I was born in the US as a US citizen, had a passport all my life but lived and worked overseas entirely until my early 50s, never filed a US tax return. When we wanted to move to the US so my kids could have the choice of US citizenship I had none of the requirements to support the immigration of my foreign citizen wife and foreign born but citizenship eligible kids, including no “domicile” or SSN. The consulate where I was told me to get an SSN, file a tax return for a couple of years, get a street address post box where we planned to live for domicile and it would be OK. Immigration went so quickly we were caught short with no questions whatsoever about my tax record so I wonder how tightly the citizen tax rules are enforced.
@@DaveDave-e4t It's a burden on them when they return to live in a foreign country. US citizenship makes banking, investments, and business mostly impossible and then add the high cost and stress of filing while overseas and the additional taxation... You're not doing them any favors.
I would like to hear about Estonia's simplified tax system, if you would be inclined to make a vid about it. I'm sure others would appreciate it also. Thank-you.
In Finland we have the taxes mostly automated so that you'll just get a pre-filled tax filing that you can view online (if you even want to, not mandatory) and only if something is not right or you want to add something, then it can be done online and sent to the tax office. Now most of the tax types are handled like this. Inheritance tax is one of the last tax types which is done manually, however that should be also automated in the next few years so that you'll again just get a pre-filled inheritance tax filing and that's all, no actions necessary.
Love your content, thanks so much for your videos! 🙏🏼 Germany has opened up the option for dual citizenship again - do you think there's much point in getting a second European passport (Irish) if one has the option - or would it not be worth the hassle, seeing they're both pretty much equal when it comes to accessing other countries visa free?
You acquire the citizenship of five countries and most of which are tax-free? And tax rates combined might be lower than income tax levied by the US 😂.
@@FeralineHydor true but you don't need citizenship to be taxed in Japan. You only need to be a resident 5 or more years. You will be taxed exactly like a citizen. Maybe we are speaking on 2 different perspectives.
@@raphaelglobalexcept for treasury interpretation, I’ve seen no where in the irc where a citizen of the United States is actually taxed WITHOUT first declaring oneself a resident of the United States by submitting to various tests which really only apply to an alien (non American citizen).
Can you please do more videos on Caribbean relocation? Like to Trinidad, Jamaica, Barbados, Guyana etc… Love the info would just like to learn about other places. Thank you 🙏🏽
We did: ua-cam.com/video/d2kLQ-sWrNc/v-deo.html It's always best to get personalized advice rather than rely on UA-cam, so feel free to get in touch: www.nomadcapitalist.com/apply/
There will always be Countries who want to be tax competitive and will offer zero tax. You can also follow the trifecta method and never establish tax residency.
If you were a resident in Australia and a US citizen, would you receive a refund from the irs if you paid more tax in Australia than would have been due in the the US!
@@kubakielbasa5987 If you pay more and file a return saying that you owe less, they give you a refund. It's very common for people to overpay and get money back when they file
So if you're a panama tax resident could you spend 2months in 6 other countries and still maintain panama tax residency? Since you didn't stay anywhere else over 180 days. Or do you need to stay in Panama a certain amount of time per year?
@@fabianshaw_ You don't need to by law. But it's better to be a tax resident of a tax friendly country if you ever plan to stay in high tax countries in future
@@rithondhar8171 As in my ORIGINAL POST... I am a panama tax resident. I'm wondering if I have to stay here 6 months a year to maintain it though or if I can travel full-time as long as I don't trigger tax residency elsewhere.
I'm applying for a new job with plenty of potential for upside movement. The problem is that it requires my first clearance level. Have you ever worked with anyone with a clearance, and in your experience, where is the line? I haven't found out what kind of clearance I will need, but it appears to be a "sf85"
How about this situation Andrew- US citizen, living permanently in Colombia soon. I have a Colombian AirBnB- should I receive my income from AirBnB sent to US account or my Colombian, based upon best tax scenario. Thank you ☺️
Why didn’t you talk about tax treaties some countries can have with other countries? You have in the past with some of your videos so I was confused why you didn’t mention this. Whether the person is American or not, there can still be tax treaties between the countries that prevent a person from double taxation.
Taxes? Are you Congress? Or did Congress ask for you to pay? What did you pay with? Please do not say a dollar, while holding a FEDERAL RESERVE NOTE (FRN). Important questions to ask.
