Leaving Thailand after months-long overstay (can't pay fine)









up vote
77
down vote

favorite
12












I missed my plane after staying just a couple weeks in Thailand and stayed with my girlfriend. I ended up out of money and no ticket home. I keep hearing about staying a day over here, but nothing about a few months over. I have stayed here for 6 months, so overstayed by about 5 months now.



I never had a visa, because I was only going to stay for a couple of weeks. Now I finally was able to get a ticket home and I'm not sure how to go about it.



I barely got enough money for a ticket and can't pay the fine, which I am sure is 20,000 baht by now.



What is there for me to do?










share|improve this question



















  • 58




    Let us know when you got out of Thailand. Else we can place a banner around your user profile [DETAINED]. Good luck.
    – Patrick Hofman
    Jun 13 '16 at 12:33







  • 74




    Although it's a minor issue, I'm struggling to understand how a missed plane turned into multi-month over stay. You might reconsider using that as your excuse.
    – NotMe
    Jun 13 '16 at 19:44






  • 38




    @NotMe It may have started with a non-refundable non-changeable ticket and insufficient funds to buy a replacement. At that point belak should have immediately contacted their country's consulate or embassy to ask for help and advice.
    – Patricia Shanahan
    Jun 13 '16 at 21:50






  • 19




    Also note that you are not allowed to work in Thailand, like most countries, on a tourist visa. You would need some sort of Thai work permit for that. Working illegally could greatly compound your problems, plus you'd be working for the kind of people who hire illegal workers, which could leave you with little recourse if things go south.
    – Zach Lipton
    Jun 14 '16 at 5:26






  • 17




    So I got to the airport and paid the fine and signed some papers and that was it... booted for a year, but that was it... last minute I got a loan for the fine... I'm sure it would've been different had I not had the fine money... thanks for all the info people
    – belak
    Aug 5 '16 at 3:35














up vote
77
down vote

favorite
12












I missed my plane after staying just a couple weeks in Thailand and stayed with my girlfriend. I ended up out of money and no ticket home. I keep hearing about staying a day over here, but nothing about a few months over. I have stayed here for 6 months, so overstayed by about 5 months now.



I never had a visa, because I was only going to stay for a couple of weeks. Now I finally was able to get a ticket home and I'm not sure how to go about it.



I barely got enough money for a ticket and can't pay the fine, which I am sure is 20,000 baht by now.



What is there for me to do?










share|improve this question



















  • 58




    Let us know when you got out of Thailand. Else we can place a banner around your user profile [DETAINED]. Good luck.
    – Patrick Hofman
    Jun 13 '16 at 12:33







  • 74




    Although it's a minor issue, I'm struggling to understand how a missed plane turned into multi-month over stay. You might reconsider using that as your excuse.
    – NotMe
    Jun 13 '16 at 19:44






  • 38




    @NotMe It may have started with a non-refundable non-changeable ticket and insufficient funds to buy a replacement. At that point belak should have immediately contacted their country's consulate or embassy to ask for help and advice.
    – Patricia Shanahan
    Jun 13 '16 at 21:50






  • 19




    Also note that you are not allowed to work in Thailand, like most countries, on a tourist visa. You would need some sort of Thai work permit for that. Working illegally could greatly compound your problems, plus you'd be working for the kind of people who hire illegal workers, which could leave you with little recourse if things go south.
    – Zach Lipton
    Jun 14 '16 at 5:26






  • 17




    So I got to the airport and paid the fine and signed some papers and that was it... booted for a year, but that was it... last minute I got a loan for the fine... I'm sure it would've been different had I not had the fine money... thanks for all the info people
    – belak
    Aug 5 '16 at 3:35












up vote
77
down vote

favorite
12









up vote
77
down vote

favorite
12






12





I missed my plane after staying just a couple weeks in Thailand and stayed with my girlfriend. I ended up out of money and no ticket home. I keep hearing about staying a day over here, but nothing about a few months over. I have stayed here for 6 months, so overstayed by about 5 months now.



I never had a visa, because I was only going to stay for a couple of weeks. Now I finally was able to get a ticket home and I'm not sure how to go about it.



I barely got enough money for a ticket and can't pay the fine, which I am sure is 20,000 baht by now.



What is there for me to do?










share|improve this question















I missed my plane after staying just a couple weeks in Thailand and stayed with my girlfriend. I ended up out of money and no ticket home. I keep hearing about staying a day over here, but nothing about a few months over. I have stayed here for 6 months, so overstayed by about 5 months now.



I never had a visa, because I was only going to stay for a couple of weeks. Now I finally was able to get a ticket home and I'm not sure how to go about it.



I barely got enough money for a ticket and can't pay the fine, which I am sure is 20,000 baht by now.



What is there for me to do?







us-citizens thailand overstaying






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jun 21 at 14:46







user67108

















asked Jun 13 '16 at 6:54









belak

386133




386133







  • 58




    Let us know when you got out of Thailand. Else we can place a banner around your user profile [DETAINED]. Good luck.
    – Patrick Hofman
    Jun 13 '16 at 12:33







  • 74




    Although it's a minor issue, I'm struggling to understand how a missed plane turned into multi-month over stay. You might reconsider using that as your excuse.
    – NotMe
    Jun 13 '16 at 19:44






  • 38




    @NotMe It may have started with a non-refundable non-changeable ticket and insufficient funds to buy a replacement. At that point belak should have immediately contacted their country's consulate or embassy to ask for help and advice.
    – Patricia Shanahan
    Jun 13 '16 at 21:50






  • 19




    Also note that you are not allowed to work in Thailand, like most countries, on a tourist visa. You would need some sort of Thai work permit for that. Working illegally could greatly compound your problems, plus you'd be working for the kind of people who hire illegal workers, which could leave you with little recourse if things go south.
    – Zach Lipton
    Jun 14 '16 at 5:26






  • 17




    So I got to the airport and paid the fine and signed some papers and that was it... booted for a year, but that was it... last minute I got a loan for the fine... I'm sure it would've been different had I not had the fine money... thanks for all the info people
    – belak
    Aug 5 '16 at 3:35












