Is there a graph or chart that clearly shows how long you can stay in a country before paying income tax?
Surely someone would've figured out a rough guide like 'spend at most 37 days in each country, as I've never had one see that as long enough to get taxed'Sols said:
No. One reason is that a lot of countries don't use a specific number of days to determine tax residence.
PwC World Tax Summaries is a good starting place, though. Worldwide Tax Summaries Online
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But in practice, nothing is going to happen if you spend more than 3 months and have never been in their system. Within the Schengen area it is not so easy to check (or disprove) how long one has been in a country. They use stuff like credit card withdrawals and transactions. So if one wants to be extra safe, dont use a card in your name.BritishSecret said:
Yeah, so basically, spend no more than 3 months in any country and don't be in their tax system already
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No, the world is much more complicated and nuanced than that.BritishSecret said:
Surely someone would've figured out a rough guide like 'spend at most 37 days in each country, as I've never had one see that as long enough to get taxed'
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In Switzerland, you just have to think about being tax resident and you become one.BritishSecret said:
Yeah, so basically, spend no more than 3 months in any country and don't be in their tax system already
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Allow me to kindly disagree.Sols said:
In France (and some other countries), place of primary sojourn can be a deciding factor. So we're talking about a percentage rather than number of days. Imagine it's a non-leap year and you spend two days in 181 different countries (2x181=362) but three days in France (362+3=365). That could be cause enough to become tax resident in France.
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Fair enough, I didn't look at France in enough detail for that reply. That was an oversight on my end. But the principle holds true in places where the wording is just "primary" or something akin to that. The aforementioned example was of course hyperbolic. My point is that in such places, counting number of days is less relevant than percentage.Mercury said:
Your tax domicile is in France if it is the place of your main stay, that is to say you stay there for more than 6 months during the year.
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