2nd citizenship for 0% tax crypto scheme from @CaptK1

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1. switzerland
3. i will pay 0% tax at St Kitts. want to use funds‌ outside of my original country
 
It depends on the tax laws of your home country. You⁤ should also seek advice from a local lawyer who knows how your home country's tax⁣ law interfaces with that particular setup.

The potential problem that I see is that you⁢ may owe tax to your home country on any gains incurred before you lawfully move︀ your tax residency to St. Kitts. Again, that depends on the tax laws of your︁ home country.
 
If you don't move to Saint Kitts or other tax haven, the structures relies on‌ lapses in CRS. Otherwise, you're on the hook for taxes just like everyone else where‍ you live.
 
Does anybody know the details of the "have tax residency" step? Would it require spending‌ 183 days per year there or would it be simpler for those acquiring the citizenship?‍

The same question for the other Caribbean nations that sell citizenship.
 
This is going to be the deciding factor.‌ Not sure if anyone here knows Swiss law well enough or cares to research it‍ for you. If not, I'm sure a Swiss tax lawyer would be able to provide⁠ reliable information.
 
The important part is ending tax residency at your home country, every country will⁤ have different rules so there are no details that will apply for every person.
 
If you remain in your original country and do not move⁤ to St Kitts (extremely boring place, has one of the highest per capita murder rate)⁣ then your home country rules will define what you have to pay
 
Just noticed this old thread.
If this
is the case the proposed solution will only fly in case of terminating swiss tax residency‌ first.
It means you have to apply for "Endbesteuerung" which needs to be duly processed.‍ It can be a lengthy process depending on the circumstances. Furthermore, new residency has to⁠ be registered with the Swiss Embassy (consulate) responsible for your new town of permanent residency.⁤ Last but not least do not forget to inform your "Heimatort" and the "Einwohnerkontrolle".

However, why doing all this: As long as a private individual is concerned, capital gains -in⁣ most cases- are tax-exempt in Switzerland. Only wealth tax is applicable of which the tax⁢ rate varies between cantons and even from one village to another.
 
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