Andrew ******
This is a summary of
Andrew ******
's contributions to the platform. They have posed 1 questions and added 36 comments.

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Andrew *******
Thanks for the suggestion, but I don't have a UK motorbike licence and I lost my UK car licence when I had my wallet stolen on a beach in China years ago. Hence trying to renew the Thai licence. :) I was also thinking about trying to get the residence certificate from the UK embassy, but that would mean a special trip to BK and the requirements didn't seem any less onerous (besides the added expense).
Andrew *******
I'm also interested in this (and have been trying to chat with a couple of visa agencies in CM about it recently). As far as I can tell, although
@Robert ******
seems to be correct from the perspective of the Department of Land Transport, the main sticking point seems to be getting the residence certificate on a short-term stay/visa-exempt entry (at least in CM - I know some immigration offices elsewhere are perhaps more flexible).

One of the visa agencies in CM told me today that it's necessary to have a visa of "more than 30 days" to get the residence certificate (their words, not mine - some info may have been lost in translation), and I've read elsewhere about generally needing an apartment contract longer than 3 months. So this might be the real issue for renewing a licence during a short-term stay. I haven't yet been able to figure out whether there's a solution to that?

(My situation is that my first two-year Thai licence expired a couple of months ago and I'd like to renew it so I can drive legally while I'm visiting CM next month for a couple of weeks on an exemption (or SETV, if necessary)).
Andrew *******
So you can renew it up to one year after expiry of the date on the licence with no issues? What about driving during that time - I assume you'll be fined if you get pulled over and show them the expired licence?
Andrew *******
But that's 180 RM total, right? For the visa fee (150 RM?) plus the agent's fee? I remember paying 190 RM total - that's what I mean. The consulate is hardly in a convenient part of town either, so I'm not sure why anyone would bother not using an agent in Penang.
Andrew *******
@T**
, isn't it normal to use an agent in Penang? Unless the price increased a lot recently, why would anyone want to make two return trips to the consulate (4x 8-9 RM in a Grab?) and waste several hours there rather than just spend the 40 RM or whatever and let someone else deal with it? Paperwork or not, it seems a no-brainer.
Andrew *******
In principle, yes, but I think it would depend on what time your flight is in the morning. If it's at 1am, sure. If it's at 7am and you need to go to the check-in desk first, which doesn't open until 2-3 hrs before the flight, I think you wouldn't be able to pass immigration without the boarding pass. In that case I'd just rely on the one-day grace period.
Andrew *******
So...why wouldn't that work? If the problem is just that his current place can't do it because the owner isn't there.
Andrew *******
Can't you just book a hotel for a night or two, get whatever the piece of paper is that proves you're staying there, and then extend the tourist visa with that?
Andrew *******
It's almost certainly not a big deal - I'm quite sure it just means that they're checking that you have the stuff you do have (which they presumably don't know about). I guess it depends on the airline/airport, but I don't remember the last time I flew within SEA where I didn't need to go to the check-in counter (and occasionally show them a return ticket or argue about that a bit when I didn't have one).
Andrew *******
That's basically just the entire group. 90% of the Q's are A'd pretty F.