What are your thoughts on this matter?
1. DelawareDepends on a factors.
1. Where your company in USA are registered?
2. Do you have Clients in USA?
3. In which countries you have clients and what is annual revenue you are receiving from each country?
I think I should meet a lawyer. CPA don't seem to be very familiar with this kind of setup.Seek a different CPA because what she said doesn't make sense.
If LLC is seen as a transparent entity then the fact there's no substantial presence in US shouldn't change the company from being treated as transparent to opaque.
the Spanish tax authorities would treat the USA LLC as a Spanish company. This would result in a significant amount of paperwork.
Perhaps I should take the risk and proceed with my initial plan, registering as an "autonomo" in Spain and invoicing my USA LLC.
Ultimately, I would fulfill all my tax obligations in Spain, as I am not attempting to evade taxes; I simply wish to operate under the umbrella of my established USA LLC.
What are your thoughts on this matter? Thank you!
No - she did not really mention the U.S side. as if it the way it is taxed does not really matter. My feeling is that for her, the main point was that the single member LLC was owned and administrated by me. therefore, the spanish tax authorities would come to me and tell me "it's a non sense to have a US company"Did the CPA elaborate on choosing either to be taxed as C-corp or pass-through for the LLC?
Yes seems you were right, and thank you for that.Told you so.
It's not worth it. I prefer to sleep good at night.There's a good chance you'll fly under the radar, but you are breaking multiple rules in two countries.
If you are caught, you may just get a slap on the wrist because you didn't actually try to evade taxes, or you may find yourself in serious trouble. I'm not sure, but I'd expect the legal expenses to get high fast, especially when you have to hire a lawyer to represent you in the US.
No, I will explore this solution.Have you looked into changing the taxation of your LLC from corporation to disregarded entity, as several people in this thread suggested?
If @TheCryptoAnt 's information is correct (that Hacienda would treat you as autonomo in that case), then that could be a good solution.
Interestingly, the advice I received from a CPA during a phone call aligns with the idea you mentioned. However, I didn't have a positive impression of her as she seemed overly intrusive, delving into personal details such as my monthly expenses and the type of car I intended to drive. the kind of apartment I would rent etc... I was uncomfortable with her approach. Nevertheless, I do recall her suggesting a setup involving a company in the U.S. and one in Spain. The Spanish entity would handle invoicing for European clients, while the U.S. company would manage clients from the rest of the world. Eventually, the Spanish company would invoice the profits of the U.S. company as well. This alternative needs further exploration.Maybe you can set up a Spanish branch of your US LLC or simply a Spanish company. Then use the Spanish company to invoice both European clients and the US company.
Then you would at least reduce the risk for 1.-3. above.
If LLC is seen as a transparent entity then the fact there's no substantial presence in US shouldn't change the company from being treated as transparent to opaque.
But I have this feeling that they don't really understand much into all of this... maybe better to find a good lawyer
I'm not sure what you mean here
1. The country in which I currently reside does not recognize the disregarded entity status, which prompted me to change the taxation structure to a C-corporation.If LLC is taxed as a C-Corp in USA, LLC is paying CIT on the profits.
If LLC is taxed as a disregarded entity then the profits and losses are pass through to the members (yours) tax return (eg. no CIT). If you are US tax resident there is additional self employment tax to be paid.
If you are not a tax resident in USA, you will still need to make your tax return to IRS and then add some additional information (don't remember the exact document ID's, but I believe there are 1 or 2 that need to be supplied) that you are not to be taxed in USA on your pass through income. Same goes for salary from a C-Corp.
If you have already chosen for the LLC to be taxed as a C-Corp it will be regarded as a US tax payer and LLC will pay CIT on the profit and then you can pay out any taxed profit to yourself and again tax on that personally.
What is the benefit of electing to be taxed as a C-Corp in your case/setup?
When you say "flushing" profit to yourself, what do you mean exactly?
Based on what you said, If I can change the taxation of my US LLC from c-corp to disregarded entity, my U.S. LLC will be considered a transparent entity in both the U.S. and Spain, I can continue operating as I have been and simply declare the profits in Spain? As an autonomo in Spain, I would report the income generated by the LLC on my personal tax return and fulfill my tax obligations accordingly?You'll never find anybody that will admit openly "look i don't have a clue WTF you are talking about but i'll take your money anyway"
source
I'll rephrase what i said.
Based on the above article his US LLC is a foreign single member entity not liable to US tax so it will be treated as a transparent enitity in Spain.
The fact that the CPA said "Since you are a sole trader with no substantial presence in US then Spain will tax US LLC as company" means that she doesn't have a clue.
If US LLC is transparent for both US and Spain he will pay income tax and social contributions in Spain.
Basically it is like the LLC doesn't exist and all income is generated by him as an autonomo.
Based on what you said, If I can change the taxation of my US LLC from c-corp to disregarded entity, my U.S. LLC will be considered a transparent entity in both the U.S. and Spain, I can continue operating as I have been and simply declare the profits in Spain? As an autonomo in Spain, I would report the income generated by the LLC on my personal tax return and fulfill my tax obligations accordingly?
Since I've done the change from disregarded to c-corp in August 2019, I will have to wait till August 2024 to change it again.
Based on the above article his US LLC is a foreign single member entity not liable to US tax so it will be treated as a transparent enitity in Spain.
Since I've done the change from disregarded to c-corp in August 2019, I will have to wait till August 2024 to change it again.
you wrote that substance in the US
OP wrote multiple times that the LLC is taxed as a corporation in the US.
What makes Spain tax LLC as a company is if you select LLC to be taxed as C-corp.
If @TheCryptoAnt 's information is correct (that Hacienda would treat you as autonomo in that case), then that could be a good solution.
Basically it is like the LLC doesn't exist and all income is generated by him as an autonomo.
the insights and knowledge I gained from this forum often surpassed the information provided by these « « professionals »
How?
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