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The Revenue Department of Thailand will amend a law to tax individuals with foreign income, even if that income is not brought into Thailand. Director-General of the Revenue Department, Kulaya Tantitemit stated that the current tax law mandates individuals residing in Thailand for over 180 days per year to pay taxes on foreign income if … …

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I read this story in the Post this morning and noted two things.

1) Kulaya mentioned plans to expand the tax base by requiring platforms with an income of 1 billion baht or more to report their sources of income.

She's referring to companies and corporations, as surely there aren't that many individuals earning 1 billion baht a year.

2) Previously, the department revised the criteria for tax residency, mandating that individuals residing in Thailand for at least 180 days per year and earning foreign income must pay personal income tax if that income is brought into the country within the same year it was earned.

For individuals, this is the only measure that would be relevant, and they still have no mechanism, at last word to track or verify.  If I'm not mistaken, this is solely based on voluntary reporting.

 

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  • 2 weeks later...

My read is that after the current 12 month rule change settles in (2025/2026), is that Thailand is going to implement worldwide (global) personal income taxation for its tax residents - including Expats. The current 12 months rule change and this impending change, will not affect USA Citizens who will continue to pay income taxes on their income worldwide because they have a Citizen based taxation. But for the rest of us who have a Resident based taxation system, it will have an impact. That is because it will not only be the income remitted in Thailand that is taxable - when they implement a global taxation system, it will be any income earned anywhere in the world by a Thai tax resident.

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On 6/5/2024 at 12:40 PM, MrStretch said:

1) Kulaya mentioned plans to expand the tax base by requiring platforms with an income of 1 billion baht or more to report their sources of income.

She's referring to companies and corporations, as surely there aren't that many individuals earning 1 billion baht a year.

I believe that she is referring to all financial institutions with an income of 1 Billion baht (banks etc.) must report to TRD all the sources of their income - deposits received - both nationally and internationally. This is common in the west, and it is how the western countries Tax Depts/Offices track people's incomes.

Thailand has not done this in the past - they are clearly moving forward to a system that will allow them to track people's income more easily. As to whether they have the resources or expertise to make this happen and when - who knows.  They certainly dont have those skilled resources yet - nor do they have a lot of resources to chase Thais (and non-Thais) who should, but dont even lodge a tax return.  They say AI is going to make this sort of thing a lot easier and quicker - probably true. 

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12 hours ago, AussieBob said:

My read is that after the current 12 month rule change settles in (2025/2026), is that Thailand is going to implement worldwide (global) personal income taxation for its tax residents - including Expats. The current 12 months rule change and this impending change, will not affect USA Citizens who will continue to pay income taxes on their income worldwide because they have a Citizen based taxation. But for the rest of us who have a Resident based taxation system, it will have an impact. That is because it will not only be the income remitted in Thailand that is taxable - when they implement a global taxation system, it will be any income earned anywhere in the world by a Thai tax resident.

If they are adopting worldwide income

It will truly only negatively impact those residents in Thailand that have been working in Thailand for an outside source and not paying income taxes there(anywhere)....

 

If it's a worldwide income system, then tax treaties will come into play 

 

 

 

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On 6/18/2024 at 11:26 PM, Marc26 said:

If they are adopting worldwide income

It will truly only negatively impact those residents in Thailand that have been working in Thailand for an outside source and not paying income taxes there(anywhere)....

If it's a worldwide income system, then tax treaties will come into play 

They are going to implement global taxation - and IMO it will happen soon (2025/26).  At the moment they only tax money earned worldwide, when that money is remitted into Thailand. When they make the change, income tax will be liable on all income earned worldwide.  The current tax system is full of holes and unknowns, and a global taxation system is 'alien' to the Thailand legal system (which is not 'common law' based).  Lots of things need to be clarified and decided now, and then going forward many things will need to be sorted and managed centrally.  Localised Provincial interpretations and decisions will have to controlled, and they will need to have the ability to be over-ruled by TRD centrally.

It is not necessarily about only working Expats. According the the tax code and TRD advices, an Expat's Pension is taxable income - as is the interest/earnings he/she gets from money invested outside Thailand - when it is brought into Thailand.  This has never been enforced in the past and TRD just 'let it go' and assumed all money earned overseas was only remitted after 12 months (tax free).  Now that has changed, there is a while can of worms about what is taxable and when and where. Countries like Philippines and Malaysia have specifically excluded all forms of income that Expats earn overseas - as long as the money has been subjected to the tax system of the country in which it was earned. The Malaysian Finance Minister stated it best something like this - 'we are not going to penalise retirees who come here and bring their money here to spend it here'. 

Actually, double tax treaties come into play now - and will more under this new 12 month rule change - and more so under the global tax system.  But your point is very much 'nail on the head' and it is the biggest problem with how TRD implements this new system, and the global system. How and where and when is TRD going to manage income tax returns for Expats, when there are 61 separate tax treaties. How can Somchai in the Provisional TRD Office deal with an Expat's claim made under their home country's DTA. A bloke recently had a meeting with the local TRD Office, with his Thai tax lawyer with him, and the TRD Official said they dont use DTAs and dont know how they will work. TRD HQ has a lot of work ahead of it, because they never enforced PIT rules before for Expats (and many Thais).  Hopefully the Thai Govt will do what Malaysia and Philippines did and exclude retired Expats - which I hope includes married ones too.

