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Posted

An interesting and as usual very complicated wording throughout the interview about the Revenue Department interview of the Director General Panuwat Luengwilai that the dept is drafting a Royal Decree to amend current criteria in line with the policy of Finance Minister Pichai Chanharvajira.  Some interesting wording that expats as Thai tax residents are supposedly treated the same as Thai citizens in relative to taxes on ALL income worldwide.   Anyway the link is below and you can read and I am sure that there will be lots of comments:

 

 

https://www.bangkokpost.com/business/general/3028760/department-to-amend-tax-on-foreign-income-remittance#

 

Mod edit- I have corrected the link, so it now works.

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Posted
3 hours ago, Presnock said:

An interesting and as usual very complicated wording throughout the interview about the Revenue Department interview of the Director General Panuwat Luengwilai that the dept is drafting a Royal Decree to amend current criteria in line with the policy of Finance Minister Pichai Chanharvajira.  Some interesting wording that expats as Thai tax residents are supposedly treated the same as Thai citizens in relative to taxes on ALL income worldwide.   Anyway the link is below and you can read and I am sure that there will be lots of comments:

htpps://www.bangkokpost.com/business/general/3028760/thailand-to-amend-tax-on-foreign-income-remittance

Link does not work on DDG OR Chrome

Any advice anybody? htpps? One t and two 'p's

Posted
17 hours ago, Presnock said:

An interesting and as usual very complicated wording throughout the interview about the Revenue Department interview of the Director General Panuwat Luengwilai that the dept is drafting a Royal Decree to amend current criteria in line with the policy of Finance Minister Pichai Chanharvajira.  Some interesting wording that expats as Thai tax residents are supposedly treated the same as Thai citizens in relative to taxes on ALL income worldwide.   Anyway the link is below and you can read and I am sure that there will be lots of comments:

htpps://www.bangkokpost.com/business/general/3028760/thailand-to-amend-tax-on-foreign-income-remittance

In error I mixed another witht the beginning the same and in fact, it mentions that worldwide income is taxable to Thai residents (including expats) but they are relaxing the rules in this new decree in attempts to get Thai tax residents to remitt more funds..see

htpps://www.thaiexaminer.com/thai-news-foreigners/2025/05/19/thai-revenue-planning-new-decree-making-remitted-foreign-funds-within-one-year-tax-free-for-residents

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Posted

I haven't seen any recent articles or announcements from the Thai gov't about taxing worldwide income of tax residents. Maybe the ww taxation idea was put on the back burner in favor of the new proposal to not tax remitted income.

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Posted

These announcements never mention DTAs, I notice. 

 

Presumably because the planning relates mostly to Thai nationals earning income from outside Thailand. But the effect is to alarm unnecessarily MOST non-Thais living in Thailand.

 

 

Posted
21 hours ago, Magictoad said:

The Link won't load on my Browser DDG

which usually indicates the presence of malware.

in this case it is a result of a typo htpps rather than https

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Posted
15 minutes ago, mfd101 said:

These announcements never mention DTAs, I notice. 

 

Presumably because the planning relates mostly to Thai nationals earning income from outside Thailand. But the effect is to alarm unnecessarily MOST non-Thais living in Thailand.

 

 

One of the articles mentioned that the Govt would adhere to the 60 DTA as signed with no change

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Posted
47 minutes ago, mfd101 said:

These announcements never mention DTAs, I notice. 

 

Presumably because the planning relates mostly to Thai nationals earning income from outside Thailand. But the effect is to alarm unnecessarily MOST non-Thais living in Thailand.

 

 

Read the article in the Thai Examiner. 

 

'Crucially, it would still honour Thailand’s tax treaties with more than 60 countries. In short, some income streams would be exempt depending on the country of origin of the taxpayer'.

 

Thai Revenue planning new decree making remitted foreign funds within one year tax-free for residents - Thai Examiner

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Posted
2 minutes ago, anrcaccount said:

This thread should be taken down as it adds nothing to the discussion and just creates more confusion.

 

I agree.

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Posted
10 minutes ago, anrcaccount said:

 

Correct.

 

This thread should be taken down as it adds nothing to the discussion and just creates more confusion.

 

 

 

5 minutes ago, JohnnyBD said:

I agree.

Was really my point. Thread heading, even with the question mark, is totally confusing. Not the first time unfortunately with this poster.

Posted
1 hour ago, Presnock said:

Actually, since you do not know the Thai rules on taxation of foreign income, you should learn before you slam anyone else. 

Seems like I know them a little better than you........

1 hour ago, Presnock said:

In just about every article on drafts of new tax bills they mention the OECD and worldwide income taxation on tax residents. 

Your original link and the article your thread is based on does not mention global or world wide taxation. It mentions "residence based"......but does not really define what income. Sounds like a soundbite specific for OECD pandering to me.

I think I have already proved the incorrect inconsistency in the Examiner article so please don't try quoting that again.

 

It may well be that Thailand moves to a global based system but that has not happened yet and is not specifically referred to by the government spokesperson for the potential new legislation being talked about.

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Posted
1 hour ago, Presnock said:

Actually, since you do not know the Thai rules on taxation of foreign income, you should learn before you slam anyone else.  I have read for several years now. The Thais claim that expats that stay in Thailand more than half a year will be treated exactly like Thai citizens that earn foreign income - there have been several references to that very fact about the OECD taxation of global income.  I am not going to link for you but you can google several subjects on this very subject.  The final goal to date has always been to have expats that become tax residents to pay on the worldwide income tax just as Thai citizens are.  However, due to shortfalls in revenues, especially last year when they began the taxation of remittances there was a noticeable drop in the revenues collected, now in one of these articles it mentions a 25 billion shortfall is expected by Sept of this year so they need to soften the tax issue as they are aware of both expat and Thais not remitting as much as before.

In just about every article on drafts of new tax bills they mention the OECD and worldwide income taxation on tax residents.  And as I mentioned, the wording was strange at times as the writer of the article mixed different stories about the taxes here when the main issue wass the new draft decree but even then the TRD people were not sure what will be in that bill until they see the final one too.

With respect to you it would be easier to read if you used paragraphs.

Posted
6 hours ago, Presnock said:

So if an expat did the tax forms and paid a tax on foreign income remitted, according to the article, one can ask for a refund for 2024 tax paid on that foreign income.    

 

Are you sure about that?

 

The examiner article you linked says:

 

However, two major questions remain. First, will this change apply retroactively to income from 2024? If it does, foreign residents who paid income tax this year may be eligible for refunds. If it does not, the tax already paid on 2024 remittances will stand.

Posted
2 hours ago, NoDisplayName said:

 

Sind Sie da sicher?

 

In dem von Ihnen verlinkten Examiner-Artikel heißt es:

 

Zwei wichtige Fragen bleiben jedoch offen. Erstens: Gilt diese Änderung rückwirkend für Einkommen ab 2024? Falls ja, haben Ausländer, die in diesem Jahr Einkommensteuer gezahlt haben, möglicherweise Anspruch auf eine Rückerstattung. Andernfalls bleibt die bereits auf Überweisungen aus dem Jahr 2024 gezahlte Steuer bestehen.

Certainly not that!

 

Because the tax was levied according to the law of 2024, i.e. legally 

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