Jump to content

Non-OA health insurance Chaeng Wattan madness


Recommended Posts

2 hours ago, EricTh said:

 

...

 

Is it possible for the insurance company to add a few days backwards ? or must the insurance policy be exactly one year, no less and no more?

 

I doubt they can do that, but I'm going to ask Aetna if they can do  something similar (and along the lines of TallGuyJohninBK's thought):  increase the OPD coverage on the remainder of my existing policy so I can show Immigration that I'm already covered at the required level.  Since it's only 20 days (and only upping coverage from 35K to 40K) they shouldn't charge much for that.

Edited by TerraplaneGuy
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, Caldera said:

...

 

Personally, I think changing to a Non-O visa - while tempting - will lead to a very short-lived victory for those who do it. Now that Thai immigration and insurance companies have created that nice little earner, does anyone really believe that they won't maximize the number of "customers" (victims) in the very near future? I bet it's just around the corner.

That's my concern and why I've held off on changing.  

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 hours ago, OJAS said:

But, playing devil's advocate (like I have done on another thread recently), why should the Immigration Bureau stop at extending the health insurance requirement to retirees with original non-O visas? Why not, for good measure, extend the insurance requirement to ALL non-immigrants aged 50+ regardless of their original visa type and current extension of stay reason (by including e.g. marriage) as well?

 

The good news, though, is that this would all necessitate a major rewrite of the existing Police Orders. But the bad news is that there may be some oik in the Immigration Bureau who is currently tackling this task with zeal and gusto as we speak (even at this late hour in LOS)!

I believe the original order used words like "... all long stay expats..".   So I believe as you suggested that at some point, insurance will be mandated for all long stay expats, which will cover several types of visas and extension reasons, marriage, retirement, dependent, etc.  Retiree probably the first target just due to the age, but why they targeted OA and not others stands out as very strange.  What is so special about starting off with an OA from one's home country?  Maybe as some have suggested this is just an experiment, fact finding, see how the IOs like or handle it, see how the expats deal with it, see how the insurance companies handle it,  etc.  Get feedback and sadly still draw irrational conclusions.

  • Like 1
  • Sad 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

17 hours ago, TallGuyJohninBKK said:

So I'm trying to understand the practical impact of this... for folks with O-A visa extensions of stay requiring insurance (and they DO require insurance, BTW...)

 

AFAIK, I've heard that some of the Thai insurers are willing to write policies for that month or weeks stub period, at a prorated premium amount, and then have the full year follow-on policy that matches one's extension period...

 

And if someone was able to do that with their Thai insurer on the front end for the first time, then I think they'd be OK for future cycles, as their annual insurance period would match their annual extension period... and they could apply to Immigration early because they'd already have valid insurance in force each successive year.

 

If it were me, I would either go down the Non-O route (no guarantees insurance won't become a requirement in the future) OR apply for a 1 month pro-rated insurance policy to take me to my extension date, that way I could then get into yearly cycles of renewing the insurance & extension 30 days early whilst still getting the full 12 months as previously. 

 

 

Edited by Mike Teavee
Link to comment
Share on other sites

44 minutes ago, gk10002000 said:

"... all long stay expats..".   So I believe as you suggested that at some point, insurance will be mandated for all long stay expats, which will cover several types of visas and extension reasons, marriage, retirement, dependent, etc.  Retiree probably the first target just due to the age, but why they targeted OA and not others stands out as very strange. 

Some merit to the idea that it was because OA holders not mandated to have funds in Thailand - Imm has never stated that the need for a by coincidence 400k year round with O/800k but it could be why not applied to 'O'. Alternatively, it could be that Imm saw that applying this to OA was the quickest and easiest way to be seen to be complying with Cabinet directive without huge increase in workload/pushback from more foreigners. If so they may do nothing if the Cabinet says nothing further on this or it could still be that O is next.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

12 hours ago, DrJack54 said:

I don't wish to keep sticking nose in but I have one question. 

Cannot folk that originally entered Thailand on a Non O-A see the writing on the wall. It's obvious. O-A is history. 

Many folk here eg USA and other countries you can obtain good health cover. 

Why subject yourself to this Thai useless health insurance. Change to Non O based on retirement or whatever. Simple. F em

And what makes you so sure that Non O for retirement, and possibly marriage, will never be affected by this health insurance nonsense? Those people on Non OA who are getting insurance now might end up being the wise ones. Remember we aren't getting any younger, the insurance you get today might become impossible to get in a few years time.

