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Posted

Dear All, I have a few old Thai bank accounts from the time I was working with a WP in Bangkok. I kept them alive with some small transactions over the years. My status at the moment is "long term tourist", after a few years of Retirement Visa. I stopped the retirement visa as nowadays I spend less than 6 months in a year in Thailand, with frequent trips abroad (not visa runs) for pleasure. I'm about to inherit 100.000 EUR or so from my father's death. If I transfer these funds to my Bangkok Bank account, will they attract the unwanted attention of Thai Revenue Dept? And/or will they be taxed? I don't plan to buy anything with this money, just to keep it in Thailand and use it (hopefully) slowly.

Thank you for your attention.

Cheers,

Rico       

Posted

Do you need to transfer it across in one fell sweep ??  - you could drip feed it across from your overseas account.

 

The other option is to transfer it to your wife as a Tax free 'Gift' (if you have a wife).

 

 

Another option: is Crypto...   Place the Money on a Crypto exchange, either buy Crypto itself, or buy a Stable Coin.

When you want to transfer the money to Thailand, transfer across the Crypto Coin or Stable Coin to a Thai Exchange - and withdraw from the local Thai exchange into your Thai Bank account.

 

For an additional buffer and for security - keep the Keys on a Cold Wallet, until you need to make a transfer.

 

 

  • Haha 1
Posted

Dont touch crypto its  a scam , and most crypto exchanges are  full of ripoffs, just transfer the money    by normal bank transfer to your Thai bank account  ,  

Posted
14 minutes ago, richard_smith237 said:

The other option is to transfer it to your wife as a Tax free 'Gift' (if you have a wife).

He did say he does not stay 6 months so if true he wouldn't be a tax resident anyway and no need for "workarounds" in that case.

Posted
59 minutes ago, lusty said:

If I transfer these funds to my Bangkok Bank account, will they attract the unwanted attention of Thai Revenue Dept? And/or will they be taxed?

As long as you do not spend more than 179 days in Thailand in the year you transfer the money there is no Thai tax liability. Also, from memory, inheritance is tax free anyhow :thumbsup:

  • Haha 1
Posted
5 minutes ago, topt said:
22 minutes ago, richard_smith237 said:

The other option is to transfer it to your wife as a Tax free 'Gift' (if you have a wife).

He did say he does not stay 6 months so if true he wouldn't be a tax resident anyway and no need for "workarounds" in that case.

 

I missed that...      In which case, its a no brainer - just make a transfer.

 

There are different options: Wise is probably the best.

Posted
12 minutes ago, liddelljohn said:

Dont touch crypto its  a scam , and most crypto exchanges are  full of ripoffs, just transfer the money    by normal bank transfer to your Thai bank account  ,  

 

Don't be silly....    

Posted
2 hours ago, topt said:

As long as you do not spend more than 179 days in Thailand in the year you transfer the money there is no Thai tax liability. Also, from memory, inheritance is tax free anyhow :thumbsup:

Almost correct,  but it's 179 days in the year you made this money,  not the year you transfer it.  It won't hurt if you are here less than 180 days in the year you transfer the money,  but the important one is the year you got the money. 

 

Anyway,  inheritance is tax free (up to 100MB iirc, better check this amount).

  • Thumbs Down 1
Posted
2 hours ago, topt said:

Also, from memory, inheritance is tax free anyhow :thumbsup:

Thai inheritance laws would not apply as he would be inheriting under the laws of his home country, he'd just be remitting his own funds from his home country to his Thai bank.

Posted
17 minutes ago, Lorry said:

Anyway,  inheritance is tax free (up to 100MB iirc,

Isn't he inheriting in his home country, not Thailand, and then sending what will then just be his own funds here?. 

Posted
4 hours ago, Lorry said:

Anyway,  inheritance is tax free (up to 100MB iirc, better check this amount).

 

Correct so it doesn't matter if he's tax resident or not. But if some auditor decides he owes tax on it then it's best to keep documents proving the source of funds - accountants get very excited over 'source of funds' these days.

 

It's almost like they get together and make up a load of rules for us to enrich the accountancy profession.

 

Source of funds does matter because if that 100k Euro came from selling some shares you bought 30 years ago in Apple then you're being taxed on it if resident in the year when they were sold. If it's an inheritance then there is no tax, plus it would already have been taxed in the source country.

Also small amount so irrelevant

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