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Getting My Money Out From Thailand To Uk Or Ireland
18 Answers
i hope to sell my condo in thailnd very soon and from the sale i will have approx 3,000,000 thai baht ( £69,000.00 ) the rates are fluxuating around 44 baht to the pound , i dont know if pound will get stronger or weaker in next few months but i want to transfer this money back to uk or even to ireland , i am both uk and irish citizen. i want to put it against a deposit for a mortgage hopefully in future .
how is the best easiest way to get it back without taking a big hit on charges/fees etc .
if gbp falls more to 43/42 then i get more value on my thai baht ?
how is the best easiest way to get it back without taking a big hit on charges/fees etc .
if gbp falls more to 43/42 then i get more value on my thai baht ?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by dieseldick. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.My understanding is that foreign nationals are not allowed by law to own property in Thailand. I believe that this can be circumvented to some extent where a company owns the property.
Occasionally there are stories in the UK press (mostly concerning men) who believe that they are purchasing property in Thailand – whereas in reality their Thai girlfriend/family own the property.
Occasionally there are stories in the UK press (mostly concerning men) who believe that they are purchasing property in Thailand – whereas in reality their Thai girlfriend/family own the property.
This information may be out of date, but I am quoting a situation which happened to some friends of mine who returned to the UK after many years abroad, where they owned a house. This was sold in order to buy somewhere in UK. They then had to repatriate the money. They tried to do this after arriving in UK. Unfortunately, they found that if the money had arrived before they did, it could have been held in a deposit account without problems. BUT, as the money was to arrive after they did, it was to incur income tax, as if they had earned it in UK after their arrival. They tried all sorts of arguments with the tax authorities, to no avail. Then, rather than facing losing a third of the sale price, they decided to leave the money abroad, and rent a (costly) house here. The problem got so bad that they eventually decided to return to the other country.
diesel,
https:/ /www.mo neycorp .com/uk /
I have used this company on a few occasions and they were very efficient.
I can't see why you can't transfer your money directly from your Thai bank into a UK bank, using this company.
What's the problem?
https:/
I have used this company on a few occasions and they were very efficient.
I can't see why you can't transfer your money directly from your Thai bank into a UK bank, using this company.
What's the problem?
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