the tax brackets in Thailand are︀ very friendly, in terms of usual living expenses in the country, it's better to simply︁ calculate the needed planned expenses by having a look at the costs and then check︂ how much % it will really end up being taxed, could easily be like 18%︃ or something, which is not a big deal for having a nice paper that says︄ "I already pay taxes in [X] country, you cant tax me twice arent you?" to︅ the hungry-country 🙂)). All countries are hungry though, just taxation in each one looks different︆ - Hong Kong is not hungry with the 0% tax? well they tax through real︇ estate by having all lands leased from government to contractors who charge exorbitant real estate︈ prices and people pay their 'everything tax' that way, while still thinking they pay no︉ tax. That's what I've read about Hong Kong, not an expert though. Dubai same story,︊ all prices of "everything" are high, look at the cost of restaurants and real estate,︋ same thing like HK just in a different wrap. If you name taxes "Government Fees",︌ it's still a tax imho. Just convenient for some types of activities, not for everyone.︍ I would choose what's best in terms of lifestyle, because life is short and money︎ really doesn't buy any happiness 🙁 . Look at the polls, people in Scandinavian countries are️ the "Happiest in the world, by all polls!" despite being taxed up to 72% total at some circumstances (Denmark smi(&%), but they're always the happiest in the world thu&¤#. This makes me want to try living in one of these countries where wages after tax are 4k Euro, and a 1-bedroom apartment rent is 4k Euro. Just to figure out the mystery of how they even make ends meet, and then the second mystery of how they keep themselves so happy (number one in the world after all!). For now it's the number 2 I'm most curious about (number 1 is where are the aliens︀ hiding in US underground bases - the topic of the year smi(&%)
unfortunately you will also need a US address proof, AT&T bill︄ of some water / electric bill or long term rent contract (I think they don't︅ even accept contract, but want bills specifically). My friend who's a non US citizen, recently︆ went there for a bank account, we researched like 3-4 banks that are "foreigner friendly"︇ but none of them agreed to open personal account without US address proof. And to︈ get some mobile sim card bill at your address (he tried to get one to︉ his friend place) needs like 30 days lol, and his ticket back home was for︊ 2 weeks, so try to plan for that as well. Possibly it's different for LLC,︋ but better to be safe than sorry - so just pick a few banks on︌ google maps and call them, ask the workers if they require US address of not,︍ for foreigners with LLC thu&¤# that way you'll know for sure that they'll accept your application.︎
Also most banks automatically know that an address is a "mail forwarding service" address, even️ when it looks like a completely physical address box (they have some database) so they won't accept, must be residential address of the account owner. Pretty sure for LLC too, although when I did my account for LLC I was still resident in Texas, they asked address, but I am not 100% sure how they handle non-residents.