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My common sense tells me it would be the easiest in your home country.Perpetualtourist wrote:As an EU citizen, what are the criteria for being officially domiciled (in the legal sense of the word) in a EU country, and where is it easiest?
It needs to be as condition free and cheap as possible because I don't plan on spending much time there - I will be traveling and staying in countries around the world (would that be a problem?).
For internet business, many gov't have decided that wherever you generate the income from is where it has to be declared to deal with people like you trying to be foot loose and fancy free with tax declarations.Perpetualtourist wrote:Thanks. I will be working on the internet and just stay where I like. I need to be domiciled somewhere though for tax reasons.
You know how I can do this the easiest/cheapest?
I dont want to have to pay rent for a place I dont use etc. Im also not sure what the criteria are, would I need a physical place? Would I need to be in the country for a certain amount of time?
Thats why I would like to know where its the easiest and cheapest...
In Ireland such people are known as "members of the travelling community".Perpetualtourist wrote:What if I work from a different country every few months? Would I be tax liable in the country I'm domiciled in? What If I'm not domiciled anywhere (and just keep moving around)?
I do not think it is nearly so simple as this.acme4242 wrote:The Legal concept of domicile as it relates to TAX, means your
country of Birth, and Nationality.
Even you live in another country, and take another passport, does
not mean you don't have your origins or your domicile.
This is incorrect, at least in the law of many countries I know.acme4242 wrote:If you evade lawful tax's in your country of residence, you are
always liable in your country of domicile. This is how the taxman
always wins in the end.
I think this is pretty much right.acme4242 wrote:To lawfully advoid tax (not evade), you need to be tax compliant
and resident in a country with little or no tax.
This is why UK artists and singers live in Ireland.