The FTIN? it's an optional field. But since I also have a legal entity in Montenegro and will have a personal tax ID too (since I travel a lot and also plan at times to live long periods in other countries during winters/summers once in a while, and I don't want any other country claim me to accidentally owe them anything when I spend a lot of time in their territory) in my case I'll be using my FTIN.
But for︀ OP, I guess his choice will be "None" or a blank line
😀 (see 2nd screenshot).︁ But I might not be reading the instruction correctly, does it say "if this form︂ is filed by foreign owned DE (LLC that chose a pass-through mode taxation) you *must*︃ add a valid FTIN"?
If my reading comprehension is wrong and that's the meaning, you're︄ right and it won't work for OP (but will work for me, since I'll have︅ the FTIN and will use it, happily paying my low rate 9% tax to support︆ the glorious nation of
Kazakhstan Montenegro. I'm actually donating a lot to NGOs on a︇ regular basis too... so taxation at a 10-20% range is fair IMHO since we all︈ use the cities/countries infrastructures like airports/malls/roads/safe borders/etc so I believe most of us should keep︉ doing that, imagine if everyone goes for a 0% setup, we'll have no roads to︊ drive and no light on the streets
😳 ). I vote for lower tax, vs 0%︋ scheme pho%¤# though Dubai also has taxes, they just collect from different revenue streams. The 21%︌ VAT in Montenegro for example covers for the lower income tax, and it's actually smart︍ because if you buy a lot of stuff and spend high sums locally, then you︎ contribute more to local infrastructure, but if you barely make ends meet, like many families️ are, then the country doesn't try to squeeze you.
@Eldorado in any case a short consultation with country C local accountant/tax adviser is a must IMHO, both if you'll go for full clean setup or the 'catch me if you can' one, to find out about local laws and how strict they are. To be on a safe side.