at 01:09 AM Posted yesterday at 01:09 AM 14 hours ago, Scouse123 said: I don't think I have assessable income, because the money is from savings prior to 2024. So your assessable income is 0 THB? I'm no tax expert but my guess is that you won't owe any tax. And you may not have been required to file a return. 1 1
Scouse123 Posted 19 hours ago Author Posted 19 hours ago 20 hours ago, bamnutsak said: So your assessable income is 0 THB? I'm no tax expert but my guess is that you won't owe any tax. And you may not have been required to file a return. I left it with the Buddhist holiday, they don't like to be pushed. I'll gently ask them today, now they are back at work, and report back to the board the result. 1
loong Posted 13 hours ago Posted 13 hours ago On 2/10/2025 at 2:24 PM, Scouse123 said: OK Guys, They have now got the memo here regarding foreigner tax. I produced all documents, all printed from Barclays UK corresponding to my KTB account. This was a SENIOR officer. Plenty of gold braiding on his shoulders. He took my documents as he was required urgently in another meeting. I have kept trace documents since arriving in Thailand all those years ago with explanations for all monies prior to this tax change. He was pleasant, polite, told me he would copy, upload and return my documents. He thanked me on excellent easy to follow paperwork After a quick scan through, he believed I had nothing to worry about, but he would enter in the system I had followed regulations. A final meeting with me tomorrow. Was your discussion in Thai or English? I can speak Thai reasonably well, but far from fluent and discussions about Tax etc. are probably outside of my comfort zone. It would be interesting to know how well English is spoken in some tax offices.
Unclernie Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago Don’t be stupid and volunteer anything to these nimrods. Until they have a clear and consistent law or policy in effect, you are open to being misled by the authorities who don’t know their arse from a whole in the ground 2
Scouse123 Posted 3 hours ago Author Posted 3 hours ago 10 hours ago, loong said: Was your discussion in Thai or English? I can speak Thai reasonably well, but far from fluent and discussions about Tax etc. are probably outside of my comfort zone. It would be interesting to know how well English is spoken in some tax offices. Both languages. My Thai is well capable of discussing tax issues.
Scouse123 Posted 3 hours ago Author Posted 3 hours ago 25 minutes ago, Unclernie said: Don’t be stupid and volunteer anything to these nimrods. Until they have a clear and consistent law or policy in effect, you are open to being misled by the authorities who don’t know their arse from a whole in the ground Comment appreciated, you could well be right.
oldcpu Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago On 2/11/2025 at 5:24 PM, Scouse123 said: ... the senior officer took my phone numbers and said ' Leave it with him ' and he will phone me. I really don't want to sit in their office as though I am impatient. It's Thailand, they do things in their own sweet time. Last time an RD official said that to me was over 2 months ago. They never did phone. 1
Scouse123 Posted 10 minutes ago Author Posted 10 minutes ago 3 hours ago, oldcpu said: Last time an RD official said that to me was over 2 months ago. They never did phone. Thanks, One thing for sure, I won't get stressed any more about this despite all the AN opinionated experts on here.
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