speedtripler Posted February 21, 2016 Share Posted February 21, 2016 i have 200 days overstay i plan to get it sorted in the next day or two ,was just wondering is it better to fly out from suabhanabum or don muang ? how long does it take to sort out at the airport/whats the procedure etc ? would i be able to come back in a couple of weeks on a tourist visa or visa exemption ? thx in advance 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post jspill Posted February 21, 2016 Popular Post Share Posted February 21, 2016 Both airports the same, you just get lead over to a desk after passport control to pay the 20k, sign a form, take your photo, stamp the passport. Takes under 15 mins, often they're quite relaxed about it. In my experience they actually were all smiles. Yes you can come back, if you go for visa exemption you'll be pulled aside and asked to show onward ticket, proof of funds, hotel bookings etc. Better off going for a tourist visa, and from Laos since from recent reports they won't reject you. 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sunnyjim5 Posted February 21, 2016 Share Posted February 21, 2016 It does not matter which airport you leave from. I have no idea how long it will take to complete the formalities. You would be VERY unwise to attempt using a visa exempt entry to return. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BritTim Posted February 21, 2016 Share Posted February 21, 2016 The process does not take long. Just allow an extra half hour. Returning should not be a problem at this time. It is better to get a visa. If you plan to stay long term on tourist visas and visa exempt entries, life may become difficult later. I would recommend having a plan B. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rhys Posted February 21, 2016 Share Posted February 21, 2016 Jeepers... let us know the final outcome...especially with the new policies and the good guys in and bad guys stay.l..555 I hope you leave before they enforce the new rules.. good luck mate Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
speedtripler Posted February 22, 2016 Author Share Posted February 22, 2016 Both airports the same, you just get lead over to a desk after passport control to pay the 20k, sign a form, take your photo, stamp the passport. Takes under 15 mins, often they're quite relaxed about it. In my experience they actually were all smiles. Yes you can come back, if you go for visa exemption you'll be pulled aside and asked to show onward ticket, proof of funds, hotel bookings etc. Better off going for a tourist visa, and from Laos since from recent reports they won't reject you. do they ask many questions about what you were doing for the missing days or how on earth did this happen etc ? lol Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sunnyjim5 Posted February 22, 2016 Share Posted February 22, 2016 Both airports the same, you just get lead over to a desk after passport control to pay the 20k, sign a form, take your photo, stamp the passport. Takes under 15 mins, often they're quite relaxed about it. In my experience they actually were all smiles. Yes you can come back, if you go for visa exemption you'll be pulled aside and asked to show onward ticket, proof of funds, hotel bookings etc. Better off going for a tourist visa, and from Laos since from recent reports they won't reject you. do they ask many questions about what you were doing for the missing days or how on earth did this happen etc ? lol If you are really lucky they will detain you until they are satisfied by checking with the Police that there are no outstanding criminal/civil charges against you That would be funny. lol 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jspill Posted February 22, 2016 Share Posted February 22, 2016 One time I wasn't asked anything, another time just the question 'what you do in Thailand'. Obviously don't reply 'working'. A safe answer would be you have a girlfriend and stay with her. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rob13 Posted February 22, 2016 Share Posted February 22, 2016 20K baht for a 200 day 'visa'. Better deal than the 60 day visa I got in laos which cost me 15K all in Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post schweizer Posted February 22, 2016 Popular Post Share Posted February 22, 2016 Both airports the same, you just get lead over to a desk after passport control to pay the 20k, sign a form, take your photo, stamp the passport. Takes under 15 mins, often they're quite relaxed about it. In my experience they actually were all smiles. Yes you can come back, if you go for visa exemption you'll be pulled aside and asked to show onward ticket, proof of funds, hotel bookings etc. Better off going for a tourist visa, and from Laos since from recent reports they won't reject you. do they ask many questions about what you were doing for the missing days or how on earth did this happen etc ? lol It still amazes me how people find themselves amusing in such situations, lets put it in perspective, you are breaking the law Hopefully these new rules will sort out this mess and then the only people you will see on the streets will have a legitimate visa 5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jspill Posted February 22, 2016 Share Posted February 22, 2016 If you are really lucky they will detain you until they are satisfied by checking with the Police that there are no outstanding criminal/civil charges against you That would be funny. lol Doesn't happen. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sunnyjim5 Posted February 22, 2016 Share Posted February 22, 2016 If you are really lucky they will detain you until they are satisfied by checking with the Police that there are no outstanding criminal/civil charges against you That would be funny. lol Doesn't happen. I know for a fact that it can and does happen. Not personal experience but knowledge of one individuals experience, a person who was detained, missed a flight and had to buy a new ticket. