Steuerresidenz in Thailand: Der 180-Tage-Test

180-Tage-Schwelle

Geprüft von: BorderLog RedaktionZuletzt geprüft:
180
Tage bis zur Residenz
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Messzeitraum
185
Sichere Tage pro Jahr

Wie die 180-Tage-Regel in Thailand funktioniert

Thailand uses a 180 day threshold per calendar year. Since 2024, overseas income remitted to Thailand is taxable for residents.

Kalenderjahr (Januar bis Dezember). Das bedeutet, dass dein Tageszähler am 1. Januar zurückgesetzt wird. Tage aus dem Vorjahr werden nicht übertragen.

Wenn du 180 Tage überschreitest, kann Thailand dein weltweites Einkommen als Steuerresident besteuern. Die genauen Folgen hängen von deiner persönlichen Situation, geltenden Doppelbesteuerungsabkommen und der Art des Einkommens ab.

Wie die Zählung funktioniert

Thai tax residency turns on a single threshold: spend 180 days or more in Thailand in a calendar year (aggregate, not continuous) and you are resident. As a resident, you pay Thai tax on Thai source income, plus on foreign source income to the extent the remittance rules introduced in 2024 bring it into the Thai tax base.

Was als Tag gilt

Any day of presence in Thailand counts toward the total, arrival and departure days included, and the count resets each calendar year.

Was über die Tageszählung hinausgeht

Thailand does not run a separate residency test based on domicile or ties; the 180 day count is the sole criterion. Stay below 180 days and you are non resident, taxed only on Thai source income.

Besondere Steuerregelungen

The Long-Term Resident (LTR) visa is the headline product. It grants a 10 year stay and a flat 17% personal income tax rate for qualifying highly skilled professionals, and it exempts foreign source income earned outside Thailand from Thai tax under specific conditions. Other long stay visas (Elite, retirement) are immigration products only and do not change your tax position on their own.

Doppelbesteuerungsabkommen

Thailand has tax treaties with most major economies. They can credit foreign tax paid against Thai tax on the same remitted foreign source income, which is the main relief on offer.

Häufig gestellte Fragen

What changed with foreign income in 2024?

From 1 January 2024, foreign source income earned by Thai tax residents is taxable in Thailand once it is remitted, no matter when the remittance happens. The old rule, which exempted income remitted in a later year than it was earned, is gone. Subsequent guidance has kept refining the detail, so check with an adviser for the current treatment of your income types.

Does the LTR visa exempt foreign income from Thai tax?

Qualifying LTR visa holders (Wealthy Global Citizens, Wealthy Pensioners, and Work-from-Thailand Professionals among them) are exempt from Thai tax on foreign source income earned abroad and brought into Thailand, subject to the conditions attached to each category.

Does the Thailand Elite visa make me tax resident?

No. The Elite visa is purely an immigration scheme and does not change your tax position. Thai tax residency is decided separately by the 180 day rule.

Offizielle Quelle: https://www.rd.go.th/english/

Verfolge deine Tage in Thailand

BorderLog zählt deine Tage automatisch und warnt dich, bevor du die 180-Tage-Schwelle erreichst.

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Dies ist keine Steuerberatung
Steuerresidenz-Regeln sind komplex und ändern sich häufig. Diese Seite enthält nur allgemeine Informationen. Wende dich für Ratschläge zu deiner konkreten Situation immer an einen qualifizierten Steuerberater.

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