Some info about that?have you talked to a spanish consultant? they told you the LLC route cant be used?
Some info about that?have you talked to a spanish consultant? they told you the LLC route cant be used?
Hi!
Just wonder which would you consider a better option for an EU resident doing 100% digital services with worldwide clients (mainly USA, EU and Australia clients).
Would you open an unipersonal (passthrough) United States LLC or an Armenia LLC ?
Thanks!
What about getting setup in Cyprus and hiring a good accountant?EU is the HELL of taxes, and not only that, is overcomplicated, making it almost impossible for small entrepreneurs. If you start to dig into the VAT system you will see how crazy and complex it is, as each EU country has it's own regulations....
I'm running Armenian LLC right now. Your business can't have any expenses outside Armenia, otherwise you will have to pay 23% WHT on all outgoing payments. Other than this, you can apply for IT company status and pay no corporate taxes, just dividend tax 5% or so. It seems that you dont have to pay VAT for export of services (which can be your business model if I understood right). But IT status is not for everyone, you probably need to develop your own softwareSomone has an Armenia LLC running? It's possible to make by distance?
As Armenia doesn't report your under CRS because they are not under CRS, would be useful to open an LLC there as non resident? Some advise?
No, most EMIs will not service you with Armenian company. You have to use local banks (which are very good but need some extra care)Thank you @avalanche for quite detailed answer. About that:
- Armenian company cannot have euro account at any EMI like Transferwise, Revolut?
Thats weird, I didnt know. You will need residence permit at least (no need for tax residency) to maintain Armenian company. That is the most optimal way. Banks dont like random people who do all things totally remotely.- Imposible to be resident in Armenia, because for European citizens (like France, Spain, Portugal...) it's not possible second residence in Armenia
Its possible yes. This money can be transferred anywhere else afterwards.- So only being a IT company in Armenia will be the best way to have only a 5% tax on dividend. I think good combination can be have a personal non-resident account at an Armenian Bank and pay yourself the dividends from the company to you personal account in there with the 5% tax. Is that right?
Easily. We are working only with EU clients right now + clients from Middle East are just fine. Get paid in USD, EUR, CHF or whatever currency you like- You can invoice european/us citizens with the IT company without problems?
I dont know. From what I understand, they dont do reporting even to their own government lol. Unless Armenian police has court order to access your bank account, there is bank secrecy in here.- Will Armenia o armenian bank report something to your own country?
No, even banks need your written permission to process your company data before opening an account. If I understood right, you need to be authorized to get such information from the government registry. No public data so far (but still be careful, I dont know all the details)- Your personal data is accessible from companies register of Armenia or similar? In Estonia, for example, is public...
From what I know, you need to either sell materials for education in IT fields OR you can develop and sell software licenses. Developing Joomla/Wordpress websites will be good enough for applying.- Being an IT company is enough to build an online guide in several languages or develop Joomla/Wordpress websites?
Many thanks in advance for your help on that
There is no problem whatsoever but of course they use intermediary banks. We even use merchant account services with below 3% card processing fee (can process payments in EUR). We dont pay anything for receiving money via wire transfer. EUR arrives within 1 working day. CHF is very expensive though when you exchange it to something else or move it around.Hello again @avalanche Many thanks for all the provided details. About all that you posted, only 2 doubts:
ABOUT "Easily. We are working only with EU clients right now + clients from Middle East are just fine. Get paid in USD, EUR, CHF or whatever currency you like"
- The armenian banks let you have account in EUR, USD and CHF with no problem? They don't use intermediate banks or similar to let the money enter the account? (I think this could be very expensive in that way).
EUR, USD and AMD are all supported without any problem. We are processing over 30k EUR/mo without any questions whatsoever. Just dont fuckup with chargebacks and have legit business with full transparency and solid website. The only drawback, you will have to develop software for integrating their API gateway. Most of all, dont do shady of fishy activity and stay compliant- Banks there provide your company with merchant account to integrate to your website and checkout your clients directly in EUR or USD? (instead of AMD)
It costs something but Im thinking budget around 2k EUR for setup of license and LLC with bank account should be enough. Might take around 1-2 months to get license, bank takes usually 3-7 working days.ABOUT "From what I know, you need to either sell materials for education in IT fields OR you can develop and sell software licenses"
- That license is easy to apply and cost-free?
Its one of the most scrutinizing and strictest banks over here. They will ask you for details more than any other banks. But once you get an account with them, you can easily apply for any other bank and tell them you already have Ameria. They think like "oh these guys approved him, so he must be legit".- What do you think about AmeriaBank to manage merchant account for a company?
Many thanks mate!
Neither armenian nor european. I didnt say about getting nationality or citizenship, I only mentioned residency. These are very different things. Not sure if I can mention incorporator while keeping it aligned with the rules of the forumSo grateful to know about that details. Are you armenian guy or european one? (I ask it because you told me about getting double nationallity).
You recommend me some incorporator for setting up the IT LLC?
Thank you @avalancheNeither armenian nor european. I didnt say about getting nationality or citizenship, I only mentioned residency. These are very different things. Not sure if I can mention incorporator while keeping it aligned with the rules of the forum
do you still think they are good, what bank would take on a foreigner with a local company in Armenia?No, most EMIs will not service you with Armenian company. You have to use local banks (which are very good but need some extra care)
Yes they are still good. Just try Ameriabank, they seem fine.do you still think they are good, what bank would take on a foreigner with a local company in Armenia?
Its against the rules of the forum to post such things publiclyThis sounds very interesting. Avalanche, do you have any recommendations for company formation service providers for Armenian LLC?
You can post other providers as you are sharing a resource.Its against the rules of the forum to post such things publicly
Its against the rules of the forum to post such things publicly
https://www.ibfd.org/Consultancy-Research/Tax-Treatment-Foreign-Entities-Germany-and-SpainNo, you are all wrong. My fingers are becoming sore from typing this over and over.
You cannot live and work in your high-tax country and just register a company in some other country and expect to pay that country’s taxes instead. If that was possible, everybody would be doing it. It would be the same as your government saying: “You know what, just decide how much tax you want to pay!”
I’m no expert on Spain, but I don’t think you can avoid the autonomo fees that way either. Because when everything is done from Spain, you must register a Spanish office for your US company and then it will be the same all over.
Unless you can avoid the fees with a SARL then you can’t avoid them with a US LLC or UK LLP or whatever structure. You’d need something more complex.