  • 58




    Let us know when you got out of Thailand. Else we can place a banner around your user profile [DETAINED]. Good luck.
    – Patrick Hofman
    Jun 13 '16 at 12:33







  • 74




    Although it's a minor issue, I'm struggling to understand how a missed plane turned into multi-month over stay. You might reconsider using that as your excuse.
    – NotMe
    Jun 13 '16 at 19:44






  • 38




    @NotMe It may have started with a non-refundable non-changeable ticket and insufficient funds to buy a replacement. At that point belak should have immediately contacted their country's consulate or embassy to ask for help and advice.
    – Patricia Shanahan
    Jun 13 '16 at 21:50






  • 19




    Also note that you are not allowed to work in Thailand, like most countries, on a tourist visa. You would need some sort of Thai work permit for that. Working illegally could greatly compound your problems, plus you'd be working for the kind of people who hire illegal workers, which could leave you with little recourse if things go south.
    – Zach Lipton
    Jun 14 '16 at 5:26






  • 17




    So I got to the airport and paid the fine and signed some papers and that was it... booted for a year, but that was it... last minute I got a loan for the fine... I'm sure it would've been different had I not had the fine money... thanks for all the info people
    – belak
    Aug 5 '16 at 3:35







58




58




Let us know when you got out of Thailand. Else we can place a banner around your user profile [DETAINED]. Good luck.
– Patrick Hofman
Jun 13 '16 at 12:33





Let us know when you got out of Thailand. Else we can place a banner around your user profile [DETAINED]. Good luck.
– Patrick Hofman
Jun 13 '16 at 12:33





74




74




Although it's a minor issue, I'm struggling to understand how a missed plane turned into multi-month over stay. You might reconsider using that as your excuse.
– NotMe
Jun 13 '16 at 19:44




Although it's a minor issue, I'm struggling to understand how a missed plane turned into multi-month over stay. You might reconsider using that as your excuse.
– NotMe
Jun 13 '16 at 19:44




38




38




@NotMe It may have started with a non-refundable non-changeable ticket and insufficient funds to buy a replacement. At that point belak should have immediately contacted their country's consulate or embassy to ask for help and advice.
– Patricia Shanahan
Jun 13 '16 at 21:50




@NotMe It may have started with a non-refundable non-changeable ticket and insufficient funds to buy a replacement. At that point belak should have immediately contacted their country's consulate or embassy to ask for help and advice.
– Patricia Shanahan
Jun 13 '16 at 21:50




19




19




Also note that you are not allowed to work in Thailand, like most countries, on a tourist visa. You would need some sort of Thai work permit for that. Working illegally could greatly compound your problems, plus you'd be working for the kind of people who hire illegal workers, which could leave you with little recourse if things go south.
– Zach Lipton
Jun 14 '16 at 5:26




Also note that you are not allowed to work in Thailand, like most countries, on a tourist visa. You would need some sort of Thai work permit for that. Working illegally could greatly compound your problems, plus you'd be working for the kind of people who hire illegal workers, which could leave you with little recourse if things go south.
– Zach Lipton
Jun 14 '16 at 5:26




17




17




So I got to the airport and paid the fine and signed some papers and that was it... booted for a year, but that was it... last minute I got a loan for the fine... I'm sure it would've been different had I not had the fine money... thanks for all the info people
– belak
Aug 5 '16 at 3:35




So I got to the airport and paid the fine and signed some papers and that was it... booted for a year, but that was it... last minute I got a loan for the fine... I'm sure it would've been different had I not had the fine money... thanks for all the info people
– belak
Aug 5 '16 at 3:35










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
127
down vote













This question has been asked many times, so I guess you've already found some nice resources (one, two) on this topic.



  1. You will pay the 20,000 THB fine. Possibly, more. Possibly, after imprisonment.

  2. You will receive the "overstay" stamp in your passport.

  3. Possibly, you'll get banned from entering the Kingdom, temporarily or permanently; The biggest issue is that you may not be informed about this right in place and get an unpleasant surprise on your next visit.

  4. Your goal is to try to avoid imprisonment.

If failed to pay the overstay fine, you'll most certainly get detained and imprisoned.



So, your actions are:



  1. Call your Embassy and ask for instructions as they know the thing better than strangers at StackExchange;

  2. Ask for a money transfer from your family or friends;

  3. Avoid exposing yourself to random police checks, even on your way to the airport. Don't drive the car/bike, don't visit places where random checks can occur (beer bars, disco, etc);

  4. Get safely to the airport; you will need several hours to get through all the process, so come early;

  5. Walk up to the Immigration counter, hand your return ticket, pay the fine.

  6. Expect for a shame of being handcuffs-escorted to the plane.

  7. Never ever overstay anymore.

P.S. Jail in Thailand usually means a small crowded room with no furniture or even fan, lots of mosquitoes, sleeping on a concrete floor, and foreigners even need to pay for their meals.

Don't expose yourself for that.






share|improve this answer
















  • 2




    Indeed, the old 'pay the fine or do the time' applies here as in so many situations.
    – jwenting
    Jun 13 '16 at 13:15






  • 63




    "strangers at StackExchange" man, the combined first hand experiences here are much better than some embassy employees.
    – Nean Der Thal
    Jun 13 '16 at 13:58






  • 42




    "Ask for a money transfer from your family or friends" you'll need to find a way to make that request sound real because on first glance it will sound like a scam.
    – Brad
    Jun 13 '16 at 15:51






  • 5




    @Brad Google Hangouts (or the like), if you can.
    – Wayne Werner
    Jun 13 '16 at 18:07






  • 7




    @KlaymenDK I doubt total strangers on the internet will be running to provide funds for this situation.
    – gerrit
    Jun 14 '16 at 10:12

















up vote
80
down vote













If you voluntarily exit, you will be fined 500 baht per day of overstay (maximum amount of 20,000 baht), you will not go to jail.



If you are caught by police overstaying, you will face criminal charges and higher fines. Jail time tends to alloted primarily for really long overstays (as in years), not for minor overstays.



