I had this situation for nine months. Years ago I left Canada for the Cayman Islands and gave up my Canadian residency (no address, banking, healthcare etc in Canada) to get tax-free status in Cayman. Then when I left the Caymans after five years of working there, I lost my residency there because I had no work permit when I left, and spent nine months travelling around Europe; not working, no income, so no tax either. It was amazing- no keys, no bills, total freedom. So I still had Canadian citizenship, but was not resident anywhere.
WG Hill of Scope Publishing introduced this subject back in the 1980s. He called it PT, perpetual tourist. Harry Schultz purportedly promoted this concept in the 1970s but I have no first hand knowledge of that
@@OffshoreCitizen your videos have been great so far so it's hard to say. In relation to this topic of nowhere residency, what if you lived on a boat? I heard about people selling everything to live on cruiseships or yachts. It's been about a year since your personal video about moving to bulgaria and while you've touched upon the good and bad in your comparison videos, it would be great to hear an update on your personal experiences now that you've lived there a while. And pardon me if you've already covered it, but it would be great to hear your opinion about places to relocate for families
All US citizens are liable to tax in the US, wherever they are domiciled. Even if the tax is not applicable where they live. Example; US citizen living in the UK for 20 years. Wins the lottery. NO tax due in UK (it is a tax free win) but liable for tax on that win in the US.
We spoke to HMRC they advised they do not accept 'just travelling' or not being a tax resident of another country as a good enough reason to leave the clutches of the UK tax system.
but someone who isn't a UK citizen or resident or domicile there, that person may be in a different situation than you because the home country rules are different . . . also, there could be a difference for someone who had already become tax resident in another country, abandoned residence and ordinary residence status in UK based on that fact, and then (years later) lost residence in the new country, see what I mean?
I'm about to leave Canada but don't know yet where I'll establish residency (if at all). I called the federal and provincial tax authorities to learn about the process (of breaking the tax tie). One of things they told me is that I have to provide them with a new address else they will keep me on their records (which I find abusive especially as I'm not even Canadian). I'm thinking about giving my parents' address in France, because technically that's where I'll go/reside for a few weeks before moving to other countries. I'd assume this takes care of the Canadian side because they won't come check if I stay for good. However, it's a bit less clear on the French side. If the French tax auth sticks with my last statement a few years back when I informed them that I moved to Canada I should be fine. But if the Canadian tax authority (or the Quebec one) sends this info to the French tax authority and the French auth uses it to update its own records, I'll just recreate the same undesirable situation as the French also require you to be resident somewhere else to break tax residency. Any thoughts?
Excellent decision. Canada is no longer worth it (if it had ever been....). I wouldn't give much details as it's no longer their business especially if you are not Canadian, why would you even want to be bothered with them, once you leave the country ? Disconnect and just come back on vacation if you wish, that's all. Otherwise, it wouldn't be fair to pay more taxes if you make money outside of canada. The less you tell them, the better in my opinion.
you really need to find a third country (not Canada, not France) that has a low tax or zero tax or territorial tax system, and officially establish a residency there by that country's rules . . . this will save you all the trouble
Criteria to be called tax resident are often not exclusiv in the law, but we can see some case law which set a precedent and recalled tax resident some nationals which did not trigger any criteria of the tax residence because they were no able to prove a tax residence somewhere else with either annual declaration either TRC
I noticed that paraguay permanent residence only needs you there 120 days a year to be tax resident. Not as good as no residency but does give you the other 8 months to travel basically tax free. Is there other countries with very low requirements to be a tax resident and terriotorial taxation?
Gibraltar is supposedly one day per year to be tax resident there! (assuming you are established officially in their system under a proper residence scheme)
I know this video is 2 years old, but is your comment still sage advice? Would it depend on your home country, Italy for example? "You don't even need to meet some standard per se of being tax resident such that they will issue you a tax residency certificate. Usually just being a resident there is good enough."
Despite having TIN in two jurisdiction I unintentionally became a tax resident nowhere. You named Spain, my home country, and some banks there are very strict. Im required a Government issued TRC, not accepting the Income Tax Return as a proof. Where I live Im an alien resident and just considered resident for local tax purposes, therefore the Gov. issue no TRC for aliens.
