And are you willing to move all of them to the new jurisdiction?
And are you willing to move all of them to the new jurisdiction?
You need to find affordable audit firm that is compliant and have skills similiar to big 4 but still in coming up stage, for example if go with EY their base charge for audit per year is $500 with low transaction volumedaniels27 said:
Many things can work. But an audit for $80? Maybe enlighten us how and where you get this? I mean normally they even charge more for photocopies.
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No will first test out new jurisdiction and see if it works without a hitch then think about moving that is why doing all this work in advance to before tax changes hit
Normally more like $2000, actually.Nw1 said:
You need to find affordable audit firm that is compliant and have skills similiar to big 4 but still in coming up stage, for example if go with EY their base charge for audit per year is $500 with low transaction volume
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Yes, but one will obviously be more expensive than 1001.Nw1 said:
No will first test out new jurisdiction and see if it works without a hitch then think about moving that is why doing all this work in advance to before tax changes hit
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How can you get a US LLC without accounting? You must file tax returns in the US for an LLC...daniels27 said:
Haven't we discussed this already in many details here
https://www.offshorecorptalk.com/th...stinations-to-utilize-non-dom-benefits.46922/
https://www.offshorecorptalk.com/threads/0-tax-offshore-company.46506/
You either need to use a US LLC or add a company in front of it. Or you go with Hong Kong or Singapore. All is possible, but costs money depending on your banking needs. For your setup, Hong Kong, Singapore, Guernsey are the usualy suspects. But they all require proper accounting.
If you do not want accounting, you will need to go the US LLC way.
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Any idea about the earlier two options I said how costly ongoing it is going to be and if it fits the bill as per the specs I am looking for?
You mean Armenia and Georgia? They are cheap. But not exactly tax-free in general. Would they be an option for you?Nw1 said:
Any idea about the earlier two options I said how costly ongoing it is going to be and if it fits the bill as per the specs I am looking for?
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Yes those two I think they meet nearly all my requirements right?daniels27 said:
You mean Armenia and Georgia? They are cheap. But not exactly tax-free in general. Would they be an option for you?
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Do you want tax-free or not? I think in that counties you would end up paying taxes even if undistributed.
Those two have foreign income waiver, undistributed earnings did not see them having a rule for taxing though?daniels27 said:
Do you want tax-free or not? I think in that counties you would end up paying taxes even if undistributed.
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No, they don't have any such waiver.Nw1 said:
Those two have foreign income waiver, undistributed earnings did not see them having a rule for taxing though?
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Armenia seems not have but Georgia have see; "Under the new CIT system, foreign income is subject to CIT at 15% upon its distribution in the form of dividends." Which means if money stays with company then you don't pay 15%daniels27 said:
No, they don't have any such waiver.
https://taxsummaries.pwc.com/armenia/corporate/income-determination
https://taxsummaries.pwc.com/georgia/corporate/income-determination
I am sure we can find a way if you have 1001 companies. What is the total annual spend over all ventures?
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Yes, but what do you want to do with the money? There are plenty of exceptions:Nw1 said:
Armenia seems not have but Georgia have see; "Under the new CIT system, foreign income is subject to CIT at 15% upon its distribution in the form of dividends." Which means if money stays with company then you don't pay 15%
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This one:Sols said:
In 2018, Latvia rolled out a new tax regime mirroring Estonia, where undistributed profits are not taxed. It's not quite as cheap as Estonia but usually just a few hundred EUR more. It lacks many of the conveniences of Estonia. But it's worth looking into.
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Their tax code smells decent to me, only question was; An individual also may become a tax resident of Georgia if the individual has high net worth, as defined under the securities market law.daniels27 said:
Yes, but what do you want to do with the money? There are plenty of exceptions:
https://www2.deloitte.com/content/d...ments/Tax/dttl-tax-georgiahighlights-2024.pdf
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No need to close since you can simply keep the earning in Estonian company since new law would only effect new earnings not old earnings that was undistributed as per my understanding. So only need a new company setup to put the new earnings todaniels27 said:
Also, just for my information. Like when you now have 1001 Estonian companies that you need to close. How are you getting the money out in the end? You then pay the 20%?
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