Thank you for your reply. Yes, I wouldn’t incorporate any business until the product is ready.
The reason for keeping the funds in the company would be to mitigate the risk of something “going wrong.”
I know that personal tax residency is different from corporate tax residency, but I don’t own a factory. It’s me and my laptop. So if a country claims me as a tax resident, there’s a massive risk that they will also consider any company tax resident per its effective place of management. That risk is probably even higher with a US LLC without any substance in the US which is︀ disregarded for tax purposes. So not even the IRS would try to challenge the foreign︁ tax residency.
But if I have a holding company, in a worst case scenario, the︂ money would be in the holding company, so only CIT would apply - provided that︃ the other country treats SMLLC’s as corporations and not as sole proprietorships. Which I believe︄ many countries do, as they don’t have an equivalent in their domestic law. So even︅ in a worse case scenario, where the corporate tax residency would be moved to a︆ high-tax country, I would only have to pay CIT.
Of course then you may ask︇ if it’s more likely for that to happen or for me to die. smi(&%
I agree︈ that it may seem overly complicated, and I wouldn’t do it if it wasn’t cheap.︉ I’m just thinking if it’s a couple hundred bucks per year, why not try to︊ build a slightly better structure.
The reason for keeping the funds in the company would be to mitigate the risk of something “going wrong.”
I know that personal tax residency is different from corporate tax residency, but I don’t own a factory. It’s me and my laptop. So if a country claims me as a tax resident, there’s a massive risk that they will also consider any company tax resident per its effective place of management. That risk is probably even higher with a US LLC without any substance in the US which is︀ disregarded for tax purposes. So not even the IRS would try to challenge the foreign︁ tax residency.
But if I have a holding company, in a worst case scenario, the︂ money would be in the holding company, so only CIT would apply - provided that︃ the other country treats SMLLC’s as corporations and not as sole proprietorships. Which I believe︄ many countries do, as they don’t have an equivalent in their domestic law. So even︅ in a worse case scenario, where the corporate tax residency would be moved to a︆ high-tax country, I would only have to pay CIT.
Of course then you may ask︇ if it’s more likely for that to happen or for me to die. smi(&%
I agree︈ that it may seem overly complicated, and I wouldn’t do it if it wasn’t cheap.︉ I’m just thinking if it’s a couple hundred bucks per year, why not try to︊ build a slightly better structure.