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Want to buy a condo... but will it cost me an 750k tax bill next year??

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Found a lovely little condo I'd like to buy. Started doing the math on the potential tax bill for bringing the funds into Thailand, and wow... having second thoughts. 

 

Condo is 3.4mb. Funds to remit for condo purchase/transfer fee etc. appox  3.5mb (About 1mb was present in the account before jan 1, 2024, leaving 2.5 taxable if not mistaken)

Another 70k/monthly I bring in for living expenses = 840k for the year

 

So it looks as though I would be taxed on 3.34mb. Even accounting for the personal deduction/health insurance deduction etc this looks like a 750k baht tax bill next year.

 

Can this be correct? If so, it's a deal breaker for me.  Any loopholes or is this it?  I can't be the only one, how do the new tax regulations not cripple the foreigner real estate market?

 

15 minutes ago, gtrinbkk said:

Can this be correct? If so, it's a deal breaker for me.  Any loopholes or is this it?  I can't be the only one, how do the new tax regulations not cripple the foreigner real estate market?

Nobody can tell as the last rule change wasn't a rule change (sort of allowed unofficially to foolish foreigners who insisted in 2024), and the new rule change (to cover 2024, 2025) that will be a rule change hasn't been enacted by parliament.

1 hour ago, gtrinbkk said:

Found a lovely little condo I'd like to buy. Started doing the math on the potential tax bill for bringing the funds into Thailand, and wow... having second thoughts. 

 

Condo is 3.4mb. Funds to remit for condo purchase/transfer fee etc. appox  3.5mb (About 1mb was present in the account before jan 1, 2024, leaving 2.5 taxable if not mistaken)

Another 70k/monthly I bring in for living expenses = 840k for the year

 

So it looks as though I would be taxed on 3.34mb. Even accounting for the personal deduction/health insurance deduction etc this looks like a 750k baht tax bill next year.

 

Can this be correct? If so, it's a deal breaker for me.  Any loopholes or is this it?  I can't be the only one, how do the new tax regulations not cripple the foreigner real estate market?

 

If this amount are your savings there will not be any tax on that, just the property transfer tax at land department.

On 6/8/2025 at 2:46 PM, msbkk said:

If this amount are your savings there will not be any tax on that, just the property transfer tax at land department.

 

this is not correct advice. if the current tax regulations are enforced on his transfers, he will be taxed ...

 

only the money saved before 31.12.2023 is not taxable (or money excluded by the DTA).

anything saving or earning after that, including transfer for living expenses, is taxable according to the current tax law ...

 

the only loophole is not being a tax resident in the year you remit the money ...

or you could wait until the regulations change again, which seems likely to happen later this year ... :smile:

 

On 6/8/2025 at 1:14 PM, gtrinbkk said:

Found a lovely little condo I'd like to buy. Started doing the math on the potential tax bill for bringing the funds into Thailand, and wow... having second thoughts. 

 

Condo is 3.4mb. Funds to remit for condo purchase/transfer fee etc. appox  3.5mb (About 1mb was present in the account before jan 1, 2024, leaving 2.5 taxable if not mistaken)

Another 70k/monthly I bring in for living expenses = 840k for the year

 

So it looks as though I would be taxed on 3.34mb. Even accounting for the personal deduction/health insurance deduction etc this looks like a 750k baht tax bill next year.

 

Can this be correct? If so, it's a deal breaker for me.  Any loopholes or is this it?  I can't be the only one, how do the new tax regulations not cripple the foreigner real estate market?

 

 

 

Be a good resident and pay the tax the government needs the money.

On 6/8/2025 at 1:14 PM, gtrinbkk said:

So it looks as though I would be taxed on 3.34mb.

 

This is a complete (but apparently common) misunderstanding.  The tax is on income brought into the country.  Income is things like interest on bank accounts, income from bonds and equities, and income from employment.

See https://www.bangkokpost.com/business/general/3041421/new-approach-to-overseas-income-aims-to-spur-inflows#:~:text=He said the ministerial,gains%2C and other income.

4 hours ago, motdaeng said:

 

this is not correct advice. if the current tax regulations are enforced on his transfers, he will be taxed ...

 

only the money saved before 31.12.2023 is not taxable (or money excluded by the DTA).

anything saving or earning after that, including transfer for living expenses, is taxable according to the current tax law ...

 

the only loophole is not being a tax resident in the year you remit the money ...

or you could wait until the regulations change again, which seems likely to happen later this year ... :smile:

 

 

 

Ok, that would mean however that he had 3.34 million Baht income within 1 year in his home country. Not bad while staying in Thailand.

On 6/12/2025 at 11:36 AM, msbkk said:

Ok, that would mean however that he had 3.34 million Baht income within 1 year in his home country. Not bad while staying in Thailand.

It's only a bit more than $US100k......and it is now 18 months........

Take a lump sum from a pension or Roth or whatever your specific country has and then in theory it is taxable.....

However this is all very simplistic. 

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