Leave the furniture behind. Leave as much as you can behind and buy it here.
Hire a company that specialises. They will likely include a small facilitation fee for customs and even if you are relocating some items will still be dutiable. Do not even bother with alcohol. Drink it before you leave.
not marketing, just adding what I thought. The original thought was wrong but the IRS post is clear - at least as clear as anything from the IRS can be. Seems you’re offended for some reason.
I was wrong but still - if you’re high net worth / salary it is expense. All assets are marked to market and deemed sold. You’ll then pay capital gains on all that.
So if you’re retired and not high worth the 120k exclusion is more than enough to warrant not bothering with changing citizenship. Not too mention the cost of obtaining another one. And getting Thai citizenship? Highly unlikely. Purchase an island citizenship? If they aren’t on Thailand’s list allowing visas that would be a spectacular self own.
It’s expensive and only makes sense if
A. Your insanely wealthy (e.g. the fb billionaire who’s taken Singapore citizenship)
B. You have enough lawyers and offshore shell corporations to hide a lot of your assets
yes. They adjust the exclusion each year. About the only passport you can get without a lot of expense is an Irish passport based on parent/grandparent Irish connections (unless they’ve tightened it). So at 120k, it’s not to bad as a retiree. And the FATCA thing is a minor nuisance. I basically cut and paste it each year.
that could be wrong but either way - it’s not cheap and you’ll need citizenship elsewhere. With the 90k exclusion in place most retired expats don’t have to pay any tax as long as they don’t exceed the exclusion. After that it starts at top rate (thanks Bush)