New to the group and soon to be in Thailand. I have a question regarding O and O-A Visa.
I will be 50 next year (Oct. 2023) and will be able to apply for retirement visa. As Canadian I also believe I can apply for O-X 5 years Visa.
My question is, how likely Thailand will change requirements to apply for that Visa next year? Can they bring up the 800K Baht to above 1M+ Baht? Is there a risk they cancel this Visa program or raise the retirement age to 55 / 60 y.o ?
and also once you get the O / O-A Visa, what happen if you don't renew the following year and skip for a few years before renewing, would you leave the 800K Baht in a Thai Bank or transfer back to Canada?
And finally is it possible to keep the amount in USD equivalent to 800K Baht or its mandatory to convert into Thai Baht when deposited in the Thai account?
Sorry for all the questions, quite new to all this π
May thanks for your kind help π
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TLDR : Answer Summary
The discussion revolves around the O and O-A visas for retirement in Thailand, particularly focusing on the 800K baht requirement. The user expresses concerns about potential changes to visa regulations, such as increases in the required amount or adjustments to the retirement age. Responses indicate that while changes are possible, significant alterations are unlikely. The conversation also touches on maintaining funds in a Thai bank account, the possibility of using foreign currency accounts, and the process for Canadians to use embassy-issued affidavits for income verification.
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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O visa lasts for 3 months then you apply for a years extention if you don't apply for the extention every year you have to reapply from beginning again
Thailand is a place where money is King. The idea is that you put 800k in a Thai bank (with no safeguards if the bank goes under). Bit by bit they will get it out of you and should it not be available then you will soon go home. A friend of mine had 800k plus 12k he had earned in interest in Bangkok Bank. When he died the medical costs amazingly came to 795k and the funeral and other costs came to 17k. How lucky he had the exact amount in his account !!!!!
thanks a lot for your help π....quick question, do you know if income from dividends are consider income to the eyes of Thai authorities for Visa purpose? I currently am switching from work income to dividend income.
as a Canadian you don't have to transfer the funds to a Thai bank account as the Canadian Embassy in BKK or Consulate in Chiang Mai will issue you an affidavit of income which you bring to Immigration. All you need is your proof of income from CRA which is easy to access.
We did this last year, got Non O's before we came to Thailand, then did the extension with the affidavit... easy!
I use a foriegn currency deposit account for visa funds no problem but you do have to keep en eye on exchange rates or keep a little extra to allow for fluctuations.
The other questions are pretty impossible to answer I'm afraid
Has to be baht (and has to come from foreign source) and if you transfer in USD or CAD the bank in Thailand will convert to baht (better rate than if you convert to baht in Canada). If you don't renew and want it again later then you start all over including the O/O-A. Feel free to DM
Zap **********
Jeffrey good to know. Sorry for my misinformation Brandon was just going based on info from local office.
The 800k can be kept in a foreign currency account at a Thai bank, but the amount has to always equal or exceed the designated THB amount even as exchange rates fluctuate. You do need evidence that the funds came from abroad if you're applying for a Non-O within Thailand, but not for annual extensions.
Can get almost two years from an OA with one border bounce. No visit to immigration with stacks of paperwork to beg for an extension. Only ever deal with home country embassy through the mail. I love it!
OA is the best for those who return to their home country every couple of years. Means never having to transfer money into Thai bank account, and never having to visit immigration! That alone is a huge bonus!
Andy *********
Steve Smythe Understand, the OA I have now is the first one I've had since insurance has been required. Seems the insurance/background check/medical form is a hindrance for some though. The pandemic changed up our travel habits somewhat. My wife is Viet, so I have a visa exemption there. That helps with our decision where to go.
oh I didn't know about that, thanks again for clarifying π
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Brandon *****
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Steve ********
You're asking questions which realistically no-one has the answers to, except to say it's highly unlikely there will be any wholesale changes. Often there's a bit of "tweaking" but if we all worried about potential changes in life, it would be better to just stay in bed every day
There's nothing. I've been on retirement visas for years and stay abreast of any rumoured or proposed changes, and at this stage there's nothing at all.
yeah I do know all those questions are quite impossible to answer, was just hopping people in the group might heard something about a possible change in regulations π
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Brandon *****
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