As a perpetual traveller and investor, this is the best nuts and bolts video on this topic I've seen. Well done Michael, as usual you're creating interesting and relevant content.
@OffshoreCitizen3 жыл бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@jamestewari-hh7et8 ай бұрын
Michael, you have raised everyone's dreams and imagination. I agree one needs a base.
@Bri-wi8kq3 жыл бұрын
Absolutely fabulous Michael, thank you! Special thanks for the year's wonderful channel covering a diverse range of topics in a thoughtful and intelligent view point. Looking forward to following your amazing channel in 2022. Wishing you a relaxing happy Christmas and a nice slide into the new year. Bri
@biznessizbizness83683 жыл бұрын
2:32 Le Monténégro n'a pas de règle CFC ??? [vérifier Thaïlande et Singapour]
@tinglestingles3 жыл бұрын
You're correct - it's been a wonderful year!
@OffshoreCitizen3 жыл бұрын
Haha hoping the next one will be even better!
@tinglestingles3 жыл бұрын
@@OffshoreCitizen Yep! Merry Christmas and a Happy, Healthy and very Prosperous New Year to you and your family.
@VERTICALWisdom3 жыл бұрын
All the best to everyone in 2022 - Happy Holidays!
@OffshoreCitizen3 жыл бұрын
Thank you! Wishing you all the best and happy holidays :)
@jamestewari-hh7et8 ай бұрын
What about Canada as a base
@delaodino2 жыл бұрын
I can’t get around one issue: if you’re a perpetual traveler, where do you establish your personal tax residency under this scenario? It’s clear where your business is taxed and where your PR would be (tax free country; no CFC rules country) but no clue where you plan to claim personal tax residency while constantly traveling. Tax residency is distinct from PR and most countries will still require 180+ days. Under this scenario, you are perpetually traveling to not incur any company holding or managing issue but this forfeits tax residency. It becomes unclear where you establish this then.
@GoTravelPlanet2 жыл бұрын
Excellent content like always, thank you Michael
@OffshoreCitizen2 жыл бұрын
Our pleasure! Thanks for keeping up Anything you'd like to see next?
@realalexmackenzie3 жыл бұрын
Great video Michael! That is a great alternative to 6+ months per year somewhere like Dubai. Working on my exit from Canadian servitude sometime in 2022!
@OffshoreCitizen3 жыл бұрын
Always our pleasure! What countries are you considering?
@realalexmackenzie3 жыл бұрын
@@OffshoreCitizen Due to recent world events, my number 1 criteria is now a country with a sensible approach to the sickness. No interest in having the authorities show up at my front door with a syringe in hand (lookin' at you Austria). I guess it is still a bit of a wait and see to know how the rules in each country are developing. Hopefully there will be some predictability by later in 2022. Outside of that, sunshine and warm weather, first world vibe, or a less luxurious feel that is offset by tropical scenery. And of course a sensible tax plan. Not necessarily zero, but not Canadian levels either. I think ideally it would be Dubai for tax residency and sunshine, not to mention the long list of things to do. May/June to Sept/Oct in a Mediterranean country, or perhaps Vancouver, then back to Dubai for the Northern winter season. Through in some travel during the twice yearly move and life would be good. I've been making good money in Canada, so I'm waiting to see how things settle out as I move everything online. I think an intermediate step might be something like this video's topic. Dubai is not the cheapest place to live, and if you're going to be there, you want to do it up right. I would rather spend a couple of years in a lower cost country as the revenue stream stabilizes from the growth of the online ventures. Having to grind it out and make decisions just to feed a big dollar lifestyle kills the creativity and the joy from the businesses. Though if I could see my crypto portfolio do a 10x in the next year... :)
@jeremyleonbarlow2 жыл бұрын
If you have the right amount of money, Georgia becomes a good country for a permanent traveler to establish a home base because of minimal time requirements to be in the country and a lack of CFC rules. It also potentially has some added benefits when operating a business through a US LLC for non-Americans provided they do not direct or control the companies operations from within Georgia, which means spending a fair amount of time in a country like Thailand or Costa Rica which do not use management & control for corporate residency. It becomes an ideal vehicle in many instances for people with a Caribbean CBI who can make use of the CARICOM Skilled Worker freedom of movement regime to hold directors meetings, but only directors meetings of a US LLC in Barbados because of the corporate tax residency provisions of the US-Barbados double tax treaty. Some of those tax residency provisions could also come in handy in some US double tax treaties for EU citizens holding board meetings in countries with similar tax residency provisions in their treaties. When place of incorporation rather than where board meetings are held determines tax residency becomes beneficial in those situations.
