Our valued sponsor

Thoughts about tax residency in Laos?

scooterguy

Member Plus
Mar 15, 2023
486
599
358
44
My sofa
Register now
You must login or register to view hidden content on this page.
No one ever talks about Laos, but maybe someone around here knows a thing or two about it?

I've been doing some research (and also I was there many years ago), and here are my findings:

Pros:
  • 100% foreign ownership of companies is allowed, including sole proprietorships.
  • Low cost of living, including low housing costs.
  • Low and simple personal income taxes. Tax brackets from 0 to 25%, and brackets are pretty large for a low GDP country (first $20K you only pay around $2k in taxes).
  • Low social security contributions (capped at around $30 per month).
  • Lots of non-existent taxes, such as wealth tax. Royalties tax 5%, dividends 10%. Capital gains taxes is 2% on the sale price (this one can be not so good, depending on the situation).
  • Non-CRS country.
  • Safe country, laid-back lifestyle and with some cool neighbors such as Vietnam, Thailand, Malaysia, etc.
  • Wise and PayPal are available. With Wise, you can only withdraw to a Laotian USD account though, and PayPal won't allow withdrawing, but you can receive and spend through PayPal.
  • A few crypto exchanges are available, such as Kraken.

Cons:
  • Extremely corrupt (this can be a pro in some cases).
  • Healthcare is pretty bad, so you'd need private insurance and be ready to go to Thailand or Vietnam for anything remotely serious.
  • It is illegal for foreigners to get intimate with Laotian girls outside of wedlock. So you can't play your "farang" card here as easily as in the neighboring countries :p.

Thoughts? On paper, it looks like a solid opportunity in SEA, but there might be some challenges as to why it's not more popular.

Main sources:
 
  • Like
Reactions: Nigital Domad
I have just been to Luang Prabang for one month as a digital nomad. There is one coworking space and for 50% of the time there where only 2 to 3 people there. There is good food and plenty of great coffee shops. Hardly any nightlife bar a local bowling alley that serves beer and plays loud music. The expat scène here is 95% tourism related. Beware there is burning season and Luang Prabang like Chiang Mai in Thailand suffer from bad air 3 months of the year. As a communist country foreigners can own no land, so real estate makes not for a good investment.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Nigital Domad
I have just been to Luang Prabang for one month as a digital nomad. There is one coworking space and for 50% of the time there where only 2 to 3 people there. There is good food and plenty of great coffee shops. Hardly any nightlife bar a local bowling alley that serves beer and plays loud music. The expat scène here is 95% tourism related. Beware there is burning season and Luang Prabang like Chiang Mai in Thailand suffer from bad air 3 months of the year. As a communist country foreigners can own no land, so real estate makes not for a good investment.
Good to know! What months are the bad air months?
 
img_2_1740132773561.webp