spambot Posted March 7, 2016 Share Posted March 7, 2016 This is the first single tourist visa applied for. I am making an application in Penang for a single Tourist visa on Monday 14th March. I will re-enter back into Thailand on Monday 21st March. Question: What will be the (60 days) “Admitted until” date stamp be calculated from: A. Application / Visa issue date - Monday 14th March? - Or B. The re-enter date into Thailand - Monday 21st March? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ubonjoe Posted March 7, 2016 Share Posted March 7, 2016 It will be the date you enter the country. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
elviajero Posted March 7, 2016 Share Posted March 7, 2016 March 21st which will be day 1 of the 60. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
spambot Posted March 7, 2016 Author Share Posted March 7, 2016 It will be the date you enter the country. March 21st which will be day 1 of the 60. Thanks ubonjoe, elviajero Fast, concise and actionable - Great job! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BangkokKen Posted March 8, 2016 Share Posted March 8, 2016 Immigration says the opposite When extending my TR visa they counted from the date of ISSUE not the entering date. I tried to say it should be from the entering date, they would not have it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sunnyjim5 Posted March 8, 2016 Share Posted March 8, 2016 Immigration says the opposite When extending my TR visa they counted from the date of ISSUE not the entering date. I tried to say it should be from the entering date, they would not have it. Which immigration office ? All extensions are are based on the date of entry which is clearly stamped in the passport and on the departure card. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ubonjoe Posted March 8, 2016 Share Posted March 8, 2016 Immigration says the opposite When extending my TR visa they counted from the date of ISSUE not the entering date. I tried to say it should be from the entering date, they would not have it. Perhaps that was an entry using a tourist visa that allowed more than one entry which is not an extension and your visa had expired which prevented you from using your visa for another entry. The visas validity starts from the date of issue. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BangkokKen Posted March 9, 2016 Share Posted March 9, 2016 Nope my visa had not expired and I was extending my 60 days for a further 30 days. They would not consider the entry date, but the issue date Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
elviajero Posted March 9, 2016 Share Posted March 9, 2016 Nope my visa had not expired and I was extending my 60 days for a further 30 days. They would not consider the entry date, but the issue date If you are applying for an extension of stay the only date that counts is the 'admitted until' date that is stamped in your passport. The extension applies from this date and the entry date or issue dates are irrelevant. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tinat Posted March 9, 2016 Share Posted March 9, 2016 Nope my visa had not expired and I was extending my 60 days for a further 30 days. They would not consider the entry date, but the issue date Impossible - unless you had been in country for less than 30 days when applying for the extension, else the 30 day extension would have only allowed you permission to stay up until some point in the past ! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IMA_FARANG Posted March 9, 2016 Share Posted March 9, 2016 Immigration says the opposite When extending my TR visa they counted from the date of ISSUE not the entering date. I tried to say it should be from the entering date, they would not have it. ---------------------------------- The two dates are different things. If you get a single entry tourist visa it may be valid for 90 days from its date of issue. That is often entered when you get the visa as the "must enter before" date or possibly the "must use before" date When you enter Thailand they will stamp s "permitted to stay" stay stamp in your passport for a 60 day stay. But if you try to get a 30 day extension on the 91st day of your visa validity they will NOT give you that 30 day extension because your visa expired on the 90th day.....you are one day late. . Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sunnyjim5 Posted March 9, 2016 Share Posted March 9, 2016 Immigration says the opposite When extending my TR visa they counted from the date of ISSUE not the entering date. I tried to say it should be from the entering date, they would not have it. ---------------------------------- The two dates are different things. If you get a single entry tourist visa it may be valid for 90 days from its date of issue. That is often entered when you get the visa as the "must enter before" date or possibly the "must use before" date When you enter Thailand they will stamp s "permitted to stay" stay stamp in your passport for a 60 day stay. But if you try to get a 30 day extension on the 91st day of your visa validity they will NOT give you that 30 day extension because your visa expired on the 90th day.....you are one day late. . Nonsense! Once a SETV is used to enter the country (its one and only purpose) the visa used, no longer valid or of any further use. It is the "admitted until" date which is extended not the visa. If what you say is true (it is not!) anyone entering the country one day prior to a SETV expiring would never be given an extension of stay ----------------------. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ubonjoe Posted March 9, 2016 Share Posted March 9, 2016 The two dates are different things. If you get a single entry tourist visa it may be valid for 90 days from its date of issue. That is often entered when you get the visa as the "must enter before" date or possibly the "must use before" date When you enter Thailand they will stamp s "permitted to stay" stay stamp in your passport for a 60 day stay. But if you try to get a 30 day extension on the 91st day of your visa validity they will NOT give you that 30 day extension because your visa expired on the 90th day.....you are one day late. Wrong info. The visas expiration date means nothing once your enter the country. You can enter the country on the last day the visa is valid and get a 60 day entry and then extend it for 30 days. It the same for any visa entry. I had a single entry non-o visa that expired over 7 years ago and I have I have extended the 90 entry from it 8 times already. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BangkokKen Posted March 11, 2016 Share Posted March 11, 2016 Nope my visa had not expired and I was extending my 60 days for a further 30 days. They would not consider the entry date, but the issue date If you are applying for an extension of stay the only date that counts is the 'admitted until' date that is stamped in your passport. The extension applies from this date and the entry date or issue dates are irrelevant. Yep, thats what I thought too. But not anymore I tried to say that to IO in CW he would not have it Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
elviajero Posted March 11, 2016 Share Posted March 11, 2016 Nope my visa had not expired and I was extending my 60 days for a further 30 days. They would not consider the entry date, but the issue date If you are applying for an extension of stay the only date that counts is the 'admitted until' date that is stamped in your passport. The extension applies from this date and the entry date or issue dates are irrelevant. Yep, thats what I thought too. But not anymore I tried to say that to IO in CW he would not have it Did you leave CW with an extra 30 day stay? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BangkokKen Posted March 11, 2016 Share Posted March 11, 2016 Nope Got 28 days from the day I entered - or 30 from issuing date. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
steve187 Posted March 11, 2016 Share Posted March 11, 2016 how did you get 28 days from the day you entered as you already had 60 days from the day you entered. some photo's would be good Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JimGant Posted March 11, 2016 Share Posted March 11, 2016 how did you get 28 days from the day you entered as you already had 60 days from the day you entered. Kinda a neat puzzle. Assuming he got the extension on, say, day 40 of his 60 day permission of stay, then his new permission of stay -- means he's now 12 days into overstay. Ah, more fine money for the police charity. (Or, maybe we're having a Chang moment.....) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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