TM30 skjema

Eie, leie, skatt, flytting, husbygging
Kolami
Innlegg: 1642
Registrert: 21 okt 2017, 14:05

#11

Phay skrev: 12 jul 2019, 22:09 Om ikke har immigration innen rimelig avstand, så er det lokale politiet en skal henvende seg til. De gjør det samme arbeidet med å ta kopi av passet, og så får de noen 100 bahter for jobben, og jeg har ett ark med statement at jeg har registert meg hos politiet å vise om jeg blir spurt når jeg forlater landet.
hehe..det er det somme som å gå på fisketur...vettet til en thai kan være innen rimelig avstand hvis man er ekspert :) Det gjelder å få den slappe fisken til å bite på agnet...200 bath under bordet fikser det..det betaler for iskaffe og kjeks--
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Phay
Innlegg: 4570
Registrert: 21 okt 2017, 00:24
Sted: Milkway

#12

Kolami skrev: 13 jul 2019, 10:09 hehe..det er det somme som å gå på fisketur...vettet til en thai kan være innen rimelig avstand hvis man er ekspert :) Det gjelder å få den slappe fisken til å bite på agnet...200 bath under bordet fikser det..det betaler for iskaffe og kjeks--
Ikke de gutta her, jeg får kvittering selvfølgelig med stempel, som jeg har som vedlegg ved siden av i tilfelle.
🌞
chelsea
Innlegg: 1802
Registrert: 24 okt 2017, 10:43
Sted: Bangkok

#13

Thailand keeping track of foreigners – the TM30 reporting form

The TM30 reporting procedure is a Thai immigration requirement. The form is designed to assist keeping track of foreigners – tourists and expats – whilst in Thailand. It must be completed by the owner or landlord to report the stay of guests within 24 hours of their arrival.

As with many things in Thailand the enforcement will not be uniformly applied and some people may get away without reporting, maybe for years. But if Immigration do check, and you haven’t been doing the required reporting, then fines and other immigration problems will follow.

We’ve tried to simplify the TM30 to these main points f you’re staying at a hotel, the hotel will do the registration for you after you’ve checked in. But it also applies to the following…

If you own and live in a home in Thailand
If you’re staying with a Thai friend
If you’re staying a property that isn’t properly licensed
The TM30 form is designed to report foreigners locations during their short or long-term stay in Thailand. If you are staying in a condo or apartment block, the owner must register your stay.

The rationale from the Thai government is that the TM30 provides a way to monitor the ‘goodies’ but also the ‘baddies’, in the hope of deterring foreign criminals to choose Thailand as a place to hide out.

The law governing the TM30 form was introduced a long time with the Hotel Act of 2005, but has since expanded beyond hotels to cover landlords owning property or apartments that are not classified as hotels. Authorities believed this was necessary to include the rental of condos and other unlicensed premises rented out to paying guests, such as room-sharing apps like AirBnB. The rules also apply to Thais hosting foreigners.

The report must be completed by hotels, serviced apartments or by landlords of private properties. It is the landlord’s responsibility to submit the TM30.

If you are staying in a friend’s house, your friend still needs to submit the TM30 form. The same applies to a foreigner married to a Thai and carries a Thai visa.

If you’re an expat living permanently in Thailand and travel to other places within the country – any other address other than your usual home address – you need to inform immigration once you’ve returned
This is what you need to fill in a TM30…

Copy of your departure card
Copy of your passport photo page
Copy of your most recent visa stamp page
The landlord or reporting person needs…

Copy of the title deed to their property
Copy of the rental contract
The TM30 is not the same as 90 day reporting.

Online registration is available HERE, when it’s working. You need to register a username and password then you just login whenever you need to. The fine for not reporting is 1,600 Baht per person.

To protect yourself, as a tenant or guest, you should ask your landlord or accommodation owner if you have already been registered.
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riflefish
Innlegg: 4645
Registrert: 21 okt 2017, 06:01
Sted: ved havet

#14

chelsea skrev: 13 jul 2019, 14:28 Thailand keeping track of foreigners – the TM30 reporting form

The TM30 reporting procedure is a Thai immigration requirement. The form is designed to assist keeping track of foreigners – tourists and expats – whilst in Thailand. It must be completed by the owner or landlord to report the stay of guests within 24 hours of their arrival.

As with many things in Thailand the enforcement will not be uniformly applied and some people may get away without reporting, maybe for years. But if Immigration do check, and you haven’t been doing the required reporting, then fines and other immigration problems will follow.

We’ve tried to simplify the TM30 to these main points f you’re staying at a hotel, the hotel will do the registration for you after you’ve checked in. But it also applies to the following…

If you own and live in a home in Thailand
If you’re staying with a Thai friend
If you’re staying a property that isn’t properly licensed
The TM30 form is designed to report foreigners locations during their short or long-term stay in Thailand. If you are staying in a condo or apartment block, the owner must register your stay.

The rationale from the Thai government is that the TM30 provides a way to monitor the ‘goodies’ but also the ‘baddies’, in the hope of deterring foreign criminals to choose Thailand as a place to hide out.

The law governing the TM30 form was introduced a long time with the Hotel Act of 2005, but has since expanded beyond hotels to cover landlords owning property or apartments that are not classified as hotels. Authorities believed this was necessary to include the rental of condos and other unlicensed premises rented out to paying guests, such as room-sharing apps like AirBnB. The rules also apply to Thais hosting foreigners.