Hey Michael, thanks for all the content! Been following for a while as I work through my ideal tax residence for me & my business as a live as a digital nomad. I see you're from Edmonton? I was born there but grew up in Van. If you ever want to connect, perhaps exchange some marketing advice for some tax advice, let me know! I'm meeting business owners abroad who could benefit from your service.
Hi, thanks for such grate content! Do you know how’s the situation for Ukrainians right now? I’m Ukrainian and digital nomad lately, can’t choose how to arrange my tax situation
True. After being away 11 months. And not having a permanent home in NZ. And you can only go back for something like 40 days in a year. But yes you don't need to be tax resident elsewhere.
On the average, doesnt tax residency rules apply usually if you stay within a foreign country for at least 6mos? If you stay shorter than 6mos, on the average, then you're not liable for taxation?
Yes, this is generally the rule but it’s not the only one to follow. When will a country consider you a tax resident will vary from country to country, and lots of places don’t just look at the amount of time but also your connections in the country , etc.
This is not at all true. Each country has its own rules as to what make you resident in that country. Some places you can be resident there with zero days spent in the country! Be careful and research it out.
Very interesting. Subscribed! Does the UK or Germany have a rule similar to "If you're not tax-resident anywhere, then you pay taxes based on your citizenship" ?
UK definitely not, you're allowed to be resident nowhere. Germany is a little bit more tricky, in theory it's possible though not nearly as straight forward as UK.
Great video. Thanks! Subscribed. Can you establish tax residency in Thailand via an Elite Visa (pay for visa no stay or age or bank account deposit/business requirements) and meet residency test (183 days a year) and then transfer some funds - enough to earn a (small amount of) taxable income. I assume this would work? Asking as An AU p/port holder wanting to avoid resuming immediate tax residence after leaving KSA (zero tax). Thanks
More like, you would need to indicate "tax residence" to open a bank account or accept money as income, and you will perhaps need to lie to them in order to do that business. Banks are regulated businesses.
you don't have to lie about anything . . . the forms ask for residence, not tax residence . . . you can give them the country that you consider yourself resident in, if there is no country that can claim you are a resident . . . in this case, resident is where you are most naturally home, where you have a fixed place of abode, where you have a power or water bill in your name showing this, where you spend the most time that year, etc.
I had this situation for nine months. Years ago I left Canada for the Cayman Islands and gave up my Canadian residency (no address, banking, healthcare etc in Canada) to get tax-free status in Cayman. Then when I left the Caymans after five years of working there, I lost my residency there because I had no work permit when I left, and spent nine months travelling around Europe; not working, no income, so no tax either. It was amazing- no keys, no bills, total freedom. So I still had Canadian citizenship, but was not resident anywhere.
I really like your clear, no-bs explanation. The best I've come across on this topic. Not too risk-averse just to common sense
Thank you, appreciate the support! What else would you like to see on the channel?
Thanks! (Volume is a bit low though.....)
WG Hill of Scope Publishing introduced this subject back in the 1980s. He called it PT, perpetual tourist. Harry Schultz purportedly promoted this concept in the 1970s but I have no first hand knowledge of that
Great video Mr. Rosmer. Thank you for taking the time to talk about nowhere tax residency. It's a very good topic
You're welcome. Always a pleasure!
Anything else you'd like to see?
@@OffshoreCitizen your videos have been great so far so it's hard to say. In relation to this topic of nowhere residency, what if you lived on a boat? I heard about people selling everything to live on cruiseships or yachts.
It's been about a year since your personal video about moving to bulgaria and while you've touched upon the good and bad in your comparison videos, it would be great to hear an update on your personal experiences now that you've lived there a while.
And pardon me if you've already covered it, but it would be great to hear your opinion about places to relocate for families
Offshore content without the bull shit, awesome channel.
Thanks, Guillermo!
Anything you'd like to see on our channel next?
