Yes, but I have to live there for at least a half year and I don't know if I would like that. I tend to Monaco since renting an apartment and having a bank deposit seems enough to get a residency there. This way I can get around for a time presence requirment since there are no borders across the Schengen area
do you have your own personal experience with Thailand and setup like this?Thailand will give you tax residency and not tax money earned outside Thailand, provided it is is not remitted to Thailand.
Maintain a separate capital account and only send capital to Thailand.
Also, a delightful and safe place to live with friendly people, great weather, great food, great golf etc and excellent internet (except during thunderstorms)
Sorta kinda. You are still not allowed to WORK without a work permit in Thailand. Work permits are only given to people working for Thai registered companies. If you ignore that specific labor law, and work in Thailand anyway, then you are still exposed to the tax laws. If you get compensated directly for your work (=salary), then by law you need to pay tax in Thailand regardless of remittance.Am i correct? Or are this rule old?
How complicated is it to setup a company in Thailand and be employed by that company? I'm curious to know.Sorta kinda. You are still not allowed to WORK without a work permit in Thailand. Work permits are only given to people working for Thai registered companies. If you ignore that specific labor law, and work in Thailand anyway, then you are still exposed to the tax laws. If you get compensated directly for your work (=salary), then by law you need to pay tax in Thailand regardless of remittance.
Note that none of this is actively being enforced in Thailand at the moment. If you work online then you are relatively safe at the moment, but it can easily change.
Anyway, the excerpt you were referring to is regarding dividends. Dividend income received abroad is only taxed (and requires reporting) if it was remitted to Thailand within the same calendar year in which it was received. So if you do decide to try it out, make sure to structure it so you do not actually "work" and receive a salary. You just receive dividends from a business that you own, but not directly operate, and you never remit in the same calendar year.
It's not complicated, and the 51% Thai ownership problem can be sorted with some basic lawyer tricks (there will be Thai owners on paper, but they will be powerless in practice), but it is quite unattractive tax wise and bureaucracy wise. It makes no sense unless you actually want to conduct business/own property in Thailand.How complicated is it to setup a company in Thailand and be employed by that company?
Just came an idea into my mind: With an malteste company...
Armenia, Australia, Austria, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Belgium, Bulgaria, Canada, Chile, China, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Great Britain and Northern Ireland, Hong Kong, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Israel, Italy, Japan, Kuwait, Laos, Luxembourg, Malaysia, Mauritius, Myanmar, Nepal, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Philippines, Poland, Romania, Russia, Seychelles, Singapore, Slovenia, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Sri Lanka, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, Ukraine, United Arab Emirates, United States of America, Uzbekistan and Vietnam.
What are these countries?25 Other countries have no-questions-asked, no restrictions what-so-ever policy for getting that tax exemption on foreign income.
Malta needs to be booted from the offshore business. Their sneaky ways laying tax traps and over-complicating simple matters is a disgrace. Existing legal bloat and compliance is cumbersome enough but they keep adding to it. And even when you bank elsewhere, you can't ignore the undeniable fact that the title of being the worst financial services center in the EU belongs to Malta.
To pay 0 to 5% tax, there are better options elsewhere in Europe. For long term-term stability and clarity, avoid Malta. Not residents looking to structure their passive investment funds or active trading companies can structure via Ireland, Gibraltar, IoM/Guernsey/Jersey, Cyrpus or Luxembourg. There may be other options not mentioned.
What are these countries?
Happy new year
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