One does not need health insurance or medical certificate when renewing inside Thailand?
I hear conflicting things from google about this requirement being implemented but no official sites show this as a requirement.
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TLDR : Answer Summary
The requirement for health insurance or a medical certificate when renewing a retirement visa in Thailand primarily depends on the type of visa originally acquired. If the individual entered with a Non-OA visa, there is no insurance requirement for renewal. However, those who originally held an OA visa must have insurance to extend their visas, and it is a lifelong requirement once established.
NON-O RETIREMENT VISA RESOURCES / SERVICES
Go to the Retirement Visa Section for information on requirements, including age restrictions, financial requirements, and necessary documentation.
For immediate assistance, contact Thai Visa Centre directly via LINE at @ThaiVisaCentre or Email them.
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Brandon Thurkettle ... You seem to be very informed đ
I'm on an OA Visa obtained in Canada, which i entered Thailand with on July 2018 & currently on my 1st OA Visa extension.
If I leave Thailand, return on a transit visa, can I apply for a retirement O-visa? ...I believe, after applying for a 90 day Non-O Immigrant visa & then an extension for 1 year?
And if I can, will it need at any point a health insurance package to extend the non-O visa?
I assume you mean tourist visa and not transit visa. Yes if you enter on a tourist visa you can apply for a 90 day non-O and then a 1 year extension, neither of which require insurance
thanks for the response. I just checked my stamp and itâs non-o. Interesting about non-oa requirment. Iâm sure there is a reason but I canât find explicitly why. Anyway; Iâll assume then I do not need a medical certificate either.
when you say self insure do you mean simply you donât need insurance at all (pay as you go) or need proof you will pay cash for health care? I was clear until this comment which muddies the waters a little bit for me.
Also, many high net worth individuals save money with whatâs called a catastrophic policy.
Very inexpensive premiums, with a very high deductible. Day to day they pay out of pocket and save money. The policy would cover catastrophes such as cancer or a major heart issue.
yes major medical policies are awesome. They no longer offer them in the USA just Health Savings Accounts with high deductibles are the best you can get.
Perhaps what you meant to say was that Lloyds doesnât meet some requirements of the Affordable Health Care Act, or that your physician doesnât accept them for direct payment⌠but I assure you they will write a catastrophe policy, and you can claim, and they will pay anywhere in the world, including the United States.
Not only that, but they have done so reliably for hundreds of years.
we need to know the original visa not the stamp. Because OA extends to O and you could have an O for 10 years and still require insurance.
When you came to Thailand did you apply for a non-OA from the consulate in your home country and have to show insurance, proof of 800,000 in baht or a bank account at home, get a criminal history check and medical clearance?
If you didn't do that then you didn't enter non-OA.
I didnât have to do that. Ironically due to Thailand Pass I had to get insurance for Covid but no background check, etc. I seeded the money when I got here.
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