The report must be completed by hotels, serviced apartments or by landlords of private properties. It is the landlord’s responsibility to submit the TM30.

If you are staying in a friend’s house, your friend still needs to submit the TM30 form. The same applies to a foreigner married to a Thai and carries a Thai visa.

If you’re an expat living permanently in Thailand and travel to other places within the country – any other address other than your usual home address – you need to inform immigration once you’ve returned
This is what you need to fill in a TM30…

Copy of your departure card
Copy of your passport photo page
Copy of your most recent visa stamp page
The landlord or reporting person needs…

Copy of the title deed to their property
Copy of the rental contract
The TM30 is not the same as 90 day reporting.

Online registration is available HERE, when it’s working. You need to register a username and password then you just login whenever you need to. The fine for not reporting is 1,600 Baht per person.

To protect yourself, as a tenant or guest, you should ask your landlord or accommodation owner if you have already been registered.
du slapp billig unna du da med « 800» bath i
bot,
kansje huseier også fikk 800 baht!,
🙄😂
Det perfekte liv er å ikke jakte på det perfekte liv. :roll:
Kolami
Innlegg: 1642
Registrert: 21 okt 2017, 14:05

#15

riflefish skrev: 13 jul 2019, 15:33 du slapp billig unna du da med « 800» bath i
bot,
kansje huseier også fikk 800 baht!,
🙄😂
leietaker betaler halve boten til huseier? :?
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riflefish
Innlegg: 4645
Registrert: 21 okt 2017, 06:01
Sted: ved havet

#16

Kolami skrev: 13 jul 2019, 15:42 leietaker betaler halve boten til huseier? :?
😂


vel,

et åpent spørsmål ,

men chelsee fikk dog ei bot for dette


på 800 baht😳
Det perfekte liv er å ikke jakte på det perfekte liv. :roll:
Asiagirl
Innlegg: 197
Registrert: 21 okt 2017, 20:52

#17

I år leier vi leiligheten til av en kollega av min mann. Leilighetskomplekset har mange leiligheter som leies ut på div. utleie steder, bl.a booking.com.
På kontoret der, tok de kopi av passene våre, når vi kom. Lurte på om de rapporterte det videre. Men de skjønte ikke hva jeg mente. Eier av leiligheten sa at de ønsker å vite hvem som er der, pga sikkerhet. Han Visste ikke om at man må rapportere hvor man bor, når man ikke bor på hotell ( jeg informerte han om reglene så han var klar om det, når andre i familien hans senere skulle bruke leiligheten )

Uansett, vi troppet opp på immigration (Bluport) få timer etter ankomst i Hua Hin. Der fikk jeg beskjed om at det var totalt unødvendig, trengte ikke gjøre det. Jeg insisterte på at vi ønsket å registrere oss, men nei det var ikke noe å tenke på. Regelen var slik, ja... men egentlig eier som skulle rapportere dette inn. Etter litt frem og tilbake, måtte jeg gi opp. Hyggelig og imøtekommende offiser. Hva skal man gjøre når de insisterer på at jeg ikke skal registrere oss??
Fikk beskjed om at det kan bli en liten bot om man blir tatt, men det går bra....Men likevel skulle jeg ikke gjøre noe med rapportering.

Kontaktet han jeg leide hus av tidligere, som jobber med utleie/salg av hus her. Han mente at kontoret her rapporterer dette inn, da de tok passkopier, og at det er trafikk av utleie her også.
Uansett hva man tror og synes, håper jeg det går greit likevel. Jeg kunne ikke krangle med offiser på immigration for å registrert oppholdet, det hadde ikke gått i min favør uansett...
Antar de tar lettere på dette her i Hua Hin, foreløpig ihvertfall.
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Phay
Innlegg: 4570
Registrert: 21 okt 2017, 00:24
Sted: Milkway

#18

[mention]Asiagirl[/mention]

Som loven er, så er det huseier ene og alene ansvarlig for at det blir gjort. Vi kan ikke bli tatt for noe slikt, eller bøtelagt. Men, en hører jo så mangt at folk blir stoppet og spurt hvor har du vært, og da er det greit å ha leiekontrakten med seg, eller kvitteringer på overnatting tilgjengelig.
🌞
chelsea
Innlegg: 1802
Registrert: 24 okt 2017, 10:43
Sted: Bangkok

#19

hmmmmmm sier jeg
Sist redigert av chelsea den 14 jul 2019, 16:52, redigert 1 gang totalt.
Asiagirl
Innlegg: 197
Registrert: 21 okt 2017, 20:52

#20

Phay skrev: 14 jul 2019, 08:05 @Asiagirl

Som loven er, så er det huseier ene og alene ansvarlig for at det blir gjort. Vi kan ikke bli tatt for noe slikt, eller bøtelagt. Men, en hører jo så mangt at folk blir stoppet og spurt hvor har du vært, og da er det greit å ha leiekontrakten med seg, eller kvitteringer på overnatting tilgjengelig.
Tusen Takk Phay. Jeg har hverken leiekontrakt eller kvittering siden dette er venner (kollega). Men om det skulle være noe får jeg bare kontakte dem.
Skal i allefall gi dem beskjed, så de er klar over dette til senere.
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