It seems the problem isn't that this appears inside a decltype, but that it appears outside the function body.
For example, this code below compiles under GCC 4.7:
struct A
{
int f() { return 0; }
auto g() -> decltype(f()) {
decltype(this->f()) var = this->f();
return var;
}
};
This uses decltype(this->f()) inside the body of g, but the specification of the return type of the function in the auto .... -> .... form, i.e. the so-called trailing return type specification, is not part of the function body, and GCC does not allow it there.
However, it would appear (see discussion in comments) that the C++ Standard does not actually require this to be used in the function body: §5.1.1 of the standard states that this may be used anywhere between the optional const/volatile qualifier and the end of the function body, see clause 3 below. (For the sake of completeness, I have added clause 4 as well, which talks about data members and is not directly relevant to the question).
(Clause 3) If a declaration declares a member function or member function template of a class X, the expression this
is a prvalue of type “pointer to cv-qualifier-seq X” between the optional cv-qualifer-seq and the end of the
function-definition, member-declarator, or declarator. It shall not appear before the optional cv-qualifier-seq
and it shall not appear within the declaration of a static member function (although its type and value
category are defined within a static member function as they are within a non-static member function). [...]
(Clause 4) Otherwise, if a member-declarator declares a non-static data member (9.2) of a class X, the expression this
is a prvalue of type “pointer to X” within the optional brace-or-equal-initializer. It shall not appear elsewhere
in the member-declarator.
(Clause 5) The expression this shall not appear in any other context. [...]
NB: The optional cv-qualifier-seq, i.e. the const or volatile qualifier for the function must, as Jesse points out in the comment, appear before the trailing return type declaration. Hence using this in the way described in the question should be correct, and GCC seems to be wrong.