@GrahamWinship3 жыл бұрын
In our consulting call you recommended that I stay over 180 days in Thailand if doing this
@OffshoreCitizen3 жыл бұрын
Yes depends on where you are from. The key thing is not being resident in your home country, which could require establishing yourself clearly in another country.
@mattlee77883 жыл бұрын
@ Graham. He is correct on the 180day required to be able to establish tax residency in Thailand
@mrkcur3 жыл бұрын
Let’s say you spend 5.5 months in one specific country, 5.5 months in another specific country, then 1 month elsewhere. Let’s say you do this habitually, year-after-year. And you don’t have residence permits in any of these countries. If you pick the right countries, like without CFC rules and with territorial taxation, are you still considered perpetual traveler without tax obligations?
@OffshoreCitizen3 жыл бұрын
Depends on the local residency rules. In most places you can be resident without spending 6 months
@mattlee77883 жыл бұрын
I did this exact thing leaving Canada with Thailand being my tax base this year. Then starting next year will be doing the 5/5/2 rotation. Is it correct that each year thereafter I don't need to establish another tax residence and just perpetually travel until I'm exhausted? Then return back to Canada, say 2024 and re establish PR. The time I'm gone travelling my assets accrue Tax Free? Thanks
@meshoksa51512 жыл бұрын
My lawyer said like that i want get residence in eu but i dont want pay tax he said spend less 180 days in eu and no need to pay tax
@anthgraham73993 жыл бұрын
Hi Michael, What if you are travelling all year with no base country, where would you have to pay tax ? Many thanks
@OffshoreCitizen3 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/rHvZkKOlnduMoZY Have you seen this one?
@Rounddireflash3 жыл бұрын
Another great one Michael, I am hopeful that I’ll be able to change my circumstances in the current macro bull phase that digital assets are experiencing. My near-term goal (1-2 years) is becoming a client of yours. Take care.
@OffshoreCitizen3 жыл бұрын
Thank you, Mark! Looking forward to that 💪 What else would you like to see from us in the meantime?
@kuzinets3 жыл бұрын
@@OffshoreCitizen I know the question wasnt to me, but I would be curious about income sourcing rules, maybe as a video. I know people who have salary income but choose to go to another country for less than 6 months are supposed to be in good shape not to be taxed by the 6 mo country in terms of tax residency, generally, but is there an issue with the fact that the income was earned while physically in the 6 mo country, regardless of tax residency? I think some countries might specifically give exceptions for this situation. Thanks for your videos. You are a credit to the internet.
@CP-so6sc Жыл бұрын
Maybe I missed it but how can I set up an investment account if I am not a tax resident of any country?
@MrDynamicMedia3 жыл бұрын
Another great video Michael! Out of interest where do you base your self??
@OffshoreCitizen3 жыл бұрын
Dubai and Bulgaria over the last while
@MrDynamicMedia3 жыл бұрын
@@OffshoreCitizen I been to Dubai how you liking Bulgaria???
@chocmilkisgood3 жыл бұрын
Literally me getting kicked out of the country that I'm currently living because of visa issues. Michael: "how to do what you're thinking of doing"
@OffshoreCitizen3 жыл бұрын
Haha happy to read your mind 😂 What's your plan?
@SofiaMarie-AnneLejeune Жыл бұрын
Are you a legal advisor or does your team also have accountants? Who can help in Mallorca?
