Buriram Expats
Buriram Province - General Category => Isaan Thai Visa => Topic started by: lindegaard on May 03, 2018, 04:06:30 PM
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Hello everyone
Danish citizen with 1 child (now 21of age), who last year, after some struggle with authorities (took almost 2 years, due to wrong information from the embassy in Denmark, a not so cooperative Amphu in rural Thailand and so on) finally got her Thai citizenship, ID card and passport, and written in to the tambien baan.
Question is this:
How does one travel in to LOS with the Thai passport, so that she don't need a visa, and can stay longer than the 30 day's given?
We have been told by the Embassy here in Denmark this guideline:
use the Thai passport from beginning to end, then when asked for VISA at airline checkin, show them the Danish passport.
upon arrival in DK you get stamp in Thai passport for entering, again just show them that you are elligable to enter by showing presenting the Danish passport.
However, one has been misslead or otherwise wrongly told before, so I was wandering if anyone here has any experience from the UK, (since none really at the Danish community at another forum, has a up to date experience),of a recent date, as to how it is best worked about.
Also, she had the passport issued in LOS, last summer, but since she had entered on the Danish passport, she did'nt think about anything else than she had to leave on that passport. She should offcourse have had a stamp in the Thai passport also.
Best regards
BuddhaNoi
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She should exit and enter Denmark on her Danish passport. Enter and exit Thailand on her Thai passport.
When checking in with the airlines, if asked about visa, show both passports.
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Hello Starman,
Thanks for that quick reply.
This was also my best guess of a way to do it.
But when the embassy says differently, one can only become confused.
Is this a certified way of doing it? did you find that information somewhere, so that one can refer to a specific "?".
The funny thing is that even the guideline from the police at CPH airport is different depending on the person you talk to.
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That is what my daughter did when we visited England 17 months ago.
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@Starman
Ok. our is vice versa, going from DK to TH, but should in reality be the same.
Do you have a reference or anything else, or did you ust try your way around?
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I did the same with my daughter when visiting my parents in Belgium : at the check-in at the airport show both, exit Thailand with Thai passpoort and enter Belgium of any other land in the world with Belgian passport. Do not ask bureaucrats in embassies ... they will always confuse you ...
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I agree 100% with Starman and dundeemk... Leave the country you are in with the passport you carry for that country. Just to add to confusion though as I have a friend taking his 50/50 Thai/Ozy child out of Thailand for the first time. He has all the paperwork as paternal father including dual passports Thai/Oz etc. Separated although still speaks with the ex and his daughter lives with him most of the time. When exiting Thailand can immigration give you a hard time travelling alone with your child without some sort of written consent from her mother or a telephone call to her to agree with letting you through Immigration? I'm just considering the original OP's question when he leaves Thailand later. Does Immigration put a stamp of arrival into the Kingdom into a Thai Passport (I don't know)? I'm wondering what issues he may have when exiting with a child and requiring the mothers consent if any. I presume the mother is not travelling with them.
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When I travelled with my daughter I had a letter signed by my wife that consented to us travelling together.
I was never asked for it. No harm in getting one anyway.
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I spoke with the ministry of foreign affairs here in Denmark earlier today to be completely sure of the guideline.
I asked them the question; How do one travel to TH with dual citizenship (when holding both thai and danish passport)
He answered without hesitation that she should travel with her Thai passport throughout the trip, and hereby not do it the way we have discussed about being the most logical way here in the thread.
When you check in at the counter in Thailand (heading back home), then you show them both passports, the danish passport being your "visa" or a prove that you allowed to enter the country without one.
I think this is a matter of "you do what works for you", but this is the way I believe it is supposed to be done since that is way that the ministry of foreign affiars, the thai embassy and the airport police say you should do it.
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I agree 100% with Starman and dundeemk... Leave the country you are in with the passport you carry for that country. Just to add to confusion though as I have a friend taking his 50/50 Thai/Ozy child out of Thailand for the first time. He has all the paperwork as paternal father including dual passports Thai/Oz etc. Separated although still speaks with the ex and his daughter lives with him most of the time. When exiting Thailand can immigration give you a hard time travelling alone with your child without some sort of written consent from her mother or a telephone call to her to agree with letting you through Immigration? I'm just considering the original OP's question when he leaves Thailand later. Does Immigration put a stamp of arrival into the Kingdom into a Thai Passport (I don't know)? I'm wondering what issues he may have when exiting with a child and requiring the mothers consent if any. I presume the mother is not travelling with them.