If your overstay is less than 90 days, your passport will be marked as an overstay and any future visits will be subjected to proving your tourist intentions (departing tickets, funding, hotel bookings).



If your overstay is more than 90 days you will be banned from the country for 1 year in situation one (voluntary) or 5 years in situation two (arrested). Overstaying by one year would be 3 and 10 year bans respectively.



http://overstay.immigration.go.th/advice.html



If you can't pay the fine, you will be at the mercy of the immigration officer handling your case. He could simply clean out your wallet and send you packing home, he could press legal charges against you, he could choose to deport you which could have ramifications on future visas or visits anywhere, etc. You really need to secure funds before going to the airport, contact friends family back home, ask your buddies in Thailand, contact your embassy about loans, etc.






share|improve this answer


















  • 3




    Yeah and most importantly, the immigration officer can detain you. Indefinitely if you cannot pay your ticket back.
    – dan-klasson
    Jun 14 '16 at 18:40










  • @dan-klasson OP has commented on the question that they do have a ticket home now.
    – a CVn
    Jun 15 '16 at 10:58






  • 1




    @MichaelKjörling: Yes, but maybe he loses this ticket, if arrested, and have to buy a new one.
    – Quora Feans
    Jun 15 '16 at 12:47






  • 2




    @QuoraFeans - one could argue a million whatifs, but that doesn't address the OP's specific questions.
    – user13044
    Jun 15 '16 at 15:24







  • 6




    @Tom: getting delayed by immigration and missing a flight at an airline company that does not allow re-schedule implies losing a ticket. I don't mean just a casual possibility, but something pretty probable.
    – Quora Feans
    Jun 15 '16 at 17:18

















up vote
38
down vote













Here's what actually happened to the OP (as indicated in a comment):




So I got to the airport and paid the fine and signed some papers and
that was it... booted for a year, but that was it... last minute I got
a loan for the fine... I'm sure it would've been different had I not
had the fine money... thanks for all the info people.




Someone suggested to the OP that this information is so valuable that it shouldn't be a mere comment, but edited into OP itself. I think OP should actually make this an answer himself, but until he does, I'm putting it here as a Community Wiki answer.






share|improve this answer


















  • 8




    I never saw the update, so thanks for highlighting it here. Glad the OP got out.
    – Zach Lipton
    Sep 18 '16 at 7:44






  • 2




    OP, if you see this answer, please consider making your own answer where you provide even more details. You can then comment on this answer and I will delete it.
    – Revetahw
    Sep 18 '16 at 7:56

















up vote
9
down vote













Let the US consulate know, when you plan to fly back.



Also ask them for advice. I am pretty sure this happens to other people.



This is the official Thai gov advice: http://overstay.immigration.go.th/advice.html



Do everything possible to gather the money. 20,000 bht is $600. Whatever you can sell to get these $600 will be worthwhile.



Report the situation to the nearest immigration office by yourself and come clean. If they catch you, things will be different. Do this with enough time before the flight, not just 2-3 hours before the flight. Otherwise, you could miss your flight.



This is the official Thai gov advice: http://overstay.immigration.go.th/advice.html They draw a line between surrendering and being caught.



Do not approach immigration before you gathered the money.






share|improve this answer


















  • 1




    Why the US consulate? Will they help the OP if he is not American?
    – AndyBrown
    Jun 15 '16 at 13:55






  • 2




    @AndyBrown: the OP is American.
    – Quora Feans
    Jun 15 '16 at 13:56







  • 12




    $600 is not much. Get it. Even dirt poor and broke as hell in the USA $600 is much better then jail time in a foreign prison. Borrow it, use a credit card or three, sell everything you own. Sell your car, your cloths, your house, your dog, everything if that's what it takes. If you end up in prison, it's just gonna make it so much worse.
    – coteyr
    Jun 15 '16 at 14:35






  • 2




    @coteyr: yes, and he will still need to pay to get out of prison. So, to pay or not to pay is not an option.
    – Quora Feans
    Jun 15 '16 at 17:20






  • 4




    @VladimirGamalian: was he the punching bag?
    – Quora Feans
    Jun 22 '16 at 17:49









protected by Community Jun 25 at 10:33



Thank you for your interest in this question.
Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?














4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes








4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
127
down vote













This question has been asked many times, so I guess you've already found some nice resources (one, two) on this topic.



  1. You will pay the 20,000 THB fine. Possibly, more. Possibly, after imprisonment.

  2. You will receive the "overstay" stamp in your passport.

  3. Possibly, you'll get banned from entering the Kingdom, temporarily or permanently; The biggest issue is that you may not be informed about this right in place and get an unpleasant surprise on your next visit.

  4. Your goal is to try to avoid imprisonment.

If failed to pay the overstay fine, you'll most certainly get detained and imprisoned.



So, your actions are:



  1. Call your Embassy and ask for instructions as they know the thing better than strangers at StackExchange;

  2. Ask for a money transfer from your family or friends;

  3. Avoid exposing yourself to random police checks, even on your way to the airport. Don't drive the car/bike, don't visit places where random checks can occur (beer bars, disco, etc);

  4. Get safely to the airport; you will need several hours to get through all the process, so come early;

  5. Walk up to the Immigration counter, hand your return ticket, pay the fine.

  6. Expect for a shame of being handcuffs-escorted to the plane.

  7. Never ever overstay anymore.

P.S. Jail in Thailand usually means a small crowded room with no furniture or even fan, lots of mosquitoes, sleeping on a concrete floor, and foreigners even need to pay for their meals.

Don't expose yourself for that.






share|improve this answer
















  • 2




    Indeed, the old 'pay the fine or do the time' applies here as in so many situations.
    – jwenting
    Jun 13 '16 at 13:15






  • 63




    "strangers at StackExchange" man, the combined first hand experiences here are much better than some embassy employees.
    – Nean Der Thal
    Jun 13 '16 at 13:58






  • 42




    "Ask for a money transfer from your family or friends" you'll need to find a way to make that request sound real because on first glance it will sound like a scam.
    – Brad
    Jun 13 '16 at 15:51






  • 5




    @Brad Google Hangouts (or the like), if you can.
    – Wayne Werner
    Jun 13 '16 at 18:07






  • 7




    @KlaymenDK I doubt total strangers on the internet will be running to provide funds for this situation.
    – gerrit
    Jun 14 '16 at 10:12














up vote
127
down vote













This question has been asked many times, so I guess you've already found some nice resources (one, two) on this topic.



