The recently renovated Chao Sam Phraya National Museum showcases the beauty of the Ayutthaya kingdom through artefacts...a good idea for a visit until the price of admission was noted: 5X the local fee...once again, it's not the amount...
The recently renovated Chao Sam Phraya National Museum showcases the beauty of the Ayutthaya kingdom through artefacts...a good idea for a visit until the price of admission was noted: 5X the local fee...once again, it's not the amount...
Thought he was organising a cocktail evening.
Show them a long term visa or driving license and they have to give you local price. I believe that's the law?
Unsure on other National Parks, but the two we go most often, Kitchakut and Namtok Phliu have had signage since about 2013 for the lower price as "Thai ID only" - removes the possibility of disputes with angry red-faced busta-bloodvessel farangs that the minimum wage cashier shouldn't have to put up with.
Don't know why a local driver licence should qualify one as a Thai - I got mine originally while on a 60-day Tourist Visa. Same with Visas - it's just permission to stay, not citizenship.
It's never bothered me; maybe I don't have 'the principle' but 200b is imo great value for those parks, I don't care what the next person in line pays.
Though I do enjoy the posts that frequent the other forum of the sulking old farang waiting in the car outside while the family go in to a Thai park etc. There was one before Xmas of a family who came here (Chanthaburi) to go to the National Maritime Museum but when Mr Farang saw it was 20/100 he refused to go in. What a fun day out.
"It's the principle"
I have never tried to argue the point but technically my pink ID card is a form of ID issued by Thailand authorities, as is a driving licence. They are 'Thai ID' although not proof of Thai nationality, which I see as a difference. Of course, they could post signs saying 'Thai nationals' and live with the posts from tourists on social media.
I am in the camp that disagrees with dual pricing. For me it isn't about money, it is about encouraging the idea amongst the general population that it's okay to be discriminatory.
My strategy has been to send the gf out of the car to buy 2 tickets, with my pink ID card in her back pocket if she is challenged. So far this has avoided any awkwardness.
I personally do not have a problem with dual pricing. However, I think that national parks far away from public transport, should not have dual pricing, to encourage more foreigners to get to them.
^ I just wish some of the money generated would go to educating Thais to be a little more sympathetic to the environment and stop taking it for granted that others will clean up the crap they throw about or leave behind.
One more reason to love the PI....
Dual pricing is simply money grubbing from the Thai whose overriding principle in levying the surcharge is that foreigners are inferior to Thai and fair game in the extortion stakes.
Fuck ‘em.
There is no economic sense to it except as a revenue stream for those responsible for administering the foreigner tax.
Tourists, residents and business visitors all pay some form of tax on entry to the country as it is, and our very presence generates higher tax revenues.
Dual pricing, like Thai idiocy generally the stupid 90 day reporting, is simply one of those rackets that is never questioned not least because it has no material effect upon numbers of mass tourism.
18 months since the last post.
Have you been stewing about this issue?
Not only Thailand does duel pricing. Same when I went to the Taj Mahal. I wouldn't mind if we did the same to the nationals who do it to us but we don't.
Last edited by Pragmatic; 24-08-2024 at 01:37 PM.
Cyril is a Thaiphile cock sucker, hence his interest in bollocks when compelled to comment.
Thai are selfish, materialistic, status obsessed money grubbers. Same as everyone else, with that Buddhist malarkey just a superstitious lottery fixation.
But I have to say, I don’t know many intelligent farang who actually think that some Thai don’t believe their stupid illusion the country is the bestest in the world.
Personally i dont like it and its a case by case approach.
Having seen the price of UK visas for Thais however, I am less botehred by it.
as for not accompnying the family in, often the best route to an hour's peace and quiet
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