Paid from my bank account with PEA and the Water people who debt my account with no problem for a couple decades. BTW I have an account just for that and top it up as required.
great Visa and the Ranking Immigration Officet took great care of me! My point is some staff never read the "memo" So glad I bought the for 50K for 10 years with multiple exit reentry
I used a "New LTR Visa" recently at Nong khai and going in and out there were minor problems with Immagration not understanding how it works and a supervisor had to be called both exiting and entering and that "New Visa " is about two years old. Even Suvarnabhumi took a few months.
Recently I entered on a new type visa, at a land entry point, and the IO had missed the memo and it was a lot of fun. There was three possible dates they could stamp in my passport as expiration dates , five year review, the visa experation date, or my passport expiration date. The IO was worried he would get it wrong and they had a conference holding up on long line then wanted to chat about where I lived as he knew the area where I live. Most of the people were doing a border bounce so I was not their normal person BTW a young female IO knew what she was doing and picked the right date.
actually he is wrong! My wife passed in Thailand with joint accounts with me in Thailand and the USA. I was not denied access at any time! Yes, the Banks knew she passed.
FYI the below information is for the USA and posters need to research and clearly state if they only taking about their home country. In my case I actually experienced the passing of a joint account holder in two countries and based my reply on actual experience.
Most joint bank or credit union accounts are held with “rights of survivorship.” This means that when one account owner dies, the money passes to the surviving owner, or equally to the rest of the owners if there are multiple people on the account. Or, the account could be titled as “tenants in common.” This means that after the death of one of the owners, that person’s share of the account passes to their heirs, either as described in their will or per their state’s laws.
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporate (FDIC) and National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) have detailed information about how federal deposit insurance applies to bank and credit union accounts after the death of a joint account holder. See the FDIC’s online guide and the NCUA’s questions and answers for more information.
The money in joint accounts belongs to both owners. Either person can withdraw or spend the money at will — even if they weren't the one to deposit the funds. The bank makes no distinction between money deposited by one person or the other, making a joint account useful for handling shared expenses.
know a guy who brought meant for years until he was caught, he said never again. Lost the meat and he was entered into the computer however forget if he was also fined.