  1. You will pay the 20,000 THB fine. Possibly, more. Possibly, after imprisonment.

  2. You will receive the "overstay" stamp in your passport.

  3. Possibly, you'll get banned from entering the Kingdom, temporarily or permanently; The biggest issue is that you may not be informed about this right in place and get an unpleasant surprise on your next visit.

  4. Your goal is to try to avoid imprisonment.

If failed to pay the overstay fine, you'll most certainly get detained and imprisoned.



So, your actions are:



  1. Call your Embassy and ask for instructions as they know the thing better than strangers at StackExchange;

  2. Ask for a money transfer from your family or friends;

  3. Avoid exposing yourself to random police checks, even on your way to the airport. Don't drive the car/bike, don't visit places where random checks can occur (beer bars, disco, etc);

  4. Get safely to the airport; you will need several hours to get through all the process, so come early;

  5. Walk up to the Immigration counter, hand your return ticket, pay the fine.

  6. Expect for a shame of being handcuffs-escorted to the plane.

  7. Never ever overstay anymore.

P.S. Jail in Thailand usually means a small crowded room with no furniture or even fan, lots of mosquitoes, sleeping on a concrete floor, and foreigners even need to pay for their meals.

Don't expose yourself for that.






share|improve this answer
















  • 2




    Indeed, the old 'pay the fine or do the time' applies here as in so many situations.
    – jwenting
    Jun 13 '16 at 13:15






  • 63




    "strangers at StackExchange" man, the combined first hand experiences here are much better than some embassy employees.
    – Nean Der Thal
    Jun 13 '16 at 13:58






  • 42




    "Ask for a money transfer from your family or friends" you'll need to find a way to make that request sound real because on first glance it will sound like a scam.
    – Brad
    Jun 13 '16 at 15:51






  • 5




    @Brad Google Hangouts (or the like), if you can.
    – Wayne Werner
    Jun 13 '16 at 18:07






  • 7




    @KlaymenDK I doubt total strangers on the internet will be running to provide funds for this situation.
    – gerrit
    Jun 14 '16 at 10:12












up vote
127
down vote










up vote
127
down vote









This question has been asked many times, so I guess you've already found some nice resources (one, two) on this topic.



  1. You will pay the 20,000 THB fine. Possibly, more. Possibly, after imprisonment.

  2. You will receive the "overstay" stamp in your passport.

  3. Possibly, you'll get banned from entering the Kingdom, temporarily or permanently; The biggest issue is that you may not be informed about this right in place and get an unpleasant surprise on your next visit.

  4. Your goal is to try to avoid imprisonment.

If failed to pay the overstay fine, you'll most certainly get detained and imprisoned.



So, your actions are:



  1. Call your Embassy and ask for instructions as they know the thing better than strangers at StackExchange;

  2. Ask for a money transfer from your family or friends;

  3. Avoid exposing yourself to random police checks, even on your way to the airport. Don't drive the car/bike, don't visit places where random checks can occur (beer bars, disco, etc);

  4. Get safely to the airport; you will need several hours to get through all the process, so come early;

  5. Walk up to the Immigration counter, hand your return ticket, pay the fine.

  6. Expect for a shame of being handcuffs-escorted to the plane.

  7. Never ever overstay anymore.

P.S. Jail in Thailand usually means a small crowded room with no furniture or even fan, lots of mosquitoes, sleeping on a concrete floor, and foreigners even need to pay for their meals.

Don't expose yourself for that.






share|improve this answer












This question has been asked many times, so I guess you've already found some nice resources (one, two) on this topic.



  1. You will pay the 20,000 THB fine. Possibly, more. Possibly, after imprisonment.

  2. You will receive the "overstay" stamp in your passport.

  3. Possibly, you'll get banned from entering the Kingdom, temporarily or permanently; The biggest issue is that you may not be informed about this right in place and get an unpleasant surprise on your next visit.

  4. Your goal is to try to avoid imprisonment.

If failed to pay the overstay fine, you'll most certainly get detained and imprisoned.



So, your actions are:



  1. Call your Embassy and ask for instructions as they know the thing better than strangers at StackExchange;

  2. Ask for a money transfer from your family or friends;

  3. Avoid exposing yourself to random police checks, even on your way to the airport. Don't drive the car/bike, don't visit places where random checks can occur (beer bars, disco, etc);

  4. Get safely to the airport; you will need several hours to get through all the process, so come early;

  5. Walk up to the Immigration counter, hand your return ticket, pay the fine.

  6. Expect for a shame of being handcuffs-escorted to the plane.

  7. Never ever overstay anymore.

P.S. Jail in Thailand usually means a small crowded room with no furniture or even fan, lots of mosquitoes, sleeping on a concrete floor, and foreigners even need to pay for their meals.

