@Teatowel
First off there is a DTA between Australia and Thailand.....
I have been seriously thinking about retiring to Thailand but the more I find out about the tax implications the more turned off by the idea I am. If I am in Thailand more than 180 days I am considered a tax resident which means even if I dont have to pay any tax I will still have to put in a return. Â
I am not sure why you think you have to submit a tax return if you have no Thai income?? Most of the foreigners, with a foreign income, do not do the tax return unless there are some benefits.
If I settle down in one place for too long Australia will also see me as a non resident and tax paid on rental income will go up to the full rate. Bank interest goes down to 10% but no doubt Thailand will just tax me extra on that to make up the difference.  If I sell my place here and just have bank interest then it will be taxed at 10% but again Thailand will probably want a cut too.
Yeah there is a choice to be made here, but Thailand will not ask a cut over your interest income unless you did not pay in Australia and if you fill in a tax return in Thailand (see above)
I seriously feel like a financial prisoner in a sh*tty system I don't even want to be in. All I want to do is be free. I've worked my whole life and just want to relax and enjoy life now but I have to worry about this BS.  And now it's all changing in Thailand and will be even worse.  I hear so many people talking about how they've moved there for a better life but how's it working out for you regarding taxes??
Nothing is changing in Thailand unless you make a fortune and do not pay taxes in your home country......so it is less dramatic as you say it..
The events in Australia you mentioned in paragraph 2 related to the tax going up in A because of you being a non resident are unavoidable. You mention a solution in the same paragraph so it will be your choice.
I am retired, worked in Thailand and regionally (based in Thailand) since 2000. I get a state allowance (taxed) from my home country and a small pension (tax free)
also from my home country. in Thailand I enrolled in Social Security which gave me a one time lump sum (small, tax free) at my retirement and a one time lump sum from my provident fund (taxed). During the time I worked I did the annual tax return as it has some deductions that I could use. Since my retirement I have not submitted and will not submit a tax return.
Only people that have an income from work in Thailand HAVE TO fill in the tax return or suffer a fine of 2,000 thb, again a choice to make, a calculated choice...
So it is not all misery, you just need to be informed before you make a decision.
Key point is does your home country have a DTA with Thailand, that simplifies things enormously.
Then you have personal decisions to make.....and sometimes it hurts to be better off...
Pay more taxed in A to live in T at considerable lower living costs, better weather, friendlier people and you name it....
Quote; And in life, it is all about choices we make. And how the direction of our lives comes down to the choices we choose