@pak74x3 жыл бұрын
So when banks (or who is handling your money/income) ask where is the company UBO's tax residency, you say it is XY (Bulgaria). Bank exchanges your co's info with XY. Then XY can ask you why you didn't pay taxes (based on place of management or CFC) -to which you answer, "because I was abroad". Question is: Does it end there or XY might ask you, "then where are you tax resident"? You answer "nowhere (or in XY)" - and they say "so you pay tax to us" I mean -might they require you to proove you are tax resident somewhere else?
@davelawson25643 жыл бұрын
you pay tax where your company is located . earned money overseas becomes your company income personal income will be where you earned it, if you are resident /citizen of territorial tax country
@dlukton3 жыл бұрын
You have to be tax resident SOMEWHERE.
@OffshoreCitizen3 жыл бұрын
No you don't necessarily have to be tax resident somewhere, it depends on what country you are from. It's possible for people from many countries to be tax resident nowhere.
@dlukton3 жыл бұрын
@@OffshoreCitizen OK, but supposedly, when you open a bank account, you have to at least ASSERT a tax residence (even if you never have to actually file a tax return there).
@pak74x3 жыл бұрын
@@OffshoreCitizen thank you for clarification
@sb3424 Жыл бұрын
Hi Michael! Would this strategy work well for owner operator truck drivers in europe who are crossing national borders every day for work?
@listlings67383 жыл бұрын
would this work for Australians?
@logintosco3 жыл бұрын
Is this doable with a thai elite visa?
@steveg65123 жыл бұрын
Yes, but you cant do any work whilst in Thailand. Elite is like a high dollar tourist visa.
@meshoksa51512 жыл бұрын
If get residence in country has cfc rules and stay less then 180 days a year need pay tax?
@OffshoreCitizen2 жыл бұрын
Could, depends on the countries and details. Best to book a call to discuss specifics
@thankyouand32603 жыл бұрын
Why not just travel the world without tax residency anywhere, "without any base"? (e.g. if you have a German pass)
@OffshoreCitizen3 жыл бұрын
You can watch this one kzbin.info/www/bejne/rHvZkKOlnduMoZY Let us know how you liked it 😄
@stevemyers20923 жыл бұрын
what if you have a remote bookkeeping company not a travel co. ? how could this work...?
@dlukton3 жыл бұрын
Gotta meet with clients; gotta go to business conventions.
@nessim.liamani2 ай бұрын
### Summary of the Video: "How to Pay Zero Tax While Traveling the World?" In this video, Michael from Offshore Citizen explains a strategy to legally avoid taxes while traveling. The approach involves establishing residency in a country without Controlled Foreign Company (CFC) rules and setting up a business in a tax-free or low-tax jurisdiction. By maintaining a "perpetual traveler" lifestyle, you avoid tax residency in any one country. Key points include ensuring the business isn't managed from a high-tax country and having the company cover personal expenses like travel and lodging under business expenses. However, Michael notes that this lifestyle can be exhausting over time. ### Answer to Title Yes, there is a clear answer: it is possible to avoid taxes by combining a specific residency strategy with a nomadic lifestyle and a tax-efficient business setup. However, the approach may not suit everyone due to the demands of constant travel.
@FighterFred3 жыл бұрын
So if I trade forex from my own yacht in international waters and the company is in a tax-free country I pay no tax?
@OffshoreCitizen3 жыл бұрын
Depends where you are from
@lusvus54453 жыл бұрын
Australia?
@user-dy2qq5wh4b3 жыл бұрын
Can a US citizen do this strategy with the FEIE? When you say "perpetual traveler" could that equate to staying in 2 different countries under 6 months each? or constantly moving around, which would get exhausting fast. thank you michael!
