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British Embassy Bangkok to Stop Certification of Income Letters


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4 minutes ago, Mark1066 said:

Exactly. The only people who will be affected by this rule change are those who do not have the income or money in the bank to qualify for a visa based on marriage or retirement (or who do have the money but refuse to transfer enough of it to a Thai bank account).

These people will be driven into the arms of the dodgy visa agents at 30k each year.

In Thailand, where there's a will, there's a way and a Thai business that will make money from it.

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I have been using the income letter and already bring in an average of more than 65K a month. If there is no certainty on the acceptable proof for funds remitted I will look at opening a foreign currency account as I do not like depending on the vagaries of the exchange rates if I set up a standing transfer to my Thai Baht account.

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Just now, Joe Mcseismic said:

These people will be driven into the arms of the dodgy visa agents at 30k each year.

In Thailand, where there's a will, there's a way and a Thai business that will make money from it.

That's up to them isn't it? But anyone who's paid 30k for that service in the past is paying twice as much as they needed to.

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17 minutes ago, graemeaylward said:

I think that this will be an advantage to most UK citizens receiving a monthly pension.  I transfer my pension into my BKK Bank account every month and my State Pension every 4 weeks so it will show in my Bank book.  And I will save 52GBP every year. ????

Only problem with that is that inevitably you'll be getting a poor exchange rate if your UK bank is converting sterling to baht.   I prefer to transfer a lump sum when the exchange rate is reasonably high (or at least not when it's really low) and have my Thai bank convert from sterling.     With HSBC in the UK, an on-line transfer up to 40,000 pounds costs 4 pounds, with no charges from my SCB account.

Edited by pagallim
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9 minutes ago, Joe Mcseismic said:

These people will be driven into the arms of the dodgy visa agents at 30k each year.

In Thailand, where there's a will, there's a way and a Thai business that will make money from it.

If Big Joke has his way that loophole will soon be closed as well.

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Let's face it, the letter of income, or signing a statutory declaration, as is the case with the Aussie embassy, in a lot of cases is a scam, and taking advantage of a loophole which allows those with insufficient funds or income to remain in Thailand.
Last year the oz embassy made the same statement and then did a 180 on it

But if the brits are right then all embassies will follow
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t seems the main problem with the 800 kBaht in the bank is the extreme reluctance of Thai banks to do a transfer back to one's home country.  However a Thai Visa card will work abroad with no problems at all, So make sure your heir has a duplicate card and starts clocking up 20k withdrawals before the bank realises you are dead. 

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14 minutes ago, anterian said:

It seems the main problem with the 800 kBaht in the bank is the extreme reluctance of Thai banks to do a transfer back to one's home country

There is no such reluctance. If the money came from abroad, you 100% can send every penny of it back out and this takes 5 minutes at the bank. 400B SWIFT transfer fee. You can even do it yourself through online banking even quicker and that is 300B. Over $50,000 US (1,650,000) there needs to be a notification to the Bank of Thailand. Anything under that there are no formalities whatsoever.

You can send the 800,000 straight back out the day after you get your extension, if you want to. Additionally, immigration will accept Foreign Currency Deposits in Thai banks for this, so you can even leave the money in GBP or USD or EUR if you prefer, and send it back after without even ever converting it into THB. Although the banks will take a small percentage in this case, in lieu of conversion. Bangkok Bank is 0.25% on USD for this, I think 0.5% on GBP- so there would be a bank fee of 2,000-4,000 on 800,000 equivalent if you were sending it back without conversion.

Edited by blorg
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1 minute ago, Joe Mcseismic said:

Never. Too much money to be made by Immigration officials.

Border immigration were charging an extra 300 baht to allow entry, that little earner has now been stopped. Just because they have been getting away with it for years doesn't mean it will continue. Time will tell.

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2 hours ago, giddyup said:

You do realise that Thailand makes it's own rules and it's not a British colony?

Yes, and the Embassy is here to represent the British Government and its citizens. Its simple really. 

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1 hour ago, PAWNEESE said:

I stopped keeping 800k in my Thai bank and opted for the embassy letter "proof" of income.  I guess I will have to move a lump sum back.

 

My only objection to having nearly £20,000 here is how hard it will be for my grown up son to get it when I go off to the big Go Go bar in the sky. A Thai lawyer needed to do a will and process it when I go. I guess the bank keeps the money if no arrangement made. 

 

My cunning plan .. I guess will be move said sum 3 months before .. and start to spend it only after visa obtained. Top up 3 months b4 next visa.  

 

Not my problem I guess if £20k lost if I "go" whilst account has a big sum in. But its best to make things easy as possible. Oh well ... maybe a will needed. Im not sure if I decide Ive had enough ... and just to go home if its easy to take out my 800,000 baht.  

 

Im ok this year .. my renewal in very early December .. the question of whether they take regular movement into my Thai bank will be sorted for future years .. but the banks will need to do lots of work certifying by letter it is genuine incoming funds from abroad not just moved from person A account to person B account .. if that makes sense.

I think the proof of income will be money into your Thai bank account over 12 months so if you make 1 or 2 transfers a year they will add them up and divide by 12, so little has changed except it has become easier - no need for an embassy letter, just a letter and passbook from Thai bank showing the annual transfers from outside Thailand, I can't see it working any other way

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Just now, Pilotman said:

Yes, and the Embassy is here to represent the British Government and its citizens. Its simple really. 

Exactly, not dispute or challenge any rules that Thailand chooses to introduce.

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1 minute ago, Pilotman said:

Yes, and the Embassy is here to represent the British Government and its citizens. Its simple really. 

It's here to represent the government/country, not it's citizens. The consular section provides assistance to citizens, ostensibly, but that is not the primary purpose of an embassy and never has been.

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Just now, giddyup said:

Exactly, not dispute or challenge any rules that Thailand chooses to introduce.

Representation means exactly that sometimes.  Otherwise whats the point of having an Embassy here at all. 

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35 minutes ago, graemeaylward said:

I think that this will be an advantage to most UK citizens receiving a monthly pension.  I transfer my pension into my BKK Bank account every month and my State Pension every 4 weeks so it will show in my Bank book.  And I will save 52GBP every year. ????

And the transfer charges............more than 52 quid.

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1 minute ago, Mark1066 said:

It's here to represent the government/country, not it's citizens. The consular section provides assistance to citizens, ostensibly, but that is not the primary purpose of an embassy and never has been.

Not the primary purpose no, but its in their Charter. 

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2 minutes ago, Pilotman said:

Representation means exactly that sometimes.  Otherwise whats the point of having an Embassy here at all. 

Certainly not to challenge every regulation that Thailand introduces that doesn't suit a very small proportion of retirees. Sounds like you may be one of those affected.

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3 minutes ago, Pilotman said:

Don't believe it. 

Why would you not believe it? With the reported changes affecting US embassy declarations and earlier in the thread someone reporting the Canadian embassy said the same thing, this is clearly coming from Thai immigration, not a change in policy for the UK embassy.

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