Immigration in Thailand as far as I know do stamp arrival into a Thai passport when you arrive in Thailand, it states the date of arrival. and the same when you leave the country.
For the last part of your question, whether or not there will be any issues with the mother giving consent;
My daughter is travelling alone (she is 21), but has just last year obtained her dual citizenship.
Her mother (my ex wife) lives here in Denmark, and I have travelled before with my daughter to thailand, where we had no issues going in or leaving the country without having consent form her mother.
But that was when she was aprox. 11 years old and she only had her danish passport, so I wouldn't know if that would make a difference.
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I spoke with the ministry of foreign affairs here in Denmark earlier today to be completely sure of the guideline.
I asked them the question; How do one travel to TH with dual citizenship (when holding both thai and danish passport)
He answered without hesitation that she should travel with her Thai passport throughout the trip, and hereby not do it the way we have discussed about being the most logical way here in the thread.
When you check in at the counter in Thailand (heading back home), then you show them both passports, the danish passport being your "visa" or a prove that you allowed to enter the country without one.
I think this is a matter of "you do what works for you", but this is the way I believe it is supposed to be done since that is way that the ministry of foreign affiars, the thai embassy and the airport police say you should do it.
How can your daughter complete her travels on Thai Passport if she has no visa for Denmark?
The general rule is that you enter and leave a country on the same Passport - obviously, your daughter can only enter Denmark on her Danish passports, therefore she should leave on it.
Accepting that immigration are a different kettle of fish to the airlines, I doubt that an airline would board her in Bangkok on Thai Passport that has no visa in it.
Starman and Croc?s advice works...... your MOFA?s doesn?t.
If you want a 5th opinion I suggest you post the question on Thai Visa.com and see what Ubon Joe says.....he is rarely wrong.
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@CO-CO
she completes it in DK, as the passport police said, by simply presenting both passports upon arrival, then you get an entry stamp in the Thai passport.
You say that Starman's way works.. so why question how she completes her travel on Thai passport if no visa?
Starman gives the answer: When checking in with the airlines, if asked about visa, show both passports
But I see what you mean when you point to the "general", point taken, and this is exactly what I'm after with my thread, if there is a general rule, then why is'nt it stated more clearly.
I have been looking and searching here and there, and can't seem to find it written.. therefor I was curious to hear if others had looked into it like me, probably not, or just went on to travel and find out the hard way if questioned by border police.
It could be fun to hear Ubon Joe's opinion, maybe he can even point me to a written document with guidelines for this.
I am member on Thai visa too, and was almost going to post in there at the same time earlier.
To everyone, thanx for your sharing in this thread and have a nice summer
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My wife have have 2 passport Icelandic and Thai. She show the airline and passport control in Copenhagen the Icelandic passport but arrive and exit LOS with Thai passport. When go back show airline Icelandic passport or both if them want to.
No problem.
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Tak Steini
How did you come about that then? did you read it somewhere ? thats the way I first thought to do it.
have this question then: does she get her Thai passport stamped in CPH? Because Im told that the Thai officials can be pretty keen on seing this upon arrival ?
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No stamp in CPH. Only show Icelandic passport. Go out of DK as Icelandic and arrive LOS as Thai. Think she talk to other Thai people with Dual citizenship.
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@CO-CO
in reply to:
Accepting that immigration are a different kettle of fish to the airlines, I doubt that an airline would board her in Bangkok on Thai Passport that has no visa in it.
My EX does not have a VISA for Denmark in her Passport, she has been here longer than 7 years, and therefor only has to carry a residence/workpermit creditcard type with photo which she then just shows at checkin. In the beginning they did question it, but since she was travelling with me, being on active duty (crew) on the flight she did not have a problem, nor has she later on when travelling without me (we are divorced), so therefor I would say that since they do accept the residence card, why woul'nt they accept a legit passport?
I really do see the logic in your reply, only : is there somewhere to find the legit way written officially, same as when I wan't to bring, say Morphin as a painkiller with me for a good 30 days use (enough to knock out an army, in my case), I really wan't to see the exact written text on the subject, and not just do what some was lucky with, if you know what I mean, not that the different ways mentioned is wrong
Guess it's just me wanting to do it by the book :)
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3 children dual nationality.
Always leave Thailand on Thai passport and return on it. Enter non Asean country on European passport No visa required.
When checking in to airline, show European passport (which satisfies them re visa or no visa etc_) Then put European passport away until you arrive at destination. DO NOT proffer both passports to immigration. That just confuses them.