 

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23 hours ago, AussieBob said:

They are going to implement global taxation - and IMO it will happen soon (2025/26).  At the moment they only tax money earned worldwide, when that money is remitted into Thailand. When they make the change, income tax will be liable on all income earned worldwide.  The current tax system is full of holes and unknowns, and a global taxation system is 'alien' to the Thailand legal system (which is not 'common law' based).  Lots of things need to be clarified and decided now, and then going forward many things will need to be sorted and managed centrally.  Localised Provincial interpretations and decisions will have to controlled, and they will need to have the ability to be over-ruled by TRD centrally.

It is not necessarily about only working Expats. According the the tax code and TRD advices, an Expat's Pension is taxable income - as is the interest/earnings he/she gets from money invested outside Thailand - when it is brought into Thailand.  This has never been enforced in the past and TRD just 'let it go' and assumed all money earned overseas was only remitted after 12 months (tax free).  Now that has changed, there is a while can of worms about what is taxable and when and where. Countries like Philippines and Malaysia have specifically excluded all forms of income that Expats earn overseas - as long as the money has been subjected to the tax system of the country in which it was earned. The Malaysian Finance Minister stated it best something like this - 'we are not going to penalise retirees who come here and bring their money here to spend it here'. 

Actually, double tax treaties come into play now - and will more under this new 12 month rule change - and more so under the global tax system.  But your point is very much 'nail on the head' and it is the biggest problem with how TRD implements this new system, and the global system. How and where and when is TRD going to manage income tax returns for Expats, when there are 61 separate tax treaties. How can Somchai in the Provisional TRD Office deal with an Expat's claim made under their home country's DTA. A bloke recently had a meeting with the local TRD Office, with his Thai tax lawyer with him, and the TRD Official said they dont use DTAs and dont know how they will work. TRD HQ has a lot of work ahead of it, because they never enforced PIT rules before for Expats (and many Thais).  Hopefully the Thai Govt will do what Malaysia and Philippines did and exclude retired Expats - which I hope includes married ones too.

They will do what the rest of the countries do or they would sort of be blackballed from the Global system

 

Now I don't personally have to worry about it, so it's easy for me to say

 

But I don't think any expats need to worry about getting taxes twice on their pensions 

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23 hours ago, AussieBob said:

They are going to implement global taxation - and IMO it will happen soon (2025/26).  At the moment they only tax money earned worldwide, when that money is remitted into Thailand. When they make the change, income tax will be liable on all income earned worldwide.  The current tax system is full of holes and unknowns, and a global taxation system is 'alien' to the Thailand legal system (which is not 'common law' based).  Lots of things need to be clarified and decided now, and then going forward many things will need to be sorted and managed centrally.  Localised Provincial interpretations and decisions will have to controlled, and they will need to have the ability to be over-ruled by TRD centrally.

It is not necessarily about only working Expats. According the the tax code and TRD advices, an Expat's Pension is taxable income - as is the interest/earnings he/she gets from money invested outside Thailand - when it is brought into Thailand.  This has never been enforced in the past and TRD just 'let it go' and assumed all money earned overseas was only remitted after 12 months (tax free).  Now that has changed, there is a while can of worms about what is taxable and when and where. Countries like Philippines and Malaysia have specifically excluded all forms of income that Expats earn overseas - as long as the money has been subjected to the tax system of the country in which it was earned. The Malaysian Finance Minister stated it best something like this - 'we are not going to penalise retirees who come here and bring their money here to spend it here'. 

Actually, double tax treaties come into play now - and will more under this new 12 month rule change - and more so under the global tax system.  But your point is very much 'nail on the head' and it is the biggest problem with how TRD implements this new system, and the global system. How and where and when is TRD going to manage income tax returns for Expats, when there are 61 separate tax treaties. How can Somchai in the Provisional TRD Office deal with an Expat's claim made under their home country's DTA. A bloke recently had a meeting with the local TRD Office, with his Thai tax lawyer with him, and the TRD Official said they dont use DTAs and dont know how they will work. TRD HQ has a lot of work ahead of it, because they never enforced PIT rules before for Expats (and many Thais).  Hopefully the Thai Govt will do what Malaysia and Philippines did and exclude retired Expats - which I hope includes married ones too.

One scenario where people might get royally screwed is an American living in Thailand and earning money outside the US/Thailand

 

The US has a very generous foreign income tax exclusion that you don't pay taxes on up to $120k

 

So I'd imagine if the US hasn't taxed that $120k and Thailand deems you a tax resident then Thailand may tax that because you didn't pay tax on it so no double tax is in play on that 

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On 6/24/2024 at 9:12 AM, Marc26 said:

They will do what the rest of the countries do or they would sort of be blackballed from the Global system

Now I don't personally have to worry about it, so it's easy for me to say

But I don't think any expats need to worry about getting taxes twice on their pensions 

Right now we dont know either way - it all depends on how the TRD implement things. But not worrying about it and dismissing it, is not a wise move - but no need to worry too much either. All will be revealed eventually - it is something to be aware of as it could affect expats who live in Thailand and receive money from/in an overseas country. 

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On 6/24/2024 at 9:15 AM, Marc26 said:

One scenario where people might get royally screwed is an American living in Thailand and earning money outside the US/Thailand

The US has a very generous foreign income tax exclusion that you don't pay taxes on up to $120k

So I'd imagine if the US hasn't taxed that $120k and Thailand deems you a tax resident then Thailand may tax that because you didn't pay tax on it so no double tax is in play on that 

Yep - one of many scenarios and even more unanswered questions that TRD will hopefully one day provide clarity about.  But as one bloke said a while ago - he thinks they may just let it run its course and get things sorted out in the Appeals Tribunal and Courts, rather than trying to provide an answer to every possible scenario and situation.  TRD started to do that in October last year, and they are either still working on it, or have thrown up their hands when realising all the complications this rule change made.

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