Don't expose yourself for that.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jun 13 '16 at 10:32









bytebuster

3,35021839




3,35021839







  • 2




    Indeed, the old 'pay the fine or do the time' applies here as in so many situations.
    – jwenting
    Jun 13 '16 at 13:15






  • 63




    "strangers at StackExchange" man, the combined first hand experiences here are much better than some embassy employees.
    – Nean Der Thal
    Jun 13 '16 at 13:58






  • 42




    "Ask for a money transfer from your family or friends" you'll need to find a way to make that request sound real because on first glance it will sound like a scam.
    – Brad
    Jun 13 '16 at 15:51






  • 5




    @Brad Google Hangouts (or the like), if you can.
    – Wayne Werner
    Jun 13 '16 at 18:07






  • 7




    @KlaymenDK I doubt total strangers on the internet will be running to provide funds for this situation.
    – gerrit
    Jun 14 '16 at 10:12












  • 2




    Indeed, the old 'pay the fine or do the time' applies here as in so many situations.
    – jwenting
    Jun 13 '16 at 13:15






  • 63




    "strangers at StackExchange" man, the combined first hand experiences here are much better than some embassy employees.
    – Nean Der Thal
    Jun 13 '16 at 13:58






  • 42




    "Ask for a money transfer from your family or friends" you'll need to find a way to make that request sound real because on first glance it will sound like a scam.
    – Brad
    Jun 13 '16 at 15:51






  • 5




    @Brad Google Hangouts (or the like), if you can.
    – Wayne Werner
    Jun 13 '16 at 18:07






  • 7




    @KlaymenDK I doubt total strangers on the internet will be running to provide funds for this situation.
    – gerrit
    Jun 14 '16 at 10:12







2




2




Indeed, the old 'pay the fine or do the time' applies here as in so many situations.
– jwenting
Jun 13 '16 at 13:15




Indeed, the old 'pay the fine or do the time' applies here as in so many situations.
– jwenting
Jun 13 '16 at 13:15




63




63




"strangers at StackExchange" man, the combined first hand experiences here are much better than some embassy employees.
– Nean Der Thal
Jun 13 '16 at 13:58




"strangers at StackExchange" man, the combined first hand experiences here are much better than some embassy employees.
– Nean Der Thal
Jun 13 '16 at 13:58




42




42




"Ask for a money transfer from your family or friends" you'll need to find a way to make that request sound real because on first glance it will sound like a scam.
– Brad
Jun 13 '16 at 15:51




"Ask for a money transfer from your family or friends" you'll need to find a way to make that request sound real because on first glance it will sound like a scam.
– Brad
Jun 13 '16 at 15:51




5




5




@Brad Google Hangouts (or the like), if you can.
– Wayne Werner
Jun 13 '16 at 18:07




@Brad Google Hangouts (or the like), if you can.
– Wayne Werner
Jun 13 '16 at 18:07




7




7




@KlaymenDK I doubt total strangers on the internet will be running to provide funds for this situation.
– gerrit
Jun 14 '16 at 10:12




@KlaymenDK I doubt total strangers on the internet will be running to provide funds for this situation.
– gerrit
Jun 14 '16 at 10:12












up vote
80
down vote













If you voluntarily exit, you will be fined 500 baht per day of overstay (maximum amount of 20,000 baht), you will not go to jail.



If you are caught by police overstaying, you will face criminal charges and higher fines. Jail time tends to alloted primarily for really long overstays (as in years), not for minor overstays.



If your overstay is less than 90 days, your passport will be marked as an overstay and any future visits will be subjected to proving your tourist intentions (departing tickets, funding, hotel bookings).



If your overstay is more than 90 days you will be banned from the country for 1 year in situation one (voluntary) or 5 years in situation two (arrested). Overstaying by one year would be 3 and 10 year bans respectively.



http://overstay.immigration.go.th/advice.html



If you can't pay the fine, you will be at the mercy of the immigration officer handling your case. He could simply clean out your wallet and send you packing home, he could press legal charges against you, he could choose to deport you which could have ramifications on future visas or visits anywhere, etc. You really need to secure funds before going to the airport, contact friends family back home, ask your buddies in Thailand, contact your embassy about loans, etc.






share|improve this answer


















  • 3




    Yeah and most importantly, the immigration officer can detain you. Indefinitely if you cannot pay your ticket back.
    – dan-klasson
    Jun 14 '16 at 18:40










  • @dan-klasson OP has commented on the question that they do have a ticket home now.
    – a CVn
    Jun 15 '16 at 10:58






  • 1




    @MichaelKjörling: Yes, but maybe he loses this ticket, if arrested, and have to buy a new one.
    – Quora Feans
    Jun 15 '16 at 12:47






  • 2




    @QuoraFeans - one could argue a million whatifs, but that doesn't address the OP's specific questions.
    – user13044
    Jun 15 '16 at 15:24







  • 6




    @Tom: getting delayed by immigration and missing a flight at an airline company that does not allow re-schedule implies losing a ticket. I don't mean just a casual possibility, but something pretty probable.
    – Quora Feans
    Jun 15 '16 at 17:18














up vote
80
down vote













If you voluntarily exit, you will be fined 500 baht per day of overstay (maximum amount of 20,000 baht), you will not go to jail.



If you are caught by police overstaying, you will face criminal charges and higher fines. Jail time tends to alloted primarily for really long overstays (as in years), not for minor overstays.



If your overstay is less than 90 days, your passport will be marked as an overstay and any future visits will be subjected to proving your tourist intentions (departing tickets, funding, hotel bookings).



If your overstay is more than 90 days you will be banned from the country for 1 year in situation one (voluntary) or 5 years in situation two (arrested). Overstaying by one year would be 3 and 10 year bans respectively.



http://overstay.immigration.go.th/advice.html



If you can't pay the fine, you will be at the mercy of the immigration officer handling your case. He could simply clean out your wallet and send you packing home, he could press legal charges against you, he could choose to deport you which could have ramifications on future visas or visits anywhere, etc. You really need to secure funds before going to the airport, contact friends family back home, ask your buddies in Thailand, contact your embassy about loans, etc.






share|improve this answer


















  • 3




    Yeah and most importantly, the immigration officer can detain you. Indefinitely if you cannot pay your ticket back.
    – dan-klasson
    Jun 14 '16 at 18:40










  • @dan-klasson OP has commented on the question that they do have a ticket home now.
    – a CVn
    Jun 15 '16 at 10:58






  • 1




    @MichaelKjörling: Yes, but maybe he loses this ticket, if arrested, and have to buy a new one.
    – Quora Feans
    Jun 15 '16 at 12:47






  • 2




    @QuoraFeans - one could argue a million whatifs, but that doesn't address the OP's specific questions.
    – user13044
    Jun 15 '16 at 15:24







  • 6




    @Tom: getting delayed by immigration and missing a flight at an airline company that does not allow re-schedule implies losing a ticket. I don't mean just a casual possibility, but something pretty probable.
    – Quora Feans
    Jun 15 '16 at 17:18












up vote
80
down vote










up vote
80
down vote









If you voluntarily exit, you will be fined 500 baht per day of overstay (maximum amount of 20,000 baht), you will not go to jail.