@OffshoreCitizen3 жыл бұрын
2 countries probably not, and you wouldn't want to have a fixed base in each. The problem for a US citizen is GILTI tax
@dummylopez60942 жыл бұрын
This is complete misleading as the tie break rules of OCSE double taxation agreements always fall back to citizenship when is impossible to define your de facto residence (which is a typical situation for a digital nomad), hence all what you said is likely wrong for the unlucky guys that are under OCSE ruling. In the end most likely your tax residence is where your citizenship is and most likely this country has CFC rules so you will end up paying personal income tax and corporate tax in your citizen country. Even UAE that you always refer to consider TAX Resident (please note I am explictily saying TAX RESIDENT) a person that live in UAE more than 183 days where on the other side to keep the VISA residency in UAE is enough to live there one day every six months. Translated this means that is not enough to move to UAE to zero your taxes but you need to actually live there or the risk is that you will be reverted to your citizenship as tax residency. It might be cases where you bought a house in your new residency that allow you to get away from this issue but in many countries that would not be enough and for sure the tax authority will challenge you to court to prove you are tax resident outside of your citizenship country.
@OffshoreCitizen2 жыл бұрын
No you're wrong. You misunderstand that tie breaker rules only matter if you trigger the residency rules in that country to begin with. If you don't trigger the rules it doesn't matter. Go watch our video on The Tax Residency Myth
@dummylopez60942 жыл бұрын
@@OffshoreCitizen Most likely aggressive countries like Italy will definitely trigger the rule why the should not? In italy the notion of fiscal residence is quite open to include any interpretation. Think that if you say in public that you would like to come back to italy you risk to be considered tax resident in Italy. There are many court sentence that unfortunately bring back under the italian tax jusrisdition many people. On top of that if you live in a country such UAE there is the risk if your own country is european that you will be considered living in a black list country. Italy has its own list for residence black list and if you live in a country which is in the list in court is you that you have to prove that you are not living in Italy which reverse the juridical principal where the accusation has the duty to proof their thesis...
@HyperspaceHoliday3 жыл бұрын
I'm calling BS on this. It simply is not true. He is talking INCOME tax. You're still paying a lot of other consumption taxes, fees, levies, company and visa costs.
@caseybanana81143 жыл бұрын
You’re just being pedantic
@EnderViBrittania3 жыл бұрын
@@caseybanana8114 No, he makes a good point, but he goes overboard. It’s not BS, but yes you should add up all the costs with this option vs. the option of making your base in a 0 tax country.
@jesselivermore92853 жыл бұрын
Sounds great until borders get slammed shut and you get trapped in one spot.
@OffshoreCitizen3 жыл бұрын
Lol If you were to get trapped, what would be the ideal location? 😄
@jesselivermore92853 жыл бұрын
@@OffshoreCitizen hands down, Dubai
@EnderViBrittania3 жыл бұрын
@@OffshoreCitizen Where do you think? I guess Dubai or another developed 0 tax country.
@zee47983 жыл бұрын
Can i ask you all these nomads paying no tax . Do you think its right that there using infurstructure paid by tax payers n they just get a free ride. Now if there channel earns very little thats fine but what if there 200.000 500.000 subcribers n earning a large sum
@OffshoreCitizen3 жыл бұрын
Subscribers don't correlate very well to how much money you're making on KZbin. And most digital nomads aren't making their money on KZbin. This being said, digital nomads aren't getting most of the benefits of living in a country (healthcare, education, social security, court system, etc). They pay VAT, tourism taxes, and spend into the local economy creating jobs. If local countries thought it was a bad deal they could easily adjust the structure of their rules and taxation to deal with it accordingly. What we're seeing is in fact the opposite. Countries are trying to make it more attractive to attract more digital nomads because conceivably they feel it's a good pay off. That should tell you something. What do you think?
@zee47983 жыл бұрын
@@OffshoreCitizen indonesia considers if there making money standing on indonesian soil from indonesian content there working n should have visa to do so n pay tax . They are also using roads goverment services etc etc which public taxes pay 4. If they earn very little they leave them alone some have been deported in the last 2yrs. And they are well aware of utube rates . Some utubers with large folowing make good money not just frm utube but various ways .
@WolfF20229 ай бұрын
Tax is always a crime, if you haven`t a contract with somebody on an agreement from both sides it is crime.