Hello. I'm looking for an agent who can help me apply for a retirement visa in Bangkok. I'm still waiting for the TM 30, I'm ready to apply once I get that.
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TLDR : Answer Summary
The post seeks recommendations for agents to assist in applying for a retirement visa in Bangkok, mentioning that the poster is waiting for their TM 30. Comments suggest agents like Siam Legal and GAM Legal, with users sharing their positive experiences.
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.
Explore recent discussions by using the Non-O Retirement Visa tag in the search box at the top of the page.
you must be over 50 years, and start with a 90 days Non-Imm-O Retirement Visa. You will get stamped in for a 90-days stay permit. If you fulfill the requirements, you can apply for the 1-year Extension of this stay permit on Immigration. People and Immigration call the "one-year stay permit based on retirement" a "retirement visa", but this is technically wrong wording because a stay permit is not the same as a visa
with regards and thanks to Robert Lagas, who wrote this!
Once more, because people try to give advice based on what they think is a "Retirement Visa"
First of all, you DO not have to be retired to apply for this visa. You however need to be 50 years or older
Second is that all options have DIFFERENT rules, regulations and requirements.
So please read and try not to give incorrect advice by using the requirements for a different type of visa or extension of stay.
What is a retirement visa?
It is a phrase used by foreigners and Immigration and it could be 6 different types of visa or stay permits, with different rules, regulations and requirements
OR
it could even be an 1 year Extension of Stay based on being over 50 years of age and willing to sit out the rest of their life inside Thailand.
It is easy to type “retirement visa”, but very difficult to understand which option the person refers to
Options are:
1. Single Entry Non Immigrant O visa based on being over 50 years of age
2. Multiple Entry Non Immigrant O visa based on being over 50 years of age
3. Non Immigrant O visa based on being over 50 years of age without entry by conversion at local immigration office
4. Non Immigrant O-A visa (Long Stay)
5. Non Immigrant O-X visa
6. Long Term Residency (LTR) visa
7. Extension of Stay based on being over 50 years of age and willing to sit out the rest of their life inside Thailand (stamp from Immigration, which is not a visa)
ONLY for options 3, 5 and 7 the applicant needs a bank account in Thailand or a Certificate of Income from their Embassy.
Option 2 cannot be applied for any more, since all Thai Embassies and Consulates took it out of the E-visa program.
Option 3 is applied for by conversion of your Visa Exempt Entry or Tourist Visa at your local Immigration Office inside Thailand.
Option 6 is applied for with support of BOI Thailand
Option 7 is applied for at your local Immigration Office AFTER you used a Non-Immigrant visa.
Other options are applied for at a Thai Consulate OR for those countries who are legit, on-line.
What you wrote i summarized as "if you are 50+ can live in Thailand long term on a retirement visa. Thai Embassy website details the different options ". i know all the options and differences but do not have time to list them.
you don't live in Thailand "longterm on a retirement visa". You will be living on yearly to be repeated extended stay permits. The visa you used will become void and invalid the very moment you get stamped into the country
When someone says they have lived 10 years in Thailand on a retirement visa, you would not say " No, you do not have a visa you are here on an extended stay permit " Hopefully you are not in Hua Hin you will be exhausted telling everyone the difference between retirement visa and permit.
I have been on a yearly stay permit extension based on retirement since I turned 50 years old, 17 years ago. The last time I had something like a Thai "visa", was 17 years ago. I am happy that the Hua Hin Immigration must have joined and read my FB visa advice group and decided to end the wrong wording 😎