If you are caught by police overstaying, you will face criminal charges and higher fines. Jail time tends to alloted primarily for really long overstays (as in years), not for minor overstays.



If your overstay is less than 90 days, your passport will be marked as an overstay and any future visits will be subjected to proving your tourist intentions (departing tickets, funding, hotel bookings).



If your overstay is more than 90 days you will be banned from the country for 1 year in situation one (voluntary) or 5 years in situation two (arrested). Overstaying by one year would be 3 and 10 year bans respectively.



http://overstay.immigration.go.th/advice.html



If you can't pay the fine, you will be at the mercy of the immigration officer handling your case. He could simply clean out your wallet and send you packing home, he could press legal charges against you, he could choose to deport you which could have ramifications on future visas or visits anywhere, etc. You really need to secure funds before going to the airport, contact friends family back home, ask your buddies in Thailand, contact your embassy about loans, etc.






share|improve this answer














If you voluntarily exit, you will be fined 500 baht per day of overstay (maximum amount of 20,000 baht), you will not go to jail.



If you are caught by police overstaying, you will face criminal charges and higher fines. Jail time tends to alloted primarily for really long overstays (as in years), not for minor overstays.



If your overstay is less than 90 days, your passport will be marked as an overstay and any future visits will be subjected to proving your tourist intentions (departing tickets, funding, hotel bookings).



If your overstay is more than 90 days you will be banned from the country for 1 year in situation one (voluntary) or 5 years in situation two (arrested). Overstaying by one year would be 3 and 10 year bans respectively.



http://overstay.immigration.go.th/advice.html



If you can't pay the fine, you will be at the mercy of the immigration officer handling your case. He could simply clean out your wallet and send you packing home, he could press legal charges against you, he could choose to deport you which could have ramifications on future visas or visits anywhere, etc. You really need to secure funds before going to the airport, contact friends family back home, ask your buddies in Thailand, contact your embassy about loans, etc.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Jun 13 '16 at 23:38









Zach Lipton

57.7k10175236




57.7k10175236










answered Jun 13 '16 at 13:11







user13044














  • 3




    Yeah and most importantly, the immigration officer can detain you. Indefinitely if you cannot pay your ticket back.
    – dan-klasson
    Jun 14 '16 at 18:40










  • @dan-klasson OP has commented on the question that they do have a ticket home now.
    – a CVn
    Jun 15 '16 at 10:58






  • 1




    @MichaelKjörling: Yes, but maybe he loses this ticket, if arrested, and have to buy a new one.
    – Quora Feans
    Jun 15 '16 at 12:47






  • 2




    @QuoraFeans - one could argue a million whatifs, but that doesn't address the OP's specific questions.
    – user13044
    Jun 15 '16 at 15:24







  • 6




    @Tom: getting delayed by immigration and missing a flight at an airline company that does not allow re-schedule implies losing a ticket. I don't mean just a casual possibility, but something pretty probable.
    – Quora Feans
    Jun 15 '16 at 17:18












  • 3




    Yeah and most importantly, the immigration officer can detain you. Indefinitely if you cannot pay your ticket back.
    – dan-klasson
    Jun 14 '16 at 18:40










  • @dan-klasson OP has commented on the question that they do have a ticket home now.
    – a CVn
    Jun 15 '16 at 10:58






  • 1




    @MichaelKjörling: Yes, but maybe he loses this ticket, if arrested, and have to buy a new one.
    – Quora Feans
    Jun 15 '16 at 12:47






  • 2




    @QuoraFeans - one could argue a million whatifs, but that doesn't address the OP's specific questions.
    – user13044
    Jun 15 '16 at 15:24







  • 6




    @Tom: getting delayed by immigration and missing a flight at an airline company that does not allow re-schedule implies losing a ticket. I don't mean just a casual possibility, but something pretty probable.
    – Quora Feans
    Jun 15 '16 at 17:18







3




3




Yeah and most importantly, the immigration officer can detain you. Indefinitely if you cannot pay your ticket back.
– dan-klasson
Jun 14 '16 at 18:40




Yeah and most importantly, the immigration officer can detain you. Indefinitely if you cannot pay your ticket back.
– dan-klasson
Jun 14 '16 at 18:40












@dan-klasson OP has commented on the question that they do have a ticket home now.
– a CVn
Jun 15 '16 at 10:58




@dan-klasson OP has commented on the question that they do have a ticket home now.
– a CVn
Jun 15 '16 at 10:58




1




1




@MichaelKjörling: Yes, but maybe he loses this ticket, if arrested, and have to buy a new one.
– Quora Feans
Jun 15 '16 at 12:47




@MichaelKjörling: Yes, but maybe he loses this ticket, if arrested, and have to buy a new one.
– Quora Feans
Jun 15 '16 at 12:47




2




2




@QuoraFeans - one could argue a million whatifs, but that doesn't address the OP's specific questions.
– user13044
Jun 15 '16 at 15:24





@QuoraFeans - one could argue a million whatifs, but that doesn't address the OP's specific questions.
– user13044
Jun 15 '16 at 15:24





6




6




@Tom: getting delayed by immigration and missing a flight at an airline company that does not allow re-schedule implies losing a ticket. I don't mean just a casual possibility, but something pretty probable.
– Quora Feans
Jun 15 '16 at 17:18




@Tom: getting delayed by immigration and missing a flight at an airline company that does not allow re-schedule implies losing a ticket. I don't mean just a casual possibility, but something pretty probable.
– Quora Feans
Jun 15 '16 at 17:18










up vote
38
down vote













Here's what actually happened to the OP (as indicated in a comment):




So I got to the airport and paid the fine and signed some papers and
that was it... booted for a year, but that was it... last minute I got
a loan for the fine... I'm sure it would've been different had I not
had the fine money... thanks for all the info people.