I'd be interested in a list of countries that allow this. I know the us "kinda" allows this with the foreign income exclusion thing
Sounds like a great video idea! Thank you for the suggestion
All US citizens are liable to tax in the US, wherever they are domiciled. Even if the tax is not applicable where they live. Example; US citizen living in the UK for 20 years. Wins the lottery. NO tax due in UK (it is a tax free win) but liable for tax on that win in the US.
what if you give up to your US citizenship?
First video I found for that topic! thanks man! A list of those countries would be amazing. Greets from a German citizen ;)
Glad to be of service!
Working on it, stay tuned :)
We spoke to HMRC they advised they do not accept 'just travelling' or not being a tax resident of another country as a good enough reason to leave the clutches of the UK tax system.
but are you no longer tax resident of the UK, shouldn't that be enough? (unless you own a home there, that's different)
but someone who isn't a UK citizen or resident or domicile there, that person may be in a different situation than you because the home country rules are different . . . also, there could be a difference for someone who had already become tax resident in another country, abandoned residence and ordinary residence status in UK based on that fact, and then (years later) lost residence in the new country, see what I mean?
This is one of the few advantages of the US tax wise. You can always claim to be a tax resident there. /s
Lol
Note quite... With the US you can be tax resident of two places at once . I was. So it's a huge disadvantage.
Lol
You haven`t to pay income tax in the US, it is against the US constitution to have direct taxes, people pay it voluntarily.
Not having tax residency anywhere certainly won't get easier over time
Likely true, hence the growing popularity of places like Dubai.
I'm about to leave Canada but don't know yet where I'll establish residency (if at all). I called the federal and provincial tax authorities to learn about the process (of breaking the tax tie). One of things they told me is that I have to provide them with a new address else they will keep me on their records (which I find abusive especially as I'm not even Canadian).
I'm thinking about giving my parents' address in France, because technically that's where I'll go/reside for a few weeks before moving to other countries. I'd assume this takes care of the Canadian side because they won't come check if I stay for good.
However, it's a bit less clear on the French side. If the French tax auth sticks with my last statement a few years back when I informed them that I moved to Canada I should be fine. But if the Canadian tax authority (or the Quebec one) sends this info to the French tax authority and the French auth uses it to update its own records, I'll just recreate the same undesirable situation as the French also require you to be resident somewhere else to break tax residency.
Any thoughts?
Your main problems are less about when you leave and more about when you return
Excellent decision. Canada is no longer worth it (if it had ever been....). I wouldn't give much details as it's no longer their business especially if you are not Canadian, why would you even want to be bothered with them, once you leave the country ? Disconnect and just come back on vacation if you wish, that's all. Otherwise, it wouldn't be fair to pay more taxes if you make money outside of canada. The less you tell them, the better in my opinion.
you really need to find a third country (not Canada, not France) that has a low tax or zero tax or territorial tax system, and officially establish a residency there by that country's rules . . . this will save you all the trouble
dude! whole channel is great content!
Thank you so much! Happy to be of service
Any suggestions for our channel? :)
@@OffshoreCitizen you could try some AMA live streams if you haven't already!
That's an amazing idea, thank you!
@@OffshoreCitizen NP btw we will be chatting this Sunday, looking forward to it :)
On my boat floating around ,, why not ,,,
Love your videos
Thank you, Edmond!
Anything you'd like to see next?
Criteria to be called tax resident are often not exclusiv in the law, but we can see some case law which set a precedent and recalled tax resident some nationals which did not trigger any criteria of the tax residence because they were no able to prove a tax residence somewhere else with either annual declaration either TRC
What do you mean?
depends on the country you're talking about . . . sure, that's true for some, but not for other, countries
I noticed that paraguay permanent residence only needs you there 120 days a year to be tax resident. Not as good as no residency but does give you the other 8 months to travel basically tax free. Is there other countries with very low requirements to be a tax resident and terriotorial taxation?
Cyprus, Gibraltar..
Gibraltar is supposedly one day per year to be tax resident there! (assuming you are established officially in their system under a proper residence scheme)
I had a problem getting a digital nomad visa (residence permit) as they were asking me to prove income via tax returns only, which I don't have.
