jwest10 Posted yesterday at 07:58 AM Posted yesterday at 07:58 AM 26 minutes ago, Sheryl said: A number (but not all) of provincial Revenue Depts are telling people no need to file if no tax owed. This is not technically correct -- by law must file if you have more than 60k in assessable income -- but the most you risk (assuming indeed no tax due) is a small fine, and that seems rarely enforced. Still, I personally would file in that circumstance. A few RDs are telling people only need to file if you work in Thailand. That is, and always has been, completly untrue and if as a result you fail to pay tax due, could come back to bite you in future. Also no tax payable!!! Per my local Revenue Office and several times ok 1
Popular Post Sheryl Posted yesterday at 08:38 AM Popular Post Posted yesterday at 08:38 AM 2 hours ago, jwest10 said: Also no tax payable!!! Per my local Revenue Office and several times ok Sorry, I don't understand what you are saying here. If you mean that your local RD has told you no need to file if no taxes owed, then as explained this is not correct (filing is required if you have over 60k in assessabld income) but, as also explained, assuming indeed no tax owed then the most you risk by not filing is a small fine and that is seldom applied. If you mean your local RD told you no tax is ever payable unless working in Thailand, that is both untrue and dangerously misleading. There are many situations wherein people not employed in Thailand would owe Thai tax. Passive income earned in Thailand or remitted from abroad to Thailand, and earnings ftom employment abroad remitted to Thailand being examples of this. Be aware that verbal misinformation from RD staff will not be any defense if you are later found to have evaded tax payment. And the knowledgabilty of RD stsff, especially in matters foreigner specific, is quite variable and often low. It behooves everyone who us tax redident here to personally research whether or not they owe Thai taxes. Really not very difficult to do. 1 1 3
oldcpu Posted yesterday at 09:09 AM Posted yesterday at 09:09 AM 4 hours ago, steven.g said: As a Canadian who lives retired in Thailand, I m tax exempt due to treaty agreements. However, I still must fill out the form. I assume you are referring to your Canadian OAS, or CPP, or RRSP/RRIF or other similar 'pension' type remunerations from Canada. If that is your only income, even a number of the Tax Advisors (for Expats in Thailand) have stated if one's only income is remitted Canadian pension type remunerations, then no Thailand tax ID is needed, nor does one have to file a Thai tax return in that case (of only Canadian pensions being one's income). However if you have local Thai income, that exceeds the threshold for filing a Thai tax return (in addition to your remitted Canadian pensions), then yes, you do need to file a Thai tax return due to that local Thai income. I assume in your case, you put down 0-Thai baht for your remitted income? I assume that because there is NO PLACE to deduct that non-taxable income on the Thai tax form. Is my assumption correct? Given that, at present time there is no immigration requirement to show a tax return submitted, nor any official indication that such document for immigration will be required in the future (only some paranoid AseanNow scaremongers noting such is possible) - then I don't believe a tax return (nor tax ID) is needed in a case such as yours (if the Canadian pension (or similar Canadian derived remunerations) is the only income one has and is remitting to Thailand) . One needs to be above a certain assessable income level to qualify for a Thai tax ID. Having typed the above, no one is stopping anyone (who has a Thai tax ID) from filing a Thai tax return, even if they don't have to file. I am curious thou - just how did you list your remitted Canadian tax exempt income? Did you simply put down such as a ZERO ?
flexomike Posted yesterday at 11:03 AM Posted yesterday at 11:03 AM 4 hours ago, tomgreen said: Thanks, I'm planning to go and get the tax all ready taken statement from my Thai bank savings account ( as requested by my local tax office ) and then once Ive got that paper work , I will be going back to my local tax office ( there they said that they would fill every thing out on line for me ) and ask them to then process every thing . Its interesting that you were given a reference number to use next year . Just out of interest ( being nosey ) was the outcome of you filing your tax form in , what you had expected. I knew before going that with my deductions and exemptions I would owe nothing, and that is what it ended up as I owed nothing. You will also owe nothing. Relax and enjoy your life. 1 1
henryford1958 Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago 21 hours ago, tomgreen said: Hi and thanks, what I wanted to do was to make sure that I filled the forms out correctly as they are all worded in Thai , and my Thai wife did not understand many of the questions on the forms. So I decided to seek help and ask at my local tax office , who were very helpful . Ive attached the tax forms in question. I couldn't really read the forms, the writing is too small, but is there any line there which relates to the DTA exemption. If not it might appear to the Revenue that you do owe tax and you have to argue to get the DTA exemptions.
