Bitcoin

Bitcoin

25,395.56

BTC -0.09%

Ethereum

Ethereum

1,538.99

ETH -0.39%

Binance Coin

Binance Coin

203.89

BNB -0.78%

Tether

Tether

0.93

USDT -0.22%

Cardano

Cardano

0.24

ADA 0.56%

Solana

Solana

18.86

SOL 2.57%

XRP

XRP

0.48

XRP 1.65%

Polkadot

Polkadot

3.87

DOT -1.57%

Shiba Inu

Shiba Inu

0.0000

SHIB 0.08%

Dogecoin

Dogecoin

0.06

DOGE -0.10%

Polygon

Polygon

0.50

MATIC 0.73%

Unisocks

Unisocks

72,440.07

SOCKS -0.39%

DIGG

DIGG

1,732.10

DIGG 2.56%

Bitcoin

Bitcoin

25,395.56

BTC -0.09%

Ethereum

Ethereum

1,538.99

ETH -0.39%

Binance Coin

Binance Coin

203.89

BNB -0.78%

Cardano

Cardano

0.24

ADA 0.56%

Solana

Solana

18.86

SOL 2.57%

Polkadot

Polkadot

3.87

DOT -1.57%

Shiba Inu

Shiba Inu

0.0000

SHIB 0.08%

Polygon

Polygon

0.50

MATIC 0.73%

Unisocks

Unisocks

72,440.07

SOCKS -0.39%

Thailand to start taxing overseas income next year, including from crypto

Any person who resides in Thailand for up to 180 days, would be subject to personal income tax on foreign assets, including crypto.

Thailand’s Revenue Department is planning to impose personal income tax on the foreign revenues, including those made from crypto trading, of any person who resides in Thailand for more than 180 days. 

According to the Sept 19 report from the Bangkok Post, the new rule will take effect on Jan. 1, 2024, with the first tax forms, including overseas income to be delivered in 2025.

Under the previous regulation, only the foreign income, remitted to Thailand in the year of earning, was taxed. The new rule closes this loophole and will oblige an individual to declare any income, earned overseas, even if it wasn’t going to be used in the local economy. A Finance Ministry official explained this logic to journalists:

“The principle of tax is that you must pay tax on income you earn from abroad no matter how you earn it and regardless of the tax year in which the money is earned”. 

According to other Bangkok Post sources, the policy specifically targets residents trading in foreign stock markets through foreign brokerages, cryptocurrency traders, and Thais with offshore accounts. 

Related: Second-largest Thai bank creates $100-million AI fund

In July, Thailand’s Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) obliged digital asset service providers to offer adequate warnings highlighting risks associated with cryptocurrency trading. It has also prohibited any forms of crypto lending services.

However, the trend for tight scrutiny over the crypto industry might change with the recent election of the new prime minister. Real estate tycoon Srettha Thavisin, elected to lead the Thai parliament, participated in a $225 million raise for a crypto-friendly investment management firm XSpring Capital and even issued its own token through XSpring in 2022.

Collect this article as an NFT to preserve this moment in history and show your support for independent journalism in the crypto space.

Magazine: Recursive inscriptions. Bitcoin ‘supercomputer’ and BTC DeFi coming soon

spot_imgspot_img

Dejar respuesta

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

spot_img

Hot Topics

Últimas Noticias

US SEC Commissioner Urges Crypto Firms To Not Give Up The Fight

Pro-Crypto US SEC Commissioner Hester Pierce has urged crypto firms not to back down in the push for regulatory clarity amidst the US Securities and...

XRP Price Down 46% Since July 2023 But Liquidity Up 50%, What This Means For The Token

Latest data from Kaiko, a blockchain analytics firm, reveals that while XRP prices are down 46% from July 2023 highs, its liquidity has significantly improved in...