Jump to content

Phillip9

Advanced Member
  • Posts

    673
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Phillip9

  1. 6 hours ago, connda said:

    Marry your girlfriend, then apply for a Philippines SRRV visa, and live in the PI instead of dealing with Thailand.  Then live happily ever after.

     

    No need for an SRRV if they are married.  In Phillipines, if you are married to a filipina, you automatically get one year permission to stay each time you enter the country.  Just leave the country once per year, and there is no need to ever do anything else immigration related.

  2. 8 hours ago, Toby1947 said:

    Luanga Prabang Laos would be my recommendation 

     

    I will agree with that recommendation.  There is also a new, very comfortable, Chinese built high speed train from Luang Prabang to Vientiane that takes about 2 hours.  

     

    So for anyone with an extensive history in Thailand who prefers to enter by land, it's very easy to fly to Luang Prabang and then cross back into Thailand by Land over the friendship bridge near Vientiane.

    • Thumbs Up 1
  3. 26 minutes ago, rob3996 said:

    Not in the process, than why comment without doing 5 seconds of research - the board is chock full of the term LTR yet your oblivious to the abbreviation.

     

    Your second post used very uncommon abbreviations.  I've read thousands of posts here, and I still can't figure out what you meant by "IMM / DOE" 

     

    • Confused 1
    • Agree 1
  4. 1 hour ago, Captain Monday said:

    So, will you blithely overstay in Japan too? Having overstay stamps in one’s passport is a negative. 
     

    Good luck. 

     

    My overstay was a mistake I made during covid times.  I thought I could get another extension, but was refused and had stupidly waited to the last minute to get the extension.  I left as soon as I possibly could which took some time in those days because I had to arrange a covid test first.

     

    I would agree overstay is generally a bad idea, but there is no possible way any immigration officer from another country will ever decipher that Thai overstay stamp.

  5. 1 hour ago, Captain Monday said:

    No, but you fool yourself if they, the consular staff and Immigration officers of various countries are not trained to identify the meaning of red stamps and then fax it to someone who does "read Thai".  Yes FAX, as in "Japan

     

    The stamp isn't even red.   I've been to more than 15 countries since I got my overstay stamp, including Japan.  No one even noticed the stamp, let alone faxed it somewhere.

     

    20240315_151352.thumb.jpg.c30249887bc5c5342e7c62c00553546f.jpg

    20240315_152104.jpg.4f4535aa52525cf8eff4e955b689ac09.jpg

    • Like 1
  6. 31 minutes ago, Captain Monday said:

    How do you think  the embassies, consulates or airport immigration officers of other countries you may apply for visa to or visit will feel about your Thailand overstay stamp?

     

    The overstay stamp is written entirely in Thai.  Do you think any of those immigration officers from other countries can read Thai, and will be able to decipher what a random stamp in your passport written in Thai means?

    • Haha 1
  7. Phillipines does not need visa on arrival.  They are visa exempt.  Otherwise your plan is fine.  She can arrive visa exempt 30 days and extend that 30 days.  Then do a border bounce by land twice per year.

     

    My gf is filipina and we have done that many times. 

     

    Make sure she has an onward flight and 20,000 baht cash.  My gf is frequently asked for both when entering by land or air.

     

    Last time I checked, filipinos can't get e-visas.

     

    • Thumbs Up 1
  8. The property owner is required to file a TM30 any time a foreigner is staying at their property.  No exception for the METV.  In practice many condo owners renting on airbnb and similar sites never file TM30s, and many people are staying in these with few if any problems.

     

    I have extended visa exempt entries many times in Phuket at the main office in Phuket town, and they never asked me for a TM30, and I am sure a TM30 was never filed for me.  I would recommend trying to extend without the TM30 a couple of weeks early, and then worrying about filing it if they ask for it.

     

    • Agree 1
  9. Your best option is probably a tourist visa, which can be either single or multiple entry.  A tourist visa allows you to stay 60 days in Thailand, then you can extend that for another 30 days at an immigration office in Thailand.

     

    If you kept your trip to 90 days or less, I would just get a single entry tourist visa and extend that in Thailand.

     

    If you will stay longer than 90 days, I would get a multiple entry tourist visa, and then on or before 60 days make a short trip to a neighbouring country.  When you return to Thailand you will get another 60 days for a total of 120.  With this option you will also not have to visa an immigration office in Thailand which can be a nightmare.

    • Confused 1
    • Thanks 1
  10. 4 hours ago, Lemsta69 said:

    Interesting. I'm surprised that you got away with it because conventional wisdom says that you need to clear Immigration in the arrival country otherwise you'll be denied entry upon your return to Thailand. Or you won't get checked in in the first place.

     

    I don't think it's something I'd be willing to chance but then again i don't have a pressing need to do same-day "out/ins".

     

    I wouldn't chance this either.  I wouldn't do a same day bounce by air in the first place, but if I did, I would definitely enter the other country properly before attempting to return to Thailand.

  11. 3 hours ago, DrJack54 said:

    Why not just go to immigration and obtain a 30 day extension to your visa exempt entry.

    1900b 

     

    By far the best advise on this thread.  There is absolutely no reason to fly to KL and back.  Plus you risk a hassle with Thai immigration when you return if you do a same day border bounce like that by air.   It's much better to stay a night or two outside the country before you return.

  12. On 2/5/2024 at 9:13 PM, pantsonfire said:

    What are the alternatives to a bus?

    That bus is definitely your best option for getting from Vientiane to Udon Thani.  It's very cheap and comfortable.  All other public transportation options involve transfers and much more hassle.

  13. 8 hours ago, henrik2000 said:

    Is that important? I might be 10 months out of Thailand. Left this February, might come back around next November (I like good weather).

     

    It is important because if you were outside of Thailand for a very short time (days or weeks), you would possibly have a problem when you returned.

     

    After 10 months outside the country you will not have any problem returning to Thailand.

  14. In late December when we extended, if you were staying in a condo, BluePort required a TM30 copy.  If you were staying in a hotel, they accepted a copy of your hotel booking, and they wanted to see your room key card.

     

    You could potentially book a night or two in a hotel the day you extend.  That's what we did.

  15. On 2/8/2024 at 5:51 PM, Nick Carter icp said:

    You can book into a hotel and get a TM30 from them 

     

    Both times I've tried to get a TM30 from a hotel, the hotel refused to give it to me and repeatedly tried to tell me that it was not necessary to extend my permission to stay because they mistakenly thought immigration could actually access it themselves in their own database.

×
×
  • Create New...