Jingthing Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago 13 minutes ago, henryford1958 said: I couldn't really read the forms, the writing is too small, but is there any line there which related to the DTA exemption. If not it might appear to the Revenue that you do owe tax and you have to argue to get the DTA exemptions. No. If it's not accessable income under your DTA, you simply do not put it down on that form. Any "argument" if it ever comes to that would be at an audit. 1
henryford1958 Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago 1 minute ago, Jingthing said: No. If it's not accessable income under your DTA, you simply do not put it down on that form. Any "argument" if it ever comes to that would be at an audit. So does that imply we should submit a tax return (to comply with the rules) but put zero income on it (as it is exempt)?
Jingthing Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago Just now, henryford1958 said: So does that imply we should submit a tax return (to comply with the rules) but put zero income on it (as it is exempt)? No. It means file if your accessable income is over the filing threshold. Being over that threshold doesn't mean you'll necessarily owe tax though. For example if a foreigners only income is a few thousand baht from bank interest, no need to file unless they want to bother with that to get the withholding refunded.
TheAppletons Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago 1 hour ago, henryford1958 said: So does that imply we should submit a tax return (to comply with the rules) but put zero income on it (as it is exempt)? If one has no assessable income, one is not required to file a tax return.
NoDisplayName Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 5 hours ago, henryford1958 said: I couldn't really read the forms, the writing is too small, but is there any line there which relates to the DTA exemption. If not it might appear to the Revenue that you do owe tax and you have to argue to get the DTA exemptions. Correct. There is no field on the form to claim a DTA exemption, thus no way to deduct NON-assessable income from you PIT calculations. Thailand permits taxpayers to self-determine which income is assessable, and only enter taxable income on the forms. Non-assessable income is invisible to the system. There are two posters here that claimed TRD officials showed them they could deduct it, but they entered that into a field to deduct income already reported on Thai half-year tax returns. This would be done manually by the TRD officer, and would require a copy of the half-year return if you tried this at home. Not possible online. Note neither of those posters filed yet, so this is still unverified.
jwest10 Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago On 2/22/2025 at 3:38 PM, Sheryl said: Sorry, I don't understand what you are saying here. If you mean that your local RD has told you no need to file if no taxes owed, then as explained this is not correct (filing is required if you have over 60k in assessabld income) but, as also explained, assuming indeed no tax owed then the most you risk by not filing is a small fine and that is seldom applied. If you mean your local RD told you no tax is ever payable unless working in Thailand, that is both untrue and dangerously misleading. There are many situations wherein people not employed in Thailand would owe Thai tax. Passive income earned in Thailand or remitted from abroad to Thailand, and earnings ftom employment abroad remitted to Thailand being examples of this. Be aware that verbal misinformation from RD staff will not be any defense if you are later found to have evaded tax payment. And the knowledgabilty of RD stsff, especially in matters foreigner specific, is quite variable and often low. It behooves everyone who us tax redident here to personally research whether or not they owe Thai taxes. Really not very difficult to do. not tax evasion read my post again ok
jwest10 Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 10 minutes ago, jwest10 said: Not tax evasion at all and read my post again ok No income from employment both here in Thailand and UK and you querying what my local revenue office have stated to me many times and also a Thai friend whose partner has a friend who works at the Revenue office and get the 220K and told me in person in my circumstances I definitely do not need to file a form and in any case why would they chase when absolute zero tas is payable ie ZERO!! Maybe ask again but what is the point they will not issue a Tin and yes I have a pink ID card and again it makes no difference. Please do not shoot the messenger ok. Cheers
Sheryl Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 9 hours ago, henryford1958 said: So does that imply we should submit a tax return (to comply with the rules) but put zero income on it (as it is exempt)? Thete is no rule requiring people without assessable income to file. And no way to show non-assessable income on a tax form. The rule is: file if 60k or more of assessable income.
jwest10 Posted 54 minutes ago Posted 54 minutes ago 15 minutes ago, Sheryl said: Thete is no rule requiring peopke without assessable income to file. And no way to show non-assessable income on a tax form. The rule is: file if 60k or more of assessable income. We get this and been told this about no need to file and many are not going to and yes as if they going to give one a letter 220k reportedly?
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