At Nomad Capitalist, adhering to legal standards is a core value for us. We believe in being the best at what we do while staying within legal boundaries.
Paying taxes, monthly concierge wage, maintenance fees are important to pursue your ownership of apartments, otherwise the managers of those apts you own can be sold and you will loose your ownership easily because you are not even their citizen, just resident.
Did you just roll out of bed and stumble on this channel to ask such an asinine question that if you were a regular follower your answer would have already been answered?
Your channel is a gift to humanity
Thank you! Stay tuned!
I was born in St. Lucia but live a nomad lifestyle. Good vibes!
That’s awesome! Since you’re living a nomad lifestyle, where have you traveled or lived so far?
Yes I will do too.
Nomadic life
I m from Belgium
I was born in the US as a US citizen, had a passport all my life but lived and worked overseas entirely until my early 50s, never filed a US tax return. When we wanted to move to the US so my kids could have the choice of US citizenship I had none of the requirements to support the immigration of my foreign citizen wife and foreign born but citizenship eligible kids, including no “domicile” or SSN. The consulate where I was told me to get an SSN, file a tax return for a couple of years, get a street address post box where we planned to live for domicile and it would be OK. Immigration went so quickly we were caught short with no questions whatsoever about my tax record so I wonder how tightly the citizen tax rules are enforced.
How did you have a passport without a SSN?
@@DearworthBooks I got the original before you needed an SSN when I was 9 months old.
This is really going to be a burden on your children.
@@LisaCultonNot if the children were born overseas and their foreign passport reflects that fact.
@@DaveDave-e4t It's a burden on them when they return to live in a foreign country. US citizenship makes banking, investments, and business mostly impossible and then add the high cost and stress of filing while overseas and the additional taxation... You're not doing them any favors.
Great video as always. Just here to say - Much love to Nomad Capitalist and to Andrew.
Go where you're treated best 📖
I would like to hear about Estonia's simplified tax system, if you would be inclined to make a vid about it. I'm sure others would appreciate it also. Thank-you.
Another Gem 🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️
As Andrew said only the USA and Eritrea have citizenship based taxation.
In Finland we have the taxes mostly automated so that you'll just get a pre-filled tax filing that you can view online (if you even want to, not mandatory) and only if something is not right or you want to add something, then it can be done online and sent to the tax office. Now most of the tax types are handled like this. Inheritance tax is one of the last tax types which is done manually, however that should be also automated in the next few years so that you'll again just get a pre-filled inheritance tax filing and that's all, no actions necessary.
inheritance tax should be outlawed
@@kubakielbasa5987 Totally agree. Our neighbor Sweden hasn't had inheritance tax for a long time, and we still do which in my opinion is nuts.
Nice video!
The best tax return is no tax return. Make it automatic.
Love your content, thanks so much for your videos! 🙏🏼 Germany has opened up the option for dual citizenship again - do you think there's much point in getting a second European passport (Irish) if one has the option - or would it not be worth the hassle, seeing they're both pretty much equal when it comes to accessing other countries visa free?
You acquire the citizenship of five countries and most of which are tax-free? And tax rates combined might be lower than income tax levied by the US 😂.
Except for Japan
All citizenships are tax-free, except the U.S.
@@FeralineHydor true but you don't need citizenship to be taxed in Japan. You only need to be a resident 5 or more years. You will be taxed exactly like a citizen. Maybe we are speaking on 2 different perspectives.
@@raphaelglobalexcept for treasury interpretation, I’ve seen no where in the irc where a citizen of the United States is actually taxed WITHOUT first declaring oneself a resident of the United States by submitting to various tests which really only apply to an alien (non American citizen).
A lot of countries don't have tax on worldwide income, so usually there's no need to sum those tax rates
Can you please do more videos on Caribbean relocation? Like to Trinidad, Jamaica, Barbados, Guyana etc… Love the info would just like to learn about other places. Thank you 🙏🏽
can you make a video on the Cyprus non-dom program for Europeans?
We did: ua-cam.com/video/d2kLQ-sWrNc/v-deo.html
It's always best to get personalized advice rather than rely on UA-cam, so feel free to get in touch: www.nomadcapitalist.com/apply/
It would be useful to get this info for the entire world on a spreadsheet like excel and the columns can be sorted by category.