  • Like 1
  • Sad 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

14 hours ago, TerraplaneGuy said:

I wondered the same since it's hard to see why they would be so worried that the first minute is not covered, if they apparently don't care about the last.  I thought of raising it with the Supervisor but given the way she kept arguing in circles and ignoring the plain logic of my position made me conclude it would be a waste of time.  So to answer your question, no there are none.

Can you fill in the blanks please; didn't want to lose f--e

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Perhaps a solution to this is to get your insurance company to change the dates of the policy to the date you will go back in to apply for the extension.  You will then be covered from that day on.  But they will not give you a full years extension and only allow it to the end of policy date.  So your extension date will change for future years.  From that point on it should be no problem as both dates will be the same.

 

(I just extended in Ratchaburi yesterday.  I had my insurance date the same as the extension date.  Worked fine there.)

Edited by rwill
Link to comment
Share on other sites

11 hours ago, Caldera said:

This is really as dumb as it gets. Not only didn't they grandfather in people who applied for a Non-OA years ago, now based on this report and a previous one they also effectively expect them to have insurance for the remainder of an extension that was already granted and is about to expire. The mind boggles.

 

Personally, I think changing to a Non-O visa - while tempting - will lead to a very short-lived victory for those who do it. Now that Thai immigration and insurance companies have created that nice little earner, does anyone really believe that they won't maximize the number of "customers" (victims) in the very near future? I bet it's just around the corner.

I agree there would be a slight possibility of that,

 IF there was a large increase in people applying for the visa and getting the insurance.

 

But I would guess the numbers are actually plummetting and they will see the insurance thing is scaring people away in droves.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

54 minutes ago, rwill said:

...

 

(I just extended in Ratchaburi yesterday.  I had my insurance date the same as the extension date.  Worked fine there.)

Did you go in on the extension date or in advance?  And if in advance, did you already have insurance at the required levels?  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

They seem to be interpreting things to force people off visas - this, and

did I understand correctly that some offices are requiring proof of 65k every month from overseas from months that predate the announcement of policy change date.

Edited by mokwit
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

16 hours ago, BritTim said:

Is there a chance that immigration would then object that you do not have a policy for the whole period of your extension (you would not be covered from (09:00-23:59 on the last day)? If they want to be stupid, are there any limits?

Just looking at my car policies and they both start at 1630pm so seems to be a common start time for Thai policies. In the UK, typically, the policy would start at 0000am so no confusion as to dates etc. 

  • Confused 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Thaidream said:

The only way to stop this nonsense is to be proactive and write to our Embassies in the hopes they can push the Thai Government to at least  rethink any further discrimination against foreigners.

 

Waste of time with the British Embassy

  • Sad 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

51 minutes ago, Pib said:

For me, I'm currently on an O-A retirement extension of stay good to later this year.  Come extension time I'm either going to switch to a "marriage" extension of stay since I have one each Thai wife for many decades....and I confirmed face-to-face with a CW immigration officer a few weeks ago insurance would not be required with a OA marriage extension of stay....OR, I'm just going to dump the OA by doing a border run without reentry permit to kill-off the OA and then do an Exempt to Non-O conversion at CW.  ...

 

I am in similar situation with a Type-OA visa and a Thai wife, albeit not yet on my 1st extension.  My current OA is still valid until end-next month.  I have some trips in/out of the country planned/upcoming during the 1st year of my 'permission to stay' on my Type-OA and if necessary I could use one of those to cancel my 'permission to stay' and then attempt a re-entry to Thailand on a 30-day-Visa exempt, followed by a Type-O visa application, followed by a one-year extension justified by marriage on the Type-O visa.   I hope it does not come to that - and I plan to see how long I can keep my Type-OA visa for (with future extensions based on marriage).

