Hopefully moving permanently to Thailand asap, I have no Thai address, no Thai bank account, I qualify for retirement visa and the funds are no problem. Which is the best way to achieve this.
This is genuine cry for help so please genuine replies.
Thanks in advance
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TLDR : Answer Summary
To move permanently to Thailand and obtain a retirement visa, first apply for a '90-day single entry Non-Imm-O Retirement visa' from the Thai embassy or consulate in your home country. Upon arrival, ensure you register your accommodation using TM30 within 24 hours. You can then open a Thai bank account with a certificate of residency from immigration. To apply for the '1-year extension of stay permit based on retirement' while in Thailand, you will need to prove financial stability, either by depositing 800,000 THB in your bank account or showing a reliable income of 65,000 THB per month. The funds must remain in your account for specific durations before applying for extensions. Consider consulting an agent for assistance, though this may come with additional costs and long-term dependencies.
90 DAY REPORTING RESOURCES / SERVICES
Use the trusted Thailand 90 Day Reporting Service to get your in-person report done and mailed to you for as low as 375 THB (even if the online system doesn't work for you).
For immediate assistance, contact Thai Visa Centre directly via LINE at @ThaiVisaCentre or Email them.
I have just arrived in Thailand 2 weeks ago from Aus on 90 day E- Visa.
What is process for long term visa in Thai. Do I need to be outside Thailand to apply? Ideally I would to get before I leave as I plan 2 or 3 visits to Thailand next year.
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Elton ******
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Alan *****
Just go to an agent, itās easier & less of a headache.
Very long and almost complete answer. Not mentioned was you can also apply for a Non 'OA' Retirement visa in your home country which is multi entry and valid for 1 year which can be extended for a further year. The big drawback with this visa is that in addition to the financial requirements a Police Clearance Certificate is needed and also Health Insurance which meet the visa specifications.
after he meets the financial requirements, basically that gives him a year in Thailand, doesn't it? You will need that to open a bank account after you get a hotel
a non-o has no medical or criminal background check or insurance requirement. It can be extended for one year every year. The OA (i think) can be extended by 1yr one time, then you're done and it can't be done again inside Thailand.
We are now talking about the most common and persisting misunderstandings regarding the applications for the āretirement visaā and the subsequent āone-year extension of the stay permit based on retirementā
The best way to reach your goals is to show up in Thailand on a ā90-days single entry Non-Imm-O Retirement/over 50 years visaā you have applied for in your home country in the E-Visa online system of the Thai embassy or consulate.
On this visaclass, you will get stamped in on a 90-days stay permit upon entering Thailand.
After having entered Thailand, you need to get registered in your accommodation per TM30 within 24 hours of arrival in the premises. If you have booked a hotel stay, the hotel will automatically register you per TM30 in the System. If you rent or live in a friendās accommodation, the landlord or the friend has to register you.
Right after you got properly registered, you can get a ācertificate of residencyā from Immigration and with this and your passport, you can open a Thai bank account.
Within this 90-days stay permit period, you have plenty of time to arrange for the application to the ā1-year extended stay permit based on retirementā (which people wrongly refer to as a āretirement visaā) Actually, this thing is not a visa. It is an extended stay permit
In order to apply for the ā90-days single entry Non-Imm-O retirement visaā through the online E-visa system at the Royal Thai Embassy of your home country (or also in any other country using the e-visa system) you can use the proof of income of a monthly minimum of equivalent of 65,000 THB, by using your original pension statements or other income documentation.
Or you use a deposit of a minimum of 800,000 THB or the equivalent in your home country currency, or on your home bank account, or on a Thai bank, or just anywhere in the World ā as long as the account is in your sole name
However, for the application inside Thailand for the ā1-year extension of the stay permitā out of the 90-days Non-Imm-O retirement visa, if you are a citizen of a country, whose embassy in Thailand does not issue the āincome affidavitā any more
(which are the embassies of the USA, UK and Australia, Norway, Canada and Belgium - AFAIK)
you would need proof by a ā12 months bank statementā, showing that for the past 12 months, you have been transferring from abroad to your Thai bank account a minimum of 65,000 THB, consecutively month for month
If your embassy still issues a legalized affidavit of income, you can use this method for the financial proof, as long as you can show a monthly income or pension of a minimum of 65,000 THB
For above mentioned citizens, in the first year there is no other way around than depositing a minimum of 800,000 THB in your Thai bank account and use this deposit for the financial proof. For the application to the āone year extension of stay permit based on being over 50/retiredā you need to show a minimum of 800,000 THB in your account and the funds must have been sat there for a minimum of 2 months, and you got the ābank letter of guaranteeā that confirms this.
The alternative would be, if you donāt have that kind of money or are not willing to deposit 800,000 THB in your Thai Bank account, paying an agent a hefty sum (mostly in the range of 32-40,000 THB) to āarrangeā the requirements
The downside is, you will get stuck with the agent for a while. You will need an agent to fix your 800k issue. You will be trapped in the agentās hamster wheel.