We have a lot of internal spreadsheets and do stuff like that for our clients. www.nomadcapitalist.com/apply/
What if other countries adoprt the US tax regime?
There will always be Countries who want to be tax competitive and will offer zero tax. You can also follow the trifecta method and never establish tax residency.
@@DanielMurrey citizenship based taxation: *exists*
I know you don't live here but pay us taxes
@@kubakielbasa5987 You have to work towards renouncing, if you're an American. Only real option. That's my long term plan.
If you were a resident in Australia and a US citizen, would you receive a refund from the irs if you paid more tax in Australia than would have been due in the the US!
As someone who never set foot on US soil, I thought that they don't even return if you pay more taxes than necessary.
@@kubakielbasa5987 If you pay more and file a return saying that you owe less, they give you a refund. It's very common for people to overpay and get money back when they file
can you do a video on indonesia please
How about leaving in turkey for australian Australian citizen
So if you're a panama tax resident could you spend 2months in 6 other countries and still maintain panama tax residency? Since you didn't stay anywhere else over 180 days. Or do you need to stay in Panama a certain amount of time per year?
You can't be technically non tax resident in all the countries. But it's better to be a tax resident of a no tax/ low tax country for future purposes
@@rithondhar8171 That isn't what I asked. smh
@@fabianshaw_ You don't need to by law. But it's better to be a tax resident of a tax friendly country if you ever plan to stay in high tax countries in future
@@rithondhar8171 As in my ORIGINAL POST... I am a panama tax resident.
I'm wondering if I have to stay here 6 months a year to maintain it though or if I can travel full-time as long as I don't trigger tax residency elsewhere.
I'm applying for a new job with plenty of potential for upside movement. The problem is that it requires my first clearance level. Have you ever worked with anyone with a clearance, and in your experience, where is the line? I haven't found out what kind of clearance I will need, but it appears to be a "sf85"
Thank you for your comment! We’d be happy to assist you. Please reach out to our team at help@nomadcapitalist.com.
How about this situation Andrew- US citizen, living permanently in Colombia soon. I have a Colombian AirBnB- should I receive my income from AirBnB sent to US account or my Colombian, based upon best tax scenario. Thank you ☺️
Good luck!
One of my favorite channels. Now I just need to make a couple million lol
Why didn’t you talk about tax treaties some countries can have with other countries? You have in the past with some of your videos so I was confused why you didn’t mention this. Whether the person is American or not, there can still be tax treaties between the countries that prevent a person from double taxation.
Nobody talks about it but pay tax where you appreciate the country and want to contribute to the culture.
That's a very interesting take! Which country do you feel most connected to and would like to support in this way?
@@nomadcapitalist 🇮🇲 but would say the same about Switzerland.
Taxes?
Are you Congress?
Or did Congress ask for you to pay?
What did you pay with?
Please do not say a dollar, while holding a FEDERAL RESERVE NOTE (FRN).
Important questions to ask.
Bro took the word "passport bros" in a different meaning
According to what You said in the video, I live in México, if I wanna get out, is it better if I get another citizenship first?
Don't pay taxes legally:)
At Nomad Capitalist, adhering to legal standards is a core value for us. We believe in being the best at what we do while staying within legal boundaries.
@@nomadcapitalist Yes.
❌ Moving around the world to avoid taxes
✅ Moving around the world to pay taxes in 5 countries
If moving around the world helps optimize your tax situation and pay less overall, why not?
He said he's NOT paying taxes in 5 countries. He's likely paying taxes in one or two
Paying taxes, monthly concierge wage, maintenance fees are important to pursue your ownership of apartments, otherwise the managers of those apts you own can be sold and you will loose your ownership easily because you are not even their citizen, just resident.
The US needs money for running the military and keeping the world safe and free.
Military is paid from debt.
You can just not pay them mate. Also why the hell do you have five citizenships......
Did you just roll out of bed and stumble on this channel to ask such an asinine question that if you were a regular follower your answer would have already been answered?
mate mate, mate.
U first time here??? 😂😂😂😂
Freedom
Have a look at our playlist about common misconceptions: ua-cam.com/play/PLlVUJeLNo-5LaCqciMonKCvFYn5RonxqN.html