Yes you can if you were born in a tax free country like Monaco !
I know this video is 2 years old, but is your comment still sage advice? Would it depend on your home country, Italy for example?
"You don't even need to meet some standard per se of being tax resident such that they will issue you a tax residency certificate. Usually just being a resident there is good enough."
true
Your bank will want a TIN nr so chose visely 😅
Despite having TIN in two jurisdiction I unintentionally became a tax resident nowhere. You named Spain, my home country, and some banks there are very strict. Im required a Government issued TRC, not accepting the Income Tax Return as a proof. Where I live Im an alien resident and just considered resident for local tax purposes, therefore the Gov. issue no TRC for aliens.
You're screwed then in this situation. I feel bad for you. All you can do is divest your financial accounts from Spain.
Can you not be resident anywhere and still open a brokerage account?
Hey Michael, thanks for all the content! Been following for a while as I work through my ideal tax residence for me & my business as a live as a digital nomad. I see you're from Edmonton? I was born there but grew up in Van. If you ever want to connect, perhaps exchange some marketing advice for some tax advice, let me know! I'm meeting business owners abroad who could benefit from your service.
What do you think of Bahrain bearing in mind forthcoming Dubai 9% tax?
would the MLI close the gaps for the mismatches
If you want your account closed then pretending you are a tax resident nowhere is a good start
Hi, thanks for such grate content! Do you know how’s the situation for Ukrainians right now? I’m Ukrainian and digital nomad lately, can’t choose how to arrange my tax situation
I am pretty sure New Zealand allows no tax residency. Is anyone able to confirm?
True. After being away 11 months. And not having a permanent home in NZ. And you can only go back for something like 40 days in a year. But yes you don't need to be tax resident elsewhere.
On the average, doesnt tax residency rules apply usually if you stay within a foreign country for at least 6mos? If you stay shorter than 6mos, on the average, then you're not liable for taxation?
Yes, this is generally the rule but it’s not the only one to follow. When will a country consider you a tax resident will vary from country to country, and lots of places don’t just look at the amount of time but also your connections in the country , etc.
@@OffshoreCitizen thanks for clarifying, sir. More power and stay safe!
You're welcome!
The same goes for you :)
This is not at all true. Each country has its own rules as to what make you resident in that country. Some places you can be resident there with zero days spent in the country! Be careful and research it out.
Very interesting. Subscribed!
Does the UK or Germany have a rule similar to "If you're not tax-resident anywhere, then you pay taxes based on your citizenship" ?
UK definitely not, you're allowed to be resident nowhere.
Germany is a little bit more tricky, in theory it's possible though not nearly as straight forward as UK.
Great video. Thanks! Subscribed. Can you establish tax residency in Thailand via an Elite Visa (pay for visa no stay or age or bank account deposit/business requirements) and meet residency test (183 days a year) and then transfer some funds - enough to earn a (small amount of) taxable income. I assume this would work? Asking as An AU p/port holder wanting to avoid resuming immediate tax residence after leaving KSA (zero tax). Thanks
Thank you for the support, appreciate it.
Yes, that could work. In case you need any help, feel free to contact us
this is a smart play, but you have to be careful . . . Thai rules are changing.
More like, you would need to indicate "tax residence" to open a bank account or accept money as income, and you will perhaps need to lie to them in order to do that business.
Banks are regulated businesses.
you don't have to lie about anything . . . the forms ask for residence, not tax residence . . . you can give them the country that you consider yourself resident in, if there is no country that can claim you are a resident . . . in this case, resident is where you are most naturally home, where you have a fixed place of abode, where you have a power or water bill in your name showing this, where you spend the most time that year, etc.
Why would anyone want to be a wage slave tax livestock peon anywhere?
So that some other, more ruthless and demanding overlord doesn't claim you as their own wage slave tax livestock peon. Did you listen to the video?
Yes and why dont more people cheat the system....I will be...
Do the UAE request a residence tax certificate from the country you're coming from in order to move to the UAE?
No
@@OffshoreCitizen thank you!