To qualify you will need the 800k fronted by the agent the first year and simultaneously deposit 65k per month for 12 months without fail, to qualify the 2nd year for income method. Yet this is not enough to enable you to escape the hamster wheel.
If you use an agent, you will not qualify for the 2nd year as you did not have the money in the first year . . . . So you will need the agent grease the palms again and again.
NOTE: It is income method OR deposit method.
And there is a third method, called the ācombination methodā:
A combination, a mix of income and deposit.
Some immigrations donāt allow the combination method in the first year. And some Immigration want the deposit part to exceed 400,000 THB. The combination method means that the sum of the deposit AND the monthly income exceeds 800,000 THB in one year.
But letās continue with the ānormal methodā (visa issued in your home country, followed by the application to the Extension inside Thailand):
On the day of application to the 1-year extension, the 800,000 THB must have āseasonedā in your account for two months, and this has to be proven with the ābank letter of guaranteeā (rab roong thanakan).
Immigration will only service you if you are properly registered in your accommodation by the TM30.
Every landlord or hotel needs to register you within 24 hours of your arrival in the premises. While hotels do this automatically online, many landlords are not aware of this or havenāt registered their house or rooms in the system. It is your responsibility to ensure that you get properly TM30 registered.
After been issued the ā1-year Extension of Stayā, the 800,000 THB need to remain in the account for 3 more months. After these 3 months, the deposit shall never go under 400,000 THB. And before your application for the next ā1-year Extension of Stayā, a minimum of 800,000 THB must have seasoned in the account for two months, again
When you get issued the ā1-year extension of stayā, you should always buy a re-entry permit for it.
A re-entry permit will keep your 1-year stay permit alive in case you exit Thailand before the expiry of the 1-year stay permit.
A single re-entry permit is 1000 THB on Immigration. A multi re-entry is 3800 THB.
With a multi re-entry permit, you can exit and re-enter as many times as you wish during the whole 1-year stay permit period.
If you prefer to enter Thailand on a tourist visa or visa-exempt, and plan to apply for the āchange of visa typeā to the 90-days Non-Imm-O Retirement Visa on Immigration, because somebody told you that this is possible (which it actually still is), you should kindly note that when banking regulations were tightened by February 2025, the fundamental change that occurred was that you cannot get a bank account opened anymore on a tourist visa.
This means that you would need an agent to circumvent the legal route. I would call that a bad start into your privileged longstay in Thailand.
Regarding all these hassles, itās better to show up in Thailand on a 90-days Non-Imm-O Visa issued in your home country, because on this visa you are allowed to open a bank account.
It helps in opening a bank account in the first week after arrival, with or without the help of an agent, and then 60 days after your 800,000 THB deposit has been transferred into the account, the money will have seasoned for 2 months and you can directly apply for the 1-year Extension of Stay
From up to 30 days (in some places 45 days) before the initial 90-days stay permit expires, you can apply to the ā1-year extension of stay based on retirementā
awesome informative post but it all sounds so complicated and difficult. šµāš«šµāš«
Gilberto ********
Thanks! No wonder you are an All-start contributor. Great service to the community. My idea was to get and ED vista to study the Thai language in Bangkok for one year, and I think I can open the bank acc with that ED visa. Then along that year apply in BKK for a visa based on retirement and 50 plus years . What do you think about this ? Can it be done ?
first of all thank you from me too, I have screenshotted your answer for the future. One question, if you move money to the Thai bank account or your show proof of income, do you have to pay taxes in Thailand? I assume you have already payed taxes on that income in your country of origin... many thanks
that is an enormous amount of info to digest but all makes good sense, thank you. So if I come in on 90 day, then take out a lease on a condo for letās say 12 months, everything should fall into place. The 800,000 I am aware of and is ready to transfer, I believe I also need health insurance? Any recommendations.
great info.Was hoping you could help me. I'm canadian been married to thai citizen 20 years and 2 kids.plan on moving in 2027 to Thailand. Which visa is best for married man. Hoping to leave country 2 times a year to travel different parts of the world.
TrustworthyHummingbird8294 firstly ignore and probably block the dickheads who tell you not to come because you need to ask a question, basically the exact reason these groups exist but hey ho, there are plenty of them (dickheads I mean)
Apply on the website for a 90 day Non-O visa. If you apply for a Non-OA then medical insurance is compulsary
When you enter Thailand you have 90 days to apply for the 12 month extension of stay (retirement visa). During this time you will need to open a bank account which is fine with the Non-O, to transfer your funds from the UK or wherever you hold them and get your 12 month extension
I asked the cost a few weeks ago and was told 1900 baht but its anything from 30k - 50k if you go through an agent. Most people use agents if they havent got, or dont want to tie up 800k for that length of time