I'm getting my Chase business bank account remotely. If it works, I will share info in this forum.
Some countries can deem you as a tax resident (Spain for instance) if you are a national from said country and you have not been tax resident in any other country. They can claim the years where you were not a tax resident anywhere else as a resident in your country of citizenship. That's why it is a good idea to pay some tax in Thailand, have the tax filing and request a tax domicile certificate. Even if you have not been to your country for many years and have no ties. A different matter is if they would notice it and would have interest in going for you.Do you have any ties to your home country? (home, wife, kids, bank accounts, shares in companies and so on?)
If not wht your EU home country should be asking about you?
Rememeber that US isn't part of CRS so isn't actively sharing informations.
That’s why the UK is great - cuts off after so many months, and then years (5 I think) I had a UK bank doing EDD a couple of years ago after my account being idle and depositing a small amount in to pay for funeral flowers - wanted to know the ins and outs of a donkeys arse hole even when pointing out (they do HMrC business for them now) that I’ve not been a non resident for well over a decade + they were looking for touch points to bring me onshore or rather to see if there was touch points - apart from a mother about to go 6ft under there wasn’t.Some countries can deem you as a tax resident (Spain for instance) if you are a national from said country and you have not been tax resident in any other country. They can claim the years where you were not a tax resident anywhere else as a resident in your country of citizenship. That's why it is a good idea to pay some tax in Thailand, have the tax filing and request a tax domicile certificate. Even if you have not been to your country for many years and have no ties. A different matter is if they would notice it and would have interest in going for you.
request a tax domicile certificate
But a LLC or LLP could either bring you onshore in Thailand
Yes, I know that in the UK it works like that. But not in every country. Some people think, ok, I am a digital nomad, I spend 2 months in country X, 3 in country Y, 3 in country Z,... and I do not trigger a tax residency anywhere. I can live tax free. Well, that depends on your country of citizenship. For some countries you belong to the state and you are a slave, kind of.That’s why the UK is great - cuts off after so many months, and then years (5 I think) I had a UK bank doing EDD a couple of years ago after my account being idle and depositing a small amount in to pay for funeral flowers - wanted to know the ins and outs of a donkeys arse hole even when pointing out (they do HMrC business for them now) that I’ve not been a non resident for well over a decade + they were looking for touch points to bring me onshore or rather to see if there was touch points - apart from a mother about to go 6ft under there wasn’t.
Right. All depends on his passports.I agree, that's why i asked him to verify if EU countries that may consider him tax resident have a DTT with Thailand.
For example Greece, Lithuania, Latvia, Malta and Portugal don't have a DTT with Thailand
https://www.rd.go.th/english/766.html
Well, if he worked with the LLC/LLP while in Thailand he would create a PE and the company would be treated as a Thai company. In theory.But a LLC or LLP could either bring you onshore in Thailand or tie you to another nation.
Under Thailand's new rules as both are just an extension of yourself as I understand.
Technically - legally speaking British people are not citizens - they are subjects of the crown.citizenship. For some countries you belong to the state and you are a slave, kind of.
Why not take the income out from the LLC to his own account somewhere around the world?If i were in you i would keep all the money in my US LLC, get a US bank account with a 0% FX fees card and use that card for living expenses in Thailand either by paying with that card when possible or using that card to withdraw cash at the counter inside Bangkok Bank to avoid withdrawal fees.
Why not take the income out from the LLC to his own account somewhere around the world?
Thank you very much! So it’s not for me. I need to transfer all the earnings from the company to myself. If I have a Ltd (outside usa) I can do it easily every time by moving the money out as dividends correct? Thank you
For some states you don't even need to file the accounts. Nothing. Nada.@Marzio if you don't transfer anything from the LLC how do you use the money? I don't assume you can just spend on anything with a company card since it's the US not a banana republic or permissive asian jurisdiction.
I don't assume you can just spend on anything with a company card since it's the US not a banana republic or permissive asian jurisdiction.
The purpose of Form 5472 is to report all transactions between the foreign owner and the LLC, both directly and indirectly.
Examples of indirect transactions include paying business expenses on behalf of the LLC, invoicing the LLC from another company the foreigner owns, or sending money to friends and family from the LLC.
Be aware of special rules for transactions between the LLC and members of your family or the LLC and other entities under your name. Seek professional advice to make sure you comply with the IRS rules.
Revenue and sales are irrelevant for Form 1120 plus 5472 – only transactions between the foreign owner and the LLC are reported.
Yes that's my question too! I decided to stay far from LLC and USA. But go where? No tax audits/ fillings/ returns per year, no ESR (preferabbly) and no headaches. EU whitelisted or gray listed country that can open a normal company with a director and shareholder. that's it.. where???Maybe BVI or some similar jurisdiction would be easier in terms of spending directly from the company account or am I wrong here?
Yes, after reading all those I’m out of LLC. I already have the insane headache with UAE that I am looking forward to terminate completely.@JackieTsan I definitely see the USA/IRS far more serious than places like BVI or SVG that's why I am concerned to incorporate there and then find out I made some mistake and end up paying insane fines.
I was also looking into BVI, harder for banking and it has some very simple filling, the agent didn't seem to know if I need actual accounting like to keep receipts but other than that I think it's less risky and it's not blacklisted by EU, no idea what to pick really.