 

I read that the Thailand Health Insurance implementation affecting the "Type-OA" visa applicants/holders/extensions, was to be a trial, and I'm hoping in the future (as part of the "trial" assessment) that the Health Insurance verification criteria is improved, to assist both Thailand and those who already have excellent health insurance and those with adequate funds for self insurance.  I believe there are excellent ways to do such that are not difficult and would benefit Thailand , but who knows?  ... I guess time will tell.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, TerraplaneGuy said:

I agree totally and might write a letter once the dust settles.  Apparently the Immigration people do not feel confined to the letter of the law (and even the letter of the law, they misread).  When I kept pointing to the English translation of the regulation, which THEY handed to me, to show them that the requirement was for the upcoming extension not the present, they would barely look at it.  They would just recite their fictional requirements.  When I asked "where did you get that from?" they said they had had "big meetings" with various government departments.  In other words, they seem comfortable imposing requirements cooked up in meetings that simply aren't in the law.  This is the familiar problem in Thailand, weak rule of law.   What they are doing here is even worse than making a law apply ex post facto (which of course is wrong), because their improvised requirements are not even law.  Presumably the Police Orders are law because the police are authorized by legislation to proclaim them.  But additional "rules" devised in smoke-filled rooms, unpublished and with no formal authorization, are not law.  

Completely agree with your sentiments.  I know what a hassle this muat be and no need for it at all.

 

The reason i urge anyone who has problems of this nature or even those who are affected by laws that are not explicit; applied retroactively and generally unfair and unequal to write to our respective embassies; the Head of the Immigration Bureau and the Minister of Public Health is that they are the basic forms of contact that we as longsyers have.

 

If no one ever conveys the sbsurdity of these situations or the basic unfairness of a law that is applied retroactively- the powers in charge will assume they can carry on as normal and evereyone is happy.  They will then move on to attempt to apply this insurance debacle across the board.

 

I have already written the US Embassy twice on this  very subject and they keep stating they are in touch with the Thai Government and have sent a diplomatic note. At least that lets the Thai Government know  that there is diplomatic interest in what is happening.

 

My best to you- let us know how it turns out.

 

  • Like 1
  • Confused 1
  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

So if extending on an O-A at CW you have to renew on the same day the previous extension ends... or accept an extension of less than a year to match your insurance.? This is madness. 

It really means people have to dump the O-A permission and extension and get a regular O. 

  • Like 1
  • Sad 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Not everyone will have the nerve to keep walking through this ill-considered, narrow-minded, bureaucratic visa jungle. Thailand will get the receipt slow but steady in the form of fewer permanent and repeat visitors. 

This group of visitors in particular spreads their money widely among the Thai population, in contrast to the all prepaid china bus tourists.

Edited by tomacht8
Link to comment
Share on other sites

They have yet to make the connection between number of 6 month plus property rentals and difficulty in staying 6 months plus, due to visa policy. People coming here to stay a few months or years were providing buoyancy to the rental market which is now gone.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

9 minutes ago, mokwit said:

They have yet to make the connection between number of 6 month plus property rentals and difficulty in staying 6 months plus, due to visa policy. People coming here to stay a few months or years were providing buoyancy to the rental market which is now gone.

Seems that they can mover over to AirBnB.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The OP’s situation is all a little confusing but in my situation my extension expires November 19th. My new Pacific Cross policy goes from January 1, 2020 to January 1, 2021. I have an insurance certificate. If I renew my policy again for January 2021-2022 and get my insurance certificate before I apply for my extension on November 19 (or before) then I will have two insurance certificates covering this year and the next year. I should be OK, right? If so then this may be the timing to make this work.

 

This obviously doesn’t help the OP who doesn’t have a valid certificate now and has already purchased next years insurance.  It may also be difficult for people traveling and living here part time.  However, if you are planning to purchase now it may be a strategy to discuss with your insurance agent. It wasn’t a strategy on my part. The timing just worked out that way. My problem may be trying to renew my insurance 3 months early. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, jacko45k said:

So if extending on an O-A at CW you have to renew on the same day the previous extension ends... or accept an extension of less than a year to match your insurance.? This is madness. 

It really means people have to dump the O-A permission and extension and get a regular O. 

At worse only for the 1st year as in subsequent years you would renew your insurance 30 days before it expires & then do your extension, that way you will have a policy covering the 30 days & a new policy for the next year. 

 

E.g. If I had insurance running 1st Jan to 31 Dec 2020 & renewed my extension today, I could extend up to 31 Dec 2020 then on 1st Dec renew my insurance to 31 Dec 2021, when doing the next extension I would show insurance (current policy) to 31st Dec 2020 & another Policy showing insurance from 1st Jan to 31st Dec 2021.

 

Not ideal, but that's how things are.... at the moment ???? 

Edited by Mike Teavee
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.





×
×
  • Create New...