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post jspill Posted February 22, 2016 Popular Post Share Posted February 22, 2016 It still amazes me how people find themselves amusing in such situations, lets put it in perspective, you are breaking the law Hopefully these new rules will sort out this mess and then the only people you will see on the streets will have a legitimate visa By the same token it amazes me how angry it makes some people. If a foreigner was in my country with no ability to take locals' jobs, claim benefits, or be anything other than a net economic positive, I wouldn't care. Not all laws are equal, you have the letter of the law and intent of the law. 5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post elviajero Posted February 22, 2016 Popular Post Share Posted February 22, 2016 It still amazes me how people find themselves amusing in such situations, lets put it in perspective, you are breaking the law Hopefully these new rules will sort out this mess and then the only people you will see on the streets will have a legitimate visa By the same token it amazes me how angry it makes some people. If a foreigner was in my country with no ability to take locals' jobs, claim benefits, or be anything other than a net economic positive, I wouldn't care. Not all laws are equal, you have the letter of the law and intent of the law. Usual nonsense from a serial overstayer justifying his and others disrespect for the country they stay in. The letter of the law says you can't overstay and the intent of the law is that foreigners don't overstay, regardless of the insignificant "net economic" benefit or their employment status. 7 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post schweizer Posted February 22, 2016 Popular Post Share Posted February 22, 2016 (edited) It still amazes me how people find themselves amusing in such situations, lets put it in perspective, you are breaking the law Hopefully these new rules will sort out this mess and then the only people you will see on the streets will have a legitimate visa By the same token it amazes me how angry it makes some people. If a foreigner was in my country with no ability to take locals' jobs, claim benefits, or be anything other than a net economic positive, I wouldn't care. Not all laws are equal, you have the letter of the law and intent of the law. First of all, I am not angry just amazed how someone can so easily laugh at breaking the law in a country like Thailand. I don't know how you would sleep at night, knowing that every time you are on the street you risk being arrested, you cannot hire or buy a car or motorcycle in case you get reported, stay in a hotel in case you get reported, attend a hospital for medical care in case you get reported. This isn't in my view living it equates to being on the run and that costs. I fully agree with you that there should be ways for people of means to live in a country if they have sufficient funds to not be a burden on society. There are ways in Thailand to do this, if over 50 retirement visa, if under 50 Thailand Elite or get a job. being in the IDC is not fun from what I understand and if the OP returns on a visa exempt or a tourist visa, both of these will very quickly run out leaving him the option of living illegally, leaving the country or finding a way to legalize his stay. My point is that this is not western Europe or the USA, prison here is not fun and should be avoided at all costs Edited February 22, 2016 by schweizer 5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jspill Posted February 22, 2016 Share Posted February 22, 2016 (edited) Usual nonsense from a serial overstayer justifying his and others disrespect for the country they stay in. The letter of the law says you can't overstay and the intent of the law is that foreigners don't overstay, regardless of the insignificant "net economic" benefit or their employment status. Would be my opinion even if I'd never overstayed. The intent in any country is to deter foreigners from becoming a burden on the system, a danger to security, organised criminal, illegal worker etc. not simply 'so that foreigners don't overstay', what kind of circular logic is that. Now Thailand is a bit of an anomaly where they let people in easily and have certain protectionist policies in place such that it's hard for us to really affect the country too negatively. Hence how lenient the laws were historically, 20k on exit and straight back the next day. That's only now changing now under a very authoritarian military government, which is fine, but still. Just my opinion but a lot better presented one than 'that's nonsense', followed by an ad hominem attack In Canada they don't actually care about overstay at all. Likewise I don't care about e.g. an under 50 in Thailand who has enough money to support his girlfriend and live well month to month, but not enough savings for the Elite Card, and isn't a threat in any way. Edited February 22, 2016 by jspill 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CWMcMurray Posted February 22, 2016 Share Posted February 22, 2016 When do the new regulations go into effect? Make sure to do it before then... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BritTim Posted February 22, 2016 Share Posted February 22, 2016 If you are really lucky they will detain you until they are satisfied by checking with the Police that there are no outstanding criminal/civil charges against you That would be funny. lol Doesn't happen. I know for a fact that it can and does happen. Not personal experience but knowledge of one individuals experience, a person who was detained, missed a flight and had to buy a new ticket. Do you have a links for this, or was it just something you heard in a bar? Unless the guy was flagged on the immigration computer somehow, this sounds like an urban myth. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sunnyjim5 Posted February 22, 2016 Share Posted February 22, 2016 If you are really lucky they will detain you until they are satisfied by checking with the Police that there are no outstanding criminal/civil charges against you That would be funny. lol Doesn't happen. I know for a fact that it can and does happen. Not personal experience but knowledge of one individuals experience, a person who was detained, missed a flight and had to buy a new ticket. Do you have a links for this, or was it just something you heard in a bar? Unless the guy was flagged on the immigration computer somehow, this sounds like an urban myth. I am not in the habit of repeating rumour or urban myth. I am saying that I have personal knowledge of the occurrence described. You can believe or not. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rayk Posted February 22, 2016 Share Posted February 22, 2016 20K baht for a 200 day 'visa'. Better deal than the 60 day visa I got in laos which cost me 15K all in 15k for a 60 day visa. You were ripped off. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post elviajero Posted February 22, 2016 Popular Post Share Posted February 22, 2016 Usual nonsense from a serial overstayer justifying his and others disrespect for the country they stay in. The letter of the law says you can't overstay and the intent of the law is that foreigners don't overstay, regardless of the insignificant "net economic" benefit or their employment status. Would be my opinion even if I'd never overstayed. The intent in any country is to deter people becoming a burden on the system, danger to national security, a nuisance, organised criminal, take jobs from locals etc. Thailand is a bit of an anomaly where they let people in easily and have protectionism in place so we can't really affect the country too negatively. Hence how lenient the laws were historically, 20k on exit and straight back the next day. That's changing now under a military government, which is fine, but still. Just my opinion but a lot better presented one than 'that's nonsense', followed by an ad hominem attack The intentions you list apply to those staying legally as well as illegally. Additional to those intentions are that countries want people staying in their country with permission. Otherwise they wouldn't have immigration control! The bar stool, happy IO's when you exit and the ability to re-enter have convinced you and others that overstaying is no big deal, and you continually justify that misconception with irrelevances. The past actions of you and others are the reason that the laws have to be made stricter. Clearly the law makers didn't think so many foreigners would come here and blatantly ignore immigration rules/law. 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post jspill Posted February 22, 2016 Popular Post Share Posted February 22, 2016 (edited) The bar stool, happy IO's when you exit and the ability to re-enter have convinced you and others that overstaying is no big deal, and you continually justify that misconception with irrelevances. No, the penalties for any given crime decide determine whether or not it's a big deal. A 20k capped fine, no blacklist and ability to return immediately, make it defacto not a big deal. On March 20th when that all changes, my opinion will change too. The past actions of you and others are the reason that the laws have to be made stricter. Clearly the law makers didn't think so many foreigners would come here and blatantly ignore immigration rules/law. No, the reason given was the correlation between overstay and other criminality - overstay itself wasn't the reason. Correlation doesn't equal causation, and that's why I'm not angry at an overstayer who doesn't commit any other crimes. Without a military government it may not have happened. It's more to do with who the law makers are, they tightened controls in many other areas too. Edited February 22, 2016 by jspill 5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post BritTim Posted February 22, 2016 Popular Post Share Posted February 22, 2016 The bar stool, happy IO's when you exit and the ability to re-enter have convinced you and others that overstaying is no big deal, and you continually justify that misconception with irrelevances. No, the penalties for any given crime decide determine whether or not it's a big deal. A 20k capped fine, no blacklist and ability to return immediately, make it defacto not a big deal. On March 20th when that all changes, my opinion will change too. The past actions of you and others are the reason that the laws have to be made stricter. Clearly the law makers didn't think so many foreigners would come here and blatantly ignore immigration rules/law. No, the reason given was the correlation between overstay and other criminality - overstay itself wasn't the reason. Correlation doesn't equal causation, and that's why I'm not angry at an overstayer who doesn't commit any other crimes. Without a military government it may not have happened. It's more to do with who the law makers are, they tightened controls in many other areas too. I agree with this. Most foreigners involved in serious crime are in compliance with immigration laws. Overstayers may be working without work permits (which may or may not be another victimless crime depending on circumstances) but are very rarely drug dealers, people traffickers or housebreakers. They sometimes overstay because they believe it is a rational choice that hurts no one. They quite often overstay because of economic and psychological problems that make them incapable of following the rules. In neither case is it something to become unduly upset about. 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