Someone suggested to the OP that this information is so valuable that it shouldn't be a mere comment, but edited into OP itself. I think OP should actually make this an answer himself, but until he does, I'm putting it here as a Community Wiki answer.






share|improve this answer


















  • 8




    I never saw the update, so thanks for highlighting it here. Glad the OP got out.
    – Zach Lipton
    Sep 18 '16 at 7:44






  • 2




    OP, if you see this answer, please consider making your own answer where you provide even more details. You can then comment on this answer and I will delete it.
    – Revetahw
    Sep 18 '16 at 7:56














up vote
38
down vote













Here's what actually happened to the OP (as indicated in a comment):




So I got to the airport and paid the fine and signed some papers and
that was it... booted for a year, but that was it... last minute I got
a loan for the fine... I'm sure it would've been different had I not
had the fine money... thanks for all the info people.




Someone suggested to the OP that this information is so valuable that it shouldn't be a mere comment, but edited into OP itself. I think OP should actually make this an answer himself, but until he does, I'm putting it here as a Community Wiki answer.






share|improve this answer


















  • 8




    I never saw the update, so thanks for highlighting it here. Glad the OP got out.
    – Zach Lipton
    Sep 18 '16 at 7:44






  • 2




    OP, if you see this answer, please consider making your own answer where you provide even more details. You can then comment on this answer and I will delete it.
    – Revetahw
    Sep 18 '16 at 7:56












up vote
38
down vote










up vote
38
down vote









Here's what actually happened to the OP (as indicated in a comment):




So I got to the airport and paid the fine and signed some papers and
that was it... booted for a year, but that was it... last minute I got
a loan for the fine... I'm sure it would've been different had I not
had the fine money... thanks for all the info people.




Someone suggested to the OP that this information is so valuable that it shouldn't be a mere comment, but edited into OP itself. I think OP should actually make this an answer himself, but until he does, I'm putting it here as a Community Wiki answer.






share|improve this answer














Here's what actually happened to the OP (as indicated in a comment):




So I got to the airport and paid the fine and signed some papers and
that was it... booted for a year, but that was it... last minute I got
a loan for the fine... I'm sure it would've been different had I not
had the fine money... thanks for all the info people.




Someone suggested to the OP that this information is so valuable that it shouldn't be a mere comment, but edited into OP itself. I think OP should actually make this an answer himself, but until he does, I'm putting it here as a Community Wiki answer.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:52


























community wiki





3 revs
Fiksdal








  • 8




    I never saw the update, so thanks for highlighting it here. Glad the OP got out.
    – Zach Lipton
    Sep 18 '16 at 7:44






  • 2




    OP, if you see this answer, please consider making your own answer where you provide even more details. You can then comment on this answer and I will delete it.
    – Revetahw
    Sep 18 '16 at 7:56












  • 8




    I never saw the update, so thanks for highlighting it here. Glad the OP got out.
    – Zach Lipton
    Sep 18 '16 at 7:44






  • 2




    OP, if you see this answer, please consider making your own answer where you provide even more details. You can then comment on this answer and I will delete it.
    – Revetahw
    Sep 18 '16 at 7:56







8




8




I never saw the update, so thanks for highlighting it here. Glad the OP got out.
– Zach Lipton
Sep 18 '16 at 7:44




I never saw the update, so thanks for highlighting it here. Glad the OP got out.
– Zach Lipton
Sep 18 '16 at 7:44




2




2




OP, if you see this answer, please consider making your own answer where you provide even more details. You can then comment on this answer and I will delete it.
– Revetahw
Sep 18 '16 at 7:56




OP, if you see this answer, please consider making your own answer where you provide even more details. You can then comment on this answer and I will delete it.
– Revetahw
Sep 18 '16 at 7:56










up vote
9
down vote













Let the US consulate know, when you plan to fly back.



Also ask them for advice. I am pretty sure this happens to other people.



This is the official Thai gov advice: http://overstay.immigration.go.th/advice.html



Do everything possible to gather the money. 20,000 bht is $600. Whatever you can sell to get these $600 will be worthwhile.



Report the situation to the nearest immigration office by yourself and come clean. If they catch you, things will be different. Do this with enough time before the flight, not just 2-3 hours before the flight. Otherwise, you could miss your flight.



This is the official Thai gov advice: http://overstay.immigration.go.th/advice.html They draw a line between surrendering and being caught.



Do not approach immigration before you gathered the money.






share|improve this answer


















  • 1




    Why the US consulate? Will they help the OP if he is not American?
    – AndyBrown
    Jun 15 '16 at 13:55






  • 2




    @AndyBrown: the OP is American.
    – Quora Feans
    Jun 15 '16 at 13:56







  • 12




    $600 is not much. Get it. Even dirt poor and broke as hell in the USA $600 is much better then jail time in a foreign prison. Borrow it, use a credit card or three, sell everything you own. Sell your car, your cloths, your house, your dog, everything if that's what it takes. If you end up in prison, it's just gonna make it so much worse.
    – coteyr
    Jun 15 '16 at 14:35






  • 2




    @coteyr: yes, and he will still need to pay to get out of prison. So, to pay or not to pay is not an option.
    – Quora Feans
    Jun 15 '16 at 17:20






  • 4




    @VladimirGamalian: was he the punching bag?
    – Quora Feans
    Jun 22 '16 at 17:49














up vote
9
down vote













Let the US consulate know, when you plan to fly back.



Also ask them for advice. I am pretty sure this happens to other people.



This is the official Thai gov advice: http://overstay.immigration.go.th/advice.html



Do everything possible to gather the money. 20,000 bht is $600. Whatever you can sell to get these $600 will be worthwhile.



Report the situation to the nearest immigration office by yourself and come clean. If they catch you, things will be different. Do this with enough time before the flight, not just 2-3 hours before the flight. Otherwise, you could miss your flight.



This is the official Thai gov advice: http://overstay.immigration.go.th/advice.html They draw a line between surrendering and being caught.



