Low tax, low cost with good freedom setup: Romania vs Bulgaria is the final match?

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5% is final.

Your post is too short. It must contain a minimum of 30‌ characters and above. your curent characters is 12
 
That's a‍ better deal than Andorra for businesses with high profit margins.

Have an employee there (cheap),⁠ establish an economic substance, and no EU country can appropriate the company with CFC rules,⁤ you can reside anywhere. No need for residency visa and waiting months for permissions, freedom⁣ to move around.
Reside in Malta, pay yourself dividends, never transfer them directly to Malta,⁢ and pay ~6% total tax.

Seems too good to be true though. Is this it︀ or am I missing something?
 
You are just missing some bureaucracy obligations that can be annoying to deal with, mostly‌ in the first year.
Several visits to the local tax office to submit some documents‍ for VAT registration etc. (In case your accountant don't want to do that)
And the⁠ monthly accounting is also something that not everybody is used to also requirement to print⁤ and keep your accounting data.
I would suggest an accountant, but for few invoices smartbill⁣ can be enough to do it yourself.
There are several things that will cost you⁢ money and time on the way.

And I don't have any idea about your plan︀ with malta, but if you are not resident according to that video you have to︁ pay 16% instead.
 
Yes, you‌ are missing that if you create a holding company that owns the Romanian company in‍ a country that doesn't have withholding tax on dividends and allows the parent-subsidiary directive, you⁠ could be paying 1% total.
 
That's no big deal for me. If︂ the costs are fixed and not a percentage of profit, I'm fine with that. Thanks︃ for your info.

I wanted Malta to cash out dividends periodically (non-dom regime will grant︄ me 0% capital gains tax). If it's the 16% withholding I'll have to accumulate and︅ move to Romania after a few years to cash out to get 5% only. Not︆ as convenient but better than giving up 50% where I live right now.
 
"Note: we had a small error of explanation in our video, taxes on dividends for‌ both expats and locals are 5%, in most cases"
 
I think this requirement is removed few years ago. It is not the case⁤ anymore
 
Hi, do you know anything about Bulgaria's 183 day stay resident requirement? How︀ can i avoid that and still be considered a resident of Bulgaria for tax purposes︁
 
Hi, do you know anything about Bulgaria's 183 day stay resident requirement? How‍ can i avoid that and still be considered a resident of Bulgaria for tax purposes⁠
 
very relevant also⁣ today, maybe even more than ever while so much has changed the last 3 -⁢ 4 years.

Can someone suggest some good setup like this ?
 
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