elviajero Posted February 22, 2016 Share Posted February 22, 2016 The bar stool, happy IO's when you exit and the ability to re-enter have convinced you and others that overstaying is no big deal, and you continually justify that misconception with irrelevances. No, the penalties for any given crime decide determine whether or not it's a big deal. A 20k capped fine, no blacklist and ability to return immediately, make it defacto not a big deal. On March 20th when that all changes, my opinion will change too. The past actions of you and others are the reason that the laws have to be made stricter. Clearly the law makers didn't think so many foreigners would come here and blatantly ignore immigration rules/law. No, the reason given was the correlation between overstay and other criminality - overstay itself wasn't the reason. Correlation doesn't equal causation, and that's why I'm not angry at an overstayer who doesn't commit any other crimes. Without a military government it may not have happened. It's more to do with who the law makers are, they tightened controls in many other areas too. I think you forgot about all those deported. I wonder how many of them think overstaying is no big deal! The immigration act is over 30 years old and outdated. Had you and others not abused the system the overstay penalties could probably stay as is. But they clearly do not deter the new generation so need updating. The fact that people have been let back in is mainly because they cant be stopped based on the current law (unless previously deported). Immigration have wanted to introduce bans for well over 5 years and have only just got it past the MOI. Maybe it took a government with balls to give the green light or maybe it's just timing and coincidence. But I'm pretty sure they didn't propose the bans otherwise they would have introduced them long ago. Where in the announcement ("reason given") did it say that the bans are being introduced due to the correlation between overstay and criminality? 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lkv Posted February 22, 2016 Share Posted February 22, 2016 (edited) This overstay thingy has the following purposes (at least in their mind): 1. To create a good image on the domestic market that they are efficient in dealing with "transnational crime" 2. More importantly, because Western logic is different, it is perceived as a threat to the "health" of the "system". 3. To recover some lost face internationally as well. But they are wrong here, because they are using Thai logic for that assumption, and that only functions domestically. I see people here blaming the overstayers. It's not their fault you gave them a finger and they took the whole hand. Let's not forget that there was a 90/180 rule scraped back in 2007-2008. Why? For economical reasons. Back then they were thinking all money is good money, no matter where it comes from. Now, they have raised the bar. Question is...was this the best time to do it (economic slowdown) and what will be the long term economic effects of all these stunts (bridge players, raids, passport checks etc). And who exactly will be paying 30-40K rent for a one bedroom in the center of Bangkok? The rich Chinese that fall in love with Thailand and decide to move here? I think they prefer Hong Kong and Canada at the moment. PS: Offtopic. HK property prices have fallen 11% last year and are expected to drop a further 25% this year. We'll see how "teflon" Thailand remains to this. Edited February 22, 2016 by lkv 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NomadStrategy Posted February 22, 2016 Share Posted February 22, 2016 suv imo, don muang immigration is much more cold and unforgiving Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sunnyjim5 Posted February 22, 2016 Share Posted February 22, 2016 suv imo, don muang immigration is much more cold and unforgiving Are you speaking from experience ? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lkv Posted February 22, 2016 Share Posted February 22, 2016 I believe they will both be forgiving until March 20th and unforgiving after. I actually got a re entry permit at Don Muang, and both the guy and the girl were very nice, asking me what time my flight was at and all that cause there were 3 people ahead of me. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Surin1969 Posted February 22, 2016 Share Posted February 22, 2016 20K baht for a 200 day 'visa'. Better deal than the 60 day visa I got in laos which cost me 15K all in15 k its better then go to jail IDC some night in jail after that deportation anyway if you want stay in Thailand better you have avalid visa whitout overstay Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lkv Posted February 22, 2016 Share Posted February 22, 2016 (edited) 20K baht for a 200 day 'visa'. Better deal than the 60 day visa I got in laos which cost me 15K all in15 k its better then go to jail IDC some night in jail after that deportation anyway if you want stay in Thailand better you have avalid visa whitout overstayYeah with that I totally agree. I got someone out of IDC after 3 weeks while they kept making excuses about the routes on the deportation plane tickets (not being direct and stuff).IDC is also like a business, the shop inside needs to make money selling items at double the price, the cleaning personnel needs to make money etc). So you need to stay there for a while to contribute. It all depends on the relationship they have with your Embassy. The UK (or the US i forgot), seems to be the most efficient taking people out of IDC for deportation. That person was from another Western European country. They take you to the airport in a cage effectively. While they do the formalities you sweat in there for a few hours. Your cage is parked there in front of the entrance while people passing by look curiously not understanding what's going on. Also, the "transportation fee" in that cage from IDC to Suvarnabhumi is 800 baht. You'll regret not spending that 15K if you got in there trust me. Only the one way ticket back to your country would cost you 30-50K, being direct and last minute. On top of the experience. PS: If you want to do Vientiane on less budget, fly to Udon Thani then enter Laos by land. Edited February 22, 2016 by lkv Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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