Do not approach immigration before you gathered the money.






share|improve this answer


















  • 1




    Why the US consulate? Will they help the OP if he is not American?
    – AndyBrown
    Jun 15 '16 at 13:55






  • 2




    @AndyBrown: the OP is American.
    – Quora Feans
    Jun 15 '16 at 13:56







  • 12




    $600 is not much. Get it. Even dirt poor and broke as hell in the USA $600 is much better then jail time in a foreign prison. Borrow it, use a credit card or three, sell everything you own. Sell your car, your cloths, your house, your dog, everything if that's what it takes. If you end up in prison, it's just gonna make it so much worse.
    – coteyr
    Jun 15 '16 at 14:35






  • 2




    @coteyr: yes, and he will still need to pay to get out of prison. So, to pay or not to pay is not an option.
    – Quora Feans
    Jun 15 '16 at 17:20






  • 4




    @VladimirGamalian: was he the punching bag?
    – Quora Feans
    Jun 22 '16 at 17:49












up vote
9
down vote










up vote
9
down vote









Let the US consulate know, when you plan to fly back.



Also ask them for advice. I am pretty sure this happens to other people.



This is the official Thai gov advice: http://overstay.immigration.go.th/advice.html



Do everything possible to gather the money. 20,000 bht is $600. Whatever you can sell to get these $600 will be worthwhile.



Report the situation to the nearest immigration office by yourself and come clean. If they catch you, things will be different. Do this with enough time before the flight, not just 2-3 hours before the flight. Otherwise, you could miss your flight.



This is the official Thai gov advice: http://overstay.immigration.go.th/advice.html They draw a line between surrendering and being caught.



Do not approach immigration before you gathered the money.






share|improve this answer














Let the US consulate know, when you plan to fly back.



Also ask them for advice. I am pretty sure this happens to other people.



This is the official Thai gov advice: http://overstay.immigration.go.th/advice.html



Do everything possible to gather the money. 20,000 bht is $600. Whatever you can sell to get these $600 will be worthwhile.



Report the situation to the nearest immigration office by yourself and come clean. If they catch you, things will be different. Do this with enough time before the flight, not just 2-3 hours before the flight. Otherwise, you could miss your flight.



This is the official Thai gov advice: http://overstay.immigration.go.th/advice.html They draw a line between surrendering and being caught.



Do not approach immigration before you gathered the money.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Jun 15 '16 at 13:03

























answered Jun 15 '16 at 12:56









Quora Feans

1,85111127




1,85111127







  • 1




    Why the US consulate? Will they help the OP if he is not American?
    – AndyBrown
    Jun 15 '16 at 13:55






  • 2




    @AndyBrown: the OP is American.
    – Quora Feans
    Jun 15 '16 at 13:56







  • 12




    $600 is not much. Get it. Even dirt poor and broke as hell in the USA $600 is much better then jail time in a foreign prison. Borrow it, use a credit card or three, sell everything you own. Sell your car, your cloths, your house, your dog, everything if that's what it takes. If you end up in prison, it's just gonna make it so much worse.
    – coteyr
    Jun 15 '16 at 14:35






  • 2




    @coteyr: yes, and he will still need to pay to get out of prison. So, to pay or not to pay is not an option.
    – Quora Feans
    Jun 15 '16 at 17:20






  • 4




    @VladimirGamalian: was he the punching bag?
    – Quora Feans
    Jun 22 '16 at 17:49












  • 1




    Why the US consulate? Will they help the OP if he is not American?
    – AndyBrown
    Jun 15 '16 at 13:55






  • 2




    @AndyBrown: the OP is American.
    – Quora Feans
    Jun 15 '16 at 13:56







  • 12




    $600 is not much. Get it. Even dirt poor and broke as hell in the USA $600 is much better then jail time in a foreign prison. Borrow it, use a credit card or three, sell everything you own. Sell your car, your cloths, your house, your dog, everything if that's what it takes. If you end up in prison, it's just gonna make it so much worse.
    – coteyr
    Jun 15 '16 at 14:35






  • 2




    @coteyr: yes, and he will still need to pay to get out of prison. So, to pay or not to pay is not an option.
    – Quora Feans
    Jun 15 '16 at 17:20






  • 4




    @VladimirGamalian: was he the punching bag?
    – Quora Feans
    Jun 22 '16 at 17:49







1




1




Why the US consulate? Will they help the OP if he is not American?
– AndyBrown
Jun 15 '16 at 13:55




Why the US consulate? Will they help the OP if he is not American?
– AndyBrown
Jun 15 '16 at 13:55




2




2




@AndyBrown: the OP is American.
– Quora Feans
Jun 15 '16 at 13:56





@AndyBrown: the OP is American.
– Quora Feans
Jun 15 '16 at 13:56





12




12




$600 is not much. Get it. Even dirt poor and broke as hell in the USA $600 is much better then jail time in a foreign prison. Borrow it, use a credit card or three, sell everything you own. Sell your car, your cloths, your house, your dog, everything if that's what it takes. If you end up in prison, it's just gonna make it so much worse.
– coteyr
Jun 15 '16 at 14:35




$600 is not much. Get it. Even dirt poor and broke as hell in the USA $600 is much better then jail time in a foreign prison. Borrow it, use a credit card or three, sell everything you own. Sell your car, your cloths, your house, your dog, everything if that's what it takes. If you end up in prison, it's just gonna make it so much worse.
– coteyr
Jun 15 '16 at 14:35




2




2




@coteyr: yes, and he will still need to pay to get out of prison. So, to pay or not to pay is not an option.
– Quora Feans
Jun 15 '16 at 17:20




@coteyr: yes, and he will still need to pay to get out of prison. So, to pay or not to pay is not an option.
– Quora Feans
Jun 15 '16 at 17:20




4




4




@VladimirGamalian: was he the punching bag?
– Quora Feans
Jun 22 '16 at 17:49




@VladimirGamalian: was he the punching bag?
– Quora Feans
Jun 22 '16 at 17:49





protected by Community Jun 25 at 10:33



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