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Posted

Getting prepared for our move from the UK to Thailand and so researching the best way to operate my business in Thailand. Any advice would be really appreciated.

I'm currently a UK operating Sole Trader that is UK VAT registered. When I move to Thailand I will continue to sell my products in the UK and would obviously remain VAT registered. As my UK income will be taxable in Thailand, I believe I must fill in a tax return each year.

 

I'm wondering if I should be thinking about registering a limited company or just continue on the sole trader/proprietorship basis. What would be the benefit of the ltd company in my position and what difficulties would I possibly have with either route?

 

Just for clarity my wife is Thai so I would be able to find the 51% ownership required and also I would not be selling in Thailand or anywhere else but the UK.

 

Thanks

Posted
9 hours ago, DrJack54 said:

Since all your business is UK and you are able to do that online, have you looked into DTV..

 

Here is a site. Not a gov site however has clear overview.

https://www.thaiembassy.com/thailand-visa/dtv-visa-thailand

Thank you for your reply. I'm aware of the DTV but have not really considered it much, however you are right, it could be a good choice. In the future my wife and I would like to open a small guesthouse (4 rooms max) I'm guessing at that point I would need to change to a visa that allows work permits but otherwise the DTV is probably ideal. From reading the article you linked it seems you have to leave the country every 180 days?

Posted
1 minute ago, JP-HB said:

From reading the article you linked it seems you have to leave the country every 180 days?

Recent thread discussing this.

Seems consensus is a short "holiday" out of Thailand is perhaps simpler option than extension at immigration. 

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Posted
22 minutes ago, CanadaSam said:

If all your business is in the UK I don't understand why you want to open any type of company now in Thailand.

Agree. I suggested DTV however given he is married to a Thai national he can just as easily obtain Non O marriage+ extensions.

Deal with the guesthouse in the future. 

 

 

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Posted
On 2/28/2025 at 10:50 PM, JP-HB said:

Getting prepared for our move from the UK to Thailand and so researching the best way to operate my business in Thailand. Any advice would be really appreciated.

I'm currently a UK operating Sole Trader that is UK VAT registered. When I move to Thailand I will continue to sell my products in the UK and would obviously remain VAT registered. As my UK income will be taxable in Thailand, I believe I must fill in a tax return each year.

 

I'm wondering if I should be thinking about registering a limited company or just continue on the sole trader/proprietorship basis. What would be the benefit of the ltd company in my position and what difficulties would I possibly have with either route?

 

Just for clarity my wife is Thai so I would be able to find the 51% ownership required and also I would not be selling in Thailand or anywhere else but the UK.

 

Thanks

I'm not from UK, but it's probably not so different from other European cpountries, and like the situation for other Danes and myself that are living in Thailand and still owner of a business in our home country. It has nothing to do with Thailand, apart from personal income and eventual taxation of that. There might be rules in UK, just like there is in my home country – and those I know in similar situation from neighboring European countries – if you have a personal owned bsusiness, about vat-registration and an address etc.

 

Most of us use a limited company registered in our home couintry. The company will pay tax in the country where it is registered. You shoukld check the DTA between Britain and Thailand concerning salary, fees and/or dividends paid to you, when you are tax-resident in Thailand. The DTAs are different from country to country, but in Denmark we don't pay Danish income tax of salary and fee, and can get tax reduction on dividends. Thai income tax is (much) lover than Danish taxation.

 

If you do no business in Thailand, you don't need a company here.

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