Friend of mine had a overstay under 30 days that he already paid all of the fees. The immigration officer gave him the wrong stamp when he flew in with 60 day tourist visa. The guy actually gave him a 30 day stamp. So when he went to get first 30 extension after his 60 days he found out he overstayed by 30 days . But he is paid up and good now.
He never got a overstay stamp.
Question is, when he does a border run later on will he have problems at the borders because he has a overstay in Thailand ? Maybe in the system?
Again, He never got a overstay stamp in passport.
And I know he should have checked his stamp right away. ( His first time in Thailand) lol
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TLDR : Answer Summary
A user describes how their friend mistakenly received a 30-day entry stamp instead of the intended 60-day tourist visa stamp upon entering Thailand and subsequently resolved a 30-day overstay by paying necessary fees without receiving an overstay stamp. They are concerned about potential problems during a future border run, despite having paid up and not having an official overstay stamp. The community responds with advice on correcting the stamp at immigration and indications that if resolved properly, the friend should not face issues re-entering Thailand.
CHECK YOUR STAMP before you walk away from passport control
Tod *********
Okay, Ellie brought up a good point in the mod chat,
If they just gave him a 30 day extension for 1900baht after he paid the "overstay" and didn't correct the stamp then his entry stamp should be a ผ.30 type AND that means that his eVisa tourist visa is still valid so when this current stamp is running out he can go to the border stamp out and then present the eVisa when he comes back in and get 60 days
Good thinking, might have a still valid tourist visa he can use to get back in and get his 60 days IF he is going to stay longer.
He should look at the visa PDF because it will be close I bet,
30 + the 30 days he overstayed, plus the 30 days he got, you're right, it could be the visa will expire before his extension runs out
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Tod *********
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Tod *********
As a rule IF you fly in you can go to any immigration office and get a bad stamp corrected for free.
AND
Unfortunately as a rule, if you stamp in with a bad stamp from a land border, you mostly have to go back there to correct it <- another good reason to check your stamp while you're standing in FRONT of passport control as soon as they give your passport back.
Also I am of the opinion that noticing the stamp was wrong AT the immigration office when he went to get the extension that he'd got 30 days when should have gotten 60 would NOT accrue a fine.
It is a bad stamp NOT an overstay.
Even though the person could be faulted for not checking their stamp sooner 😕, they shouldn't have had to pay anything to get the stamp corrected to the 60 days and then get the extension for 1900baht.
You always get a reciept for that. It's a little blue one.
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Michael *********
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Tod *********
He wouldn't get an overstay stamp because he wasn't overstaying, all he should have done was print out his eVisa and went to any immigration office and they'd have fixed the stamp and let him get a 30 day extension
he showed them the 60 day E-visa and they didn’t care. they said that they don’t go by that. They go by the actual stamp in passport. So he had to pay up. 500 tb for each day for 29 days.
think they seen him coming. Todd is correct and he isn't the first person to get the wrong date stamped in at the airport and then get it fixed at immigration. Always pays to check after